Programmes and courses Norsk English
-
Excerpt from course description

Customer Relationships in B2B Marketing

Introduction

In this course, we explore customer relationships in the business market, focusing on how they are established, developed, maintained, and analyzed. We also look at how customer relationships should be taken into account when strategic decisions are made.

Customer relationships are a fundamental part of any business's operations. Most companies operate either as suppliers or customers – often both – and their success largely depends on how they manage these relationships. Such relationships can vary from simple transactions to close, long-term collaborations, often governed by formal contracts and characterized by strong expectations of joint value creation.

The importance of good customer relationships cannot be underestimated. It is the customers' willingness to pay for a company's products and services that justifies its existence. Value creation occurs in interaction with customers, and through these relationships, opportunities for increased profitability, growth, and competitive advantage arise.

At the same time, governing and managing customer relationships can be challenging. Cooperation and coordination challenges can weaken the potential for joint value creation between customer and supplier. Therefore, it is crucial to understand how customer relationships work, what challenges they may entail, and how they can best be managed to ensure long-term success.

A majority of the business community in Norway provides products and services to other businesses, organizations, or the public sector, highlighting the importance of solid and well-functioning customer relationships.

Course content

Part 1: Customer behavior and customer value in business markets: The tension between value creation and value capture.

Part 2: Analyzing individual transactions

  1. Relationships, transactions, the transaction process, and transaction costs
  2. Measurement challenges, safeguarding challenges, and adaptation challenges
  3. Practical measurement and analysis of transaction characteristics and costs

Part 3: Creating value in customer relationships through problem-solving

  1. Problem formulation and job-to-be-done theory
  2. Problem-solving and challenges in problem-solving processes

Part 4: Management of individual customer relationships

  1. Choice of governance structures: Market vs. hybrid vs. hierarchy
  2. Choice of governance mechanisms: Relational contracts and trust, formal contracts, and relationship development

Part 5: Negotiations

  1. Distributive negotiations
  2. Integrative negotiations

Part 6: Sales management, CRM systems, and management of customer portfolios

  1. Sales management
  2. CRM systems and marketing automation
  3. Customer portfolios and account-based marketing

Part 7: Strategic decisions

  1. Product strategy
  2. Pricing strategy

Disclaimer

This is an excerpt from the complete course description for the course. If you are an active student at BI, you can find the complete course descriptions with information on eg. learning goals, learning process, curriculum and exam at portal.bi.no. We reserve the right to make changes to this description.