• Welcome
  • News
  • Team
    • Team
    • Alumni
    • Gallery
  • Research
    • Focus
    • Projects
    • Publications
  • Teaching
    • Current Courses
    • Upcoming Courses
    • Open Theses
  • Collaborate

Brand Retention on B2B Markets – The Role of Prior Experience and Choice Context in Repurchase Decisions

Conference Paper
Marketing in Transition: Scarcity, Globalism, & Sustainability
Authors

Dorith Mayer

Christoph Ihl

Ralf Reichwald

Published

January 1, 2015

Doi

10.1007/978-3-319-18687-0_56

Abstract
With the paradigm shift from transactional to relational purchasing, suppliers are confronted with considerable restraints on the customers’ side. The relational paradigm in industrial markets assumes that most industrial sales are repurchases of products or services from a focal supplier. In consequence, it is critical for suppliers to understand switching behaviour in business-to-business (B2B) markets in order to enter long term relationships with new customers in all branches of industries. Therefore, it is elementary to analyze the determinants which are relevant for repurchasing products or services from the focal supplier. The importance of branding is still neglected in a B2B setting. As a matter of fact, branding has rather been ignored in the context of B2B switching behaviour, although previous research shows that branding gets increasingly important in B2B markets as a differential factor. While organizational buying behaviour research offers rich empirical evidence, concepts and methodology, little conceptual and empirical effort has been aimed at research on a framework considering how brand retention is affected in B2B markets.

Research

© Anne Gärtner

  • Conference Paper
  • 2015
  • DOI

Authors

Dorith Mayer, Christoph Ihl, Ralf Reichwald

Abstract

With the paradigm shift from transactional to relational purchasing, suppliers are confronted with considerable restraints on the customers’ side. The relational paradigm in industrial markets assumes that most industrial sales are repurchases of products or services from a focal supplier. In consequence, it is critical for suppliers to understand switching behaviour in business-to-business (B2B) markets in order to enter long term relationships with new customers in all branches of industries. Therefore, it is elementary to analyze the determinants which are relevant for repurchasing products or services from the focal supplier. The importance of branding is still neglected in a B2B setting. As a matter of fact, branding has rather been ignored in the context of B2B switching behaviour, although previous research shows that branding gets increasingly important in B2B markets as a differential factor. While organizational buying behaviour research offers rich empirical evidence, concepts and methodology, little conceptual and empirical effort has been aimed at research on a framework considering how brand retention is affected in B2B markets.

Tags

B2B Marketing Brand Retention Repurchase

TU Hamburg

 

TU Hamburg

TUHH Institute of Entrepreneurship
Prof. Dr. Christoph Ihl
Am Irrgarten 3
21073 Hamburg
Contact

:   startup.engineer@tuhh.de
:   +49 (0)40 42878-3226
:   LinkedIn
:   Directions
Links    Data Privacy

   Imprint
Built with at