The document provides an overview of key topics in services marketing. It discusses 1) the differences between goods and services, 2) the intangible and heterogeneous nature of services, 3) models for understanding service quality like the GAPS model and service triangle, 4) factors that influence consumer decision making and evaluation of services, 5) the importance of processes, people and physical evidence in service delivery, and 6) challenges in marketing services internationally due to cultural differences.
1. TOPICS IN SERVICES MARKETING
S. Section Pages
No.
1 Service Marketing 2-8
2 GAPS Model 9-10
3 Decision making & Evaluation of 11-18
Services
4 Customers Expectation of Service 19-32
5 Building Customer Relationship 33-44
6 Service Blue Printing 45-47
7 Marketing Information System 48-49
8 Employees Role in Service Delivery 50-55
9 Customers Role in Service Delivery 55-60
10 Managing Demand and Supply 60-68
11 Yield Management 68-69
12 Pricing of Services 69-73
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2. SERVICES MARKETING
Services are deeds, processes and performances.
Services include all economic activities whose output is not a physical product or construction, is
generally consumed at the time it is produced, and provides added value in forms (such as convenience,
amusement, timeliness, comfort or health) that are essentially intangible concerns of its first purchaser.
Ex.: Transportation, Communication, Educational services etc.
Services Vs Customer Service
Customer service is the service provided in support of a company’s core products. This core product
could also be a service.
Services tend to be more intangible than manufactured products and manufactured products tend to be
more tangible than services.
31% 24% 46%
1970
36% 26% 38%
1980
1995 41% 31% 31%
2005 61% 19% 20%
SERVICES NDUSTRY AGRICULTURE
% AGE OF GDP IN INDIA
Thus we see in India over the years the services are contributing more towards the GDP as compared to
what it was couple of decades ago.
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3. Tangibility Spectrum
Salt
Soft drinks
Detergents
Automobiles
Cosmetics
Fast food outlets
Intangible Dominant
Tangible Dominant
Fast food outlets
Advertising
Agencies
Airlines
Investment
Management
Consulting
Teaching
The above diagram shows us that there are no pure products or pure services. Instead services tend to be
more intangible than manufactured products, and manufactured products tend to be more tangible than
services.
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4. Differences between Goods and Services
________________________________________________________________________________
Goods Services Resulting Implication
________________________________________________________________________________
Tangible Intangible Services cannot be inventoried
Cannot be readily displayed or communicated
Pricing is difficult
Production separate Simultaneous Customers participate in and affect the
from consumption transaction.
Customers affect each other.
Employees affect service outcome.
Decentralization may be essential.
Mass production is difficult.
Standardized Variability/ Heterogeneous Service delivery and customer
satisfaction depend on employees
actions.
Service quality depends on many
uncontrollable factors.
There is no sure knowledge that the
planned and promoted.
Non-perishable Perishable It is difficult to synchronize supply and
demand with services.
Services cannot be returned or resold.
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5. The Service Marketing Triangle
“Building service relationships: It’s all about promises.”
COMPANY
Internal Marketing
(Enabling promises)
External Marketing
(Making promises)
PROVIDERS CUSTOMERS
Interactive marketing
(Keeping promises)
The Services Triangle and Technology
Company
Technology
Providers Customers
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6. “Understanding and leveraging the role of customer service in external, interactive and internal
marketing.”
Expanded Marketing Mix for Services
Product Place
Physical Good Features Channel Type
Quality Level Exposure
Accessories Intermediaries
Packaging Outlet Locations
Warranties Transportation
Product Lines Storage
Branding Managing Channels
Promotion Price
Promotion Blend
Flexibility
Sales People: Price Level
Number Terms
Selection Differentiation
Training Discounts
Incentives Allowances
Advertising
Targets
Media Types
Types of Ads
Copy thrust
Sales Promotion
Publicity
People Physical Evidence Process
Employees Facility Design Flow of activities
Recruitment Equipment Standardized
Training Signage Customized
Motivation Employee Dress No. of steps
Rewards Other tangibles Simple
Teamwork Reports Complex
Customers Business cards Customer Involvement
Education Statements
Training Guarantees
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7. Expanded Mix for Services
Apart from Product, place, promotion and price, for Services we have People, Physical Evidence and
Process
1) People: All human actors who play part in service delivery and thus influence the buyers
perceptions namely, the firms personnel, the customer and other customers in the service
environment.
2) Physical evidence: The environment in which the service is delivered and where the firm and the
customer interact, and any tangible component that facilitate performance or communication of
the service.
3) Process: The actual procedures mechanisms, the flow of activities by which the service is
delivered- the service delivery and operating system.
