What Is B2B Marketing?

B2B marketing is directed at people who will purchase a product on behalf of a business, typically a key decision-maker. This type of marketing is primarily concerned with:

The people who will be using the productThe business goals the product will enableThe return on investment (ROI) that the purchase will deliver

There is little to no personal emotion involved in the purchasing decision, so you want to focus on understanding your buyers and how they operate within the confines of their organizations’ procedures. What’s their role? What’s important to them?

What Is B2C Marketing?

B2C marketing targets consumers, not businesses. The consumer will be buying the product for personal use. Your most effective marketing strategies will focus on:

The results your product or service will deliverHow your product or service helps the buyer What benefits it will bring to them personally

With B2C marketing, focus on the problem or pain point that you solve.

What’s the Difference Between B2B and B2C?

Evaluation

B2B clients often need to prove a return-on-investment (ROI) for their purchase. In other words, how will the expenditure help the company meet its business goals? What return can they expect for this investment? B2C customers don’t typically need their purchase to deliver a return—at least not one that’s measured in dollars. They’re more concerned with how the purchase will benefit them personally.

Buying Cycle

It is true that the cost of a sale for the B2B market can be more expensive than the B2C market. The easiest way to explain this is that a B2B transaction often takes more consideration, involves more people, and requires more decision-makers. The buying cycle can be much longer than for B2C. With B2C marketing, there is typically just one end user or buyer. They don’t have nearly the same number of hoops to jump through to complete the purchase. They may not need to consult anyone else before they buy.

B2B Marketing Example

In B2B marketing, you want to focus on the logic of the product and its features. Be more in-depth with your marketing materials. What kind of return on investment can buyers expect with their purchase? As an example, imagine that your company sells productivity software. If you are marketing it to businesses, the key thing you need to be able to show your prospective clients is that using the software will save them money in the form of time. Because those using the software will be able to streamline their work through the use of your software, employees will be able to get more done in the same amount of time. This likely would be a significant purchase for most companies, requiring multiple software licenses and adequate training. Therefore, expect the sales process to involve detailed demonstrations and trial periods.

B2C Marketing Example

When you are marketing to a consumer, you want to focus on the benefits of the product. Their decision is more emotional. Consumers also are different in that they demand a variety of distribution channels for convenience. Consumers don’t want to work to understand your benefits. Instead, they will want you to point out the benefits to them clearly. With consumers, your message must be simple and easy to understand. Consumers also have a much shorter purchasing process than businesses. They can purchase within a few minutes to within a few days. Consider again the example of productivity software. What consumers will want to know is how the software is going to make their lives easier. Does it include a calendar feature? How is inputting information easier? How does it sync with family members’ phones and laptops? Your customers in this example aren’t looking for a return on their investment. They’re simply looking for software that will make their lives easier without being too complex.

The Bottom Line

B2C marketing should account for multiple decision-makers, a long buying cycle, and logic-based purchase decisions. B2B marketing is usually aimed at just one buyer or end user, who is more likely to make the buying decision based on emotion.