Marketing of Services: Issues and Challenges
1. Performance itself is the product.
2. Services are produced after they are sold.
3. Core benefit in services is intangible.
4. Producers of service play the dual role of marketers.
5. Differentiating is difficult in services.
6. Service quality has many dimensions.
7. People factor is important.
8. Customer’s behavioral response affects service quality.
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8. CONTINUUM OF EVALUATION FOR DIFFER TYPES OF PRODUCTS
HIGH IN SEARCH HIGH IN EXPERIENCE HIGH IN CREDENCE
QUALITIES QUALITIES QUALITIES
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9. GAPS MODEL OF SERVICE QUALITY
EXPECTED
SERVICE
Customer Gap 5
PERCEIVED
SERVICE
GAP 1
SERVICE EXTERNAL
DELIVERY COMMUNICATIONS
TO CUSTOMERS
GAP 3 GAP 4
CUSTOMER- DRIVEN
SERVICE DESIGNS
AND STANDARDS
GAP 2
COMPANY PERCEPTIONS OF
CONSUMER
EXPECTATIONS
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10. THE CUSTOMER GAP
EXPECTED
SERVICE
CUSTOMER
GAP
PERCEIVED
SERVICE
The Provider Gaps
Gap 1- Not knowing what customers expects.
Gap 2 - Not selecting the right service designs & standards
Gap 3 - Not delivering to service standards
Gap 4 – not matches performance to promises
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11. CATEGORIES IN CONSUMER DECISION MAKING AND EVALUATION OF SERVICES.
INFORMATION
EVALUATION OF
SEARCH
ALTERNATIVES
USE OF PERSONAL
EVOKED SET
SOURCES
EMOTION AND MOOD
PERCEIVED RISK
CULTURE
Values & Attitudes
Manners & Customs
Material culture
Aesthetics
Educational & social
institution
Language
PURCHASE &
CONSUMPTION POST PURCHASE
SERVICE PROVISIO AS EVALUATION
DRAMA ATTRIBUTION OF
SERVICE ROLES AND DISSATISFACTION
SCRIPTS. INNOVATION DIFFUSION
COMPATABILITY OF BRAND LOYALTY
CUSTOMERS
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12. SERVICES: CATEGORIES IN THE DECISION-MAKING PROCESS
For Services the sequence of information search, Evaluation of alternatives, Purchase and consumption &
Post purchase evaluation do not occur in a linear sequence the way they most often do in purchase of
goods.
INFORMATION SEARCH: -
• Use of personal source
For purchasing goods use of both personal and non-personal sources is done as both effectively
convey information about search qualities.
For services, consumers rely to a great extent on personal sources for several reasons.
As mass media can convey about search qualities but can communicate little about experience
qualities.
• Perceived risk
Compare to good more risk would be involved in purchase of services.
- Intangible nature
- Since services are non-standardized always more uncertainty would accompany about the
outcome each time it is purchased.
- Services not accompanied by any warranties.
EVALUATION OF SERVICE ALTERNATIVES
EVOKED SET
The evoked set of alternatives –that group of products a consumer considers acceptable options in a given
product category -is likely to be smaller with services than goods.
Reasons
1. Difference in retailing between goods and services
• Retail outlet would display competing brands in close proximity
• To purchase services on other hand, the consumer visits an establishment (e.g. a bank,
a drycleaner or a hair salon) that almost always offer only a single “brand” for sale
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13. 2. Consumers are unlikely to find more than one or two businesses providing the same services in
a given geographic area, whereas they may find numerous retail outlets carrying the identical
manufacture’s product.
3. Difficulty to obtain adequate prepurchase information about services.
4. Or non professional services sometimes the consumer may perform the services for himself
e.g. cleaning homes themselves against hiring housekeepers, tax preparation etc.
Hence customers’ evoked set frequently includes self provision of the service.
SERVICE PURCHASE AND CONSUMPTION
Emotion and mood are feeling states that influence people’s (and therefore customers) perceptions and
evaluations of their experiences.
Moods are transient feeling states that occur at specific time and in specific situations.
Emotions are more intense stable and pervasive.
Any service characterized by human interaction is strongly dependent on the moods and emotions of the
service providers, the service customers and the other customers, and other customers receiving services
at the same time.
Ways in which mood can affect the behavior of service customer
• Positive moods can make customers more obliging and willing to participate in behaviors
that help service encounters succeed.
• Moods and emotions influence service encounters is to bias the way they judge service
encounters and providers. Evaluation of service is consistent with the polarity (positive or
negative) mood or emotion.
• Moods and emotion affect the way information about service is absorbed and retrieved.
Service marketers need to be aware of the moods and emotions of customers and service employees and
should attempt to influence those moods and emotions in positive ways.
SERVICE PROVISION AS DRAMA
Both service provision and drama aim to create and maintain a desirable impression before an audience.
The drama metaphor offers a useful way to conceive of service performances.
Among the aspects of a service that can be considered in this way are:
• Selection of personnel (auditioning the actors)
• Training of the personnel (rehearsing)
• Clearly defining the role (scripting the performance)
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14. • Creating the service environment (setting the stage)
• Deciding which aspect of the service should be performed in the presence of customer (on stage)
• Which should be performed in the backroom (back stage)
Importance Of Service Actors Increases When:
• Degree of personal contact increases (as in hospital, restaurant or resort)
• Services involve repeat contact and service actors have the discretion in determining the nature
of the service and how it is delivered ( as in education, medical services, legal services)
SERVICES ROLES AND SCRIPTS
Roles are defined as combinations of social clues that guide and direct behaviors in a given setting.
The success of any service performance depends in part on how well the “role set” or players- both
service employees and customers- act out their roles.
Service employees need to perform their roles according to expectations of the customers. The customer’s
role must also be performed well. If customers are informed and educated about the expectations and
requirements of the service.
If customer cooperates with the service provider to deliver the best possible service, the service
performance is likely to be successful.
One of the factors that most influences the effectiveness of role performance is a script.
A script is a coherent sequence of events expected by the individual, involving her either as a participants
or as an observer.
Conformance to scripts is satisfying to the customer while deviations leads to confusion and
dissatisfaction.
THE COMPATIBILITY OF SERVICE CUSTOMERS
The mere presence of customers in churches, restaurants, bars and spectacular sports is important.
If no one else shows up, customers will not get to socialize with others, one of the primary expectations in
these types of services.
However if number of customers becomes so dense that crowding occurs, customers may also be
dissatisfied.
Customers can be incompatible for many reasons –
• Difference in beliefs
• Values
• Experience
• Abilities to pay
• Appearance
• Age, health etc.
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15. The service marketer must anticipate, acknowledge and deal with heterogeneous customers who have the
potential to be incompatible.
The service marketer can also bring homogeneous customers together and solidify relationships between
them.
Customer compatibility is a factor that influences customer satisfaction, particularly in high contact
service.
POST PURCHASE EVALUATION
• Attribution Of Dissatisfaction
When a customer is dissatisfied with the services they purchased they may attribute their dissatisfaction to
provider and also to themselves (as they participate in the service process)
e.g. disappointed from a haircut ,the customer may blame
-The stylist (for lack of skill)
- Or herself (choosing the wrong style or not communicating her own needs)
The quality of many services depends on the information the customer brings to the service encounter.
e.g. - Doctor’s diagnosis depends greatly on this
- Dry cleaner’s success in removing a spot depends on the customer’s knowledge
of its cause
(Incase of products consumer’s main form of participation is the act of purchase. Consumer may attribute
failure to receive satisfaction to her own decision-making error, but hold the producer responsible for
product performance.)
Hence consumers may complain less frequently about services than about goods.
• Innovation Diffusion
The rate of diffusion of an Innovation depends on the Consumer’s Perceptions of the innovation with
regard to Five Characteristics:
• Relative Advantage
• Compatibility
• Communicability
• Divisibility
• Complexity
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16. Services as a group are less communicable, less divisible, more complex and probably less compatible
than goods.
Consumers adopt innovations in services more slowly than they adopt innovations of products.
Marketers may need to concentrate on incentives to trial when introducing a new service.
• Brand Loyalty
The degree to which consumers are committed to particular brands of goods or services depends on a
number of factors:
• Cost of changing brands (switching cost)
• Availability of substitutes
• Perceived risk associated with the purchase
• Degree to which they obtained satisfaction in past
Consumers are more brand loyal with services than products.
Brand loyalty has two sides.
The fact that a service provider’s own customers are brand loyal is not a problem.
The fact that customers of the provider’s competition are difficult to capture , however creates special
challenges.
Brand loyalty is described as a “ Means of economizing decision effort by substituting habit for repeated,
deliberate decision.”
This functions as a device for reducing the risk of consumer decision.
The Role Of Culture In Services
Culture is learned, shared, and transmitted from one generation to the next, and is multidimensional.
Culture would include:
1. Language (both verbal and non verbal)
2. Values and attitudes
3. Manners and customs
4. Material culture
5. Aesthetics
6. Education and social institutions
These cultural universals are manifestations of the “way of life” of any group of people.
Service marketers must be particularly sensitive to culture because of customer contact and interaction
with employees.
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17. Culture is important when we consider international services marketing – taking the service from one
country and offering them in others; but it is also critical within countries.
• VALUES AND ATTITUDES DIFFER ACROSS CULTURES
Values and attitudes help to determine what member of a culture think is right, important, and / or
desirable.
Consumer behaviors flow from values and attitudes; service marketers who want their services
adopted across cultures must understand these differences.
E.g.
US brands have ‘exotic’ appeal to other cultures, but USA cannot take it as a long-term strategy.
As nationalism in some cultures could work against this.
• MANNERS AND CUSTOMS
Manners and customs represent a culture’s views of appropriate ways of behaving.
It is important to monitor differences in manners and customs, because they can have direct affect
on the service customer.
E.g.
Central and western European employees are perplexed by western expectations that unhappy
workers put on a “happy face” when dealing with customers.
• MATERIAL CULTURE
Material culture consists of tangible products of culture. It is “the stuff we own” Why people own
and how they use and display material possessions varies around the world.
E.g.
Zoos in Japan very cramped compared to USA
Mortgages in Japan for houses 100yrs
USA 30yrs
India 20yrs
• AESTHETICS
Aesthetics refers to cultural idea about beauty and good taste. These are reflected in music, art,
drama, and dance as well as appreciation of color and form.
E.g.
Earthy tones of Japanese restaurants as against glossy red evident in their Chinese competitor’s
establishments.
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18. • EDUCATIONAL AND SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS
Both kinds of institutions are affected by and are transmission agents of culture. Education
includes the process of transmitting skills and knowledge, and thus may take place in school and
in less formal ‘training’ circumstances. The structure and functioning of each are heavily
influenced by culture. Culture manifests itself most dramatically in the people contact or our social
institutions
E.g.
Western way of imparting education in a session whenever you have a doubt you would ask from
the instructor. But in traditional eastern set up the students would learn by being with the
instructor and asking questions was not encouraged.
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19. CUSTOMER EXPECTATIONS OF SERVICE
Customer expectations are beliefs about service delivery that function as standards or reference
point against which performance is judged. Knowing what customer expects is the first and
possibly most critical step in delivering quality service.
EXPECTED SERVICE: - two levels of expectations
a. Desired service: - the service customer hopes to receive - the “wished for” level of performance.
b. Adequate service: - the level of service the customer will accept.
Desired Service
Zone of
Tolerance
Adequate Service
Dual customer expectation levels & the zone of tolerance
DESIRED SERVICE expectations seem to be the same for that defined by the customer
E.g.
Desired expectation of
1. Expensive restaurant
a. Elegant surroundings
b. Gracious employees
c. Candle light
d. And fine food
2. Fast food restaurant
a. Quick
b. Convenient
c. Tasty food in clean setting
The adequate service expectation level however is likely to vary for different firms within a
category.
E.g.
Within fast food restaurant, a customer may hold higher expectations for Mac Donald’s than for
Wimpy’s.
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20. ZONE OF TOLERANCE
As service are heterogeneous in that performance may vary across providers, across employees from the
same provider, and even within the same service employee.
The extent to which customer recognizes and are willing to accept this variation is called the zone of
tolerance.
The zone of tolerance can be considered as the range or window in which customers do not particularly
notice service performance. When it falls outside the range (either very low or very high), the services get
customer’s attention in either a positive or negative way.
Note: Marketer must understand not just the size and boundary levels for the zone of tolerance but also
when and how the tolerance zone fluctuates within a give customer.
DIFFERENT CUSTOMERS POSSESS DIFFERENT ZONES OF TOLEREANCE
E.g.
Busy customers who are pressed for the time and therefore desire short wait times in general would also
hold a constrained range for the length of acceptable wait times.
An individual customer’s zone of tolerance increases or decreases depending on a number of factors
including company-controlled factors such as price.
“Price increases don’t really drive up expectations. But tolerance level will become more stringent / less
flexible with the increase.”
ZONES OF TOLERANCE VARY FOR SERVICE DIMENSION
Customer’s tolerance zones also vary for different service attributes or dimensions. The more important
the factor, the narrower the zone of tolerance is likely to be.
In general customers are likely to be less tolerant about unreliable service (broken promises, service
errors) than other service deficiencies.
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21. Desired Service
Desired Service
Level of
expectatio
Zone of
Tolerance
Zone of
Adequate Service Tolerance
Adequate Service
Most important factors Least important factors
Zone of tolerance for different services
ZONE OF TOLERANCE VARY FOR FIRST-TIMEAND RECOVERY SERVICE
FIRST-TIME SERVICE
Outcome
Process
RECOVERY SERVICE
Outcome
Process
Low High
Expectations
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22. The fluctuation in the individual customer’s zone of tolerance is more a function of changes in adequate
service level which moves readily up and down due to situational circumstances than in desired service
level, which tends to move upward incrementally due to accumulated experiences.
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23. Nature & Determinants Of Customer Expectations Of Service
sensitivity to service.
Enduring Service Intensifiers Explicit Service Promises
Derived Expectations Advertising
Personal Service Philosophies Personal Selling
Contacts
Other Communications
Personal needs
Implicit Service Promises
Tangibles
Transitory Service Intensifiers Price
Emergencies
Service Problems
Word Of Mouth
Personal
Perceived Service Alternatives Desired Service “Expert” (Consumer Report
Publicity Consultants)
Self Perceives Service Role Expected Service
Zone of
Tolerance Past Experience
Situational Factors
Bad Weather Adequate Service
Catastrophe Predicted Service
Random Over Demand
Gap 5 (Customer Gap)
Perceived Service
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24. FACTORS INFLUENCING DESIRED SERVICES
ENDURING SERVICE
INTENSIFIERS
EXPECTED SERVICE
DESIRED SERVICE
PERSONAL NEEDS
ZONE
OF
TOLERANCE
ADEQUATE SERVICE
Personal Needs:- Those states or conditions essential to the physical or psychological well being of
the customer, are pivotal factors that share the level of desired service
Personal needs fall into
Physical, social and psychological functional categories.
Enduring Service Intensifiers:- Are individual stable factors that lead the customer to a
heightened sensitivity to service
Two factors under this are
Derived Service Expectations
Personal Service Philosophy
Derived Service Expectations:- When customer expectations are driven by another person or
group of people
Personal Service Philosophy:- The customer’s underlying generic attitude about the meaning of
services and the proper conduct of service providers
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25. e.g. Customers who have themselves been in service business would in general have strong
service philosophies.
CUSTOMER PERCEPTIONS OF SERVICE
Perceptions are always considered relative to expectations.
Customers perceive services in terms of the quality of the service and how satisfied they are overall
with their experiences.
Satisfaction is generally viewed as a broader concept while
Service quality assessment focuses on dimensions of service.
Internal and External Customer Perceptions
e.g. A telephone repair person depends on services provided by the dispatchers vehicle
maintenance crew, the repair person is the Internal Customer for the dispatchers and the
vehicle maintenance crew.
Any customer who calls up for the repair of his equipment is the External Customer for the
service repair person.
RELIABILITY
SITUATIONAL
RESPONSIVENESS FACTORS
SERVICE
QUALITY
ASSURANCE
CUSTOMER
PRODUCT SATISFACTION
QUALITY
EMPATHY
TANGIBLES PRICE
PERSONAL
FACTORS
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26. CUSTOMER PERCEPTIONS OF QUALITY AND CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
Satisfaction of the customer’s evaluation of a product or service in terms of wherher that product or
services has met their needs and expectations.
Failure to meet needs and expectations is assumed to result in dissatisfaction with the product or
service.
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION IS INFLUENCED BY:-
1 PRODUCT AND SERVICE FEATURES:- Influence significantly customers satisfaction.
1.
e.g. For service such as resort hotel, important features might include the pool area, restaurants,
room comfort and privacy, helpfulness and courtesy of staff, room price and so forth
Through focus, companies would determine what the feature and attributes are for their
service and the measure perceptions of those features as well as overall satisfaction level.
Customer would make trade offs among different service features (e.g. price level V/s.
quality V/s. friendliness of personnel) depending on the type of service being evaluated and
the criticality of the service.
2 CONSUMER EMOTIONS:- Consumer’s emotions can also affect their perceptions of
satisfaction with products and services.
These emotions can be stable, pre-existing emotions mood state.
e.g. When you are at a very happy stage in your life (such as when you are on vacation), and
your good happy mood and positive frame of mind has influenced how you feel about the
services you experience.
3. ATTRIBUTIONS FOR SERVICE SUCCESS OR FAILURE:-
Attributions – the perceived causes of events- influence perception of satisfaction as well.
e.g. In a weight loss organization if a customer fails to lose weight as hoped for, she will likely
search for the causes – was it something that she did, was the diet plan ineffective, or did
circumstances simply not allow her to follow the diet regimen.
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27. For many services, customer’s atleast take partial responsibilities for how things turn out.
4 PERCEPTIONS OF EQUITY OR FAIRNESS:- customer satisfaction is influenced by
perception of equity and fairness.
e.g. Have I been treated fairly compared with other customers?
OUTCOMES OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
RELATION SHIP BETWEEN CUSTOMER SATISFACTION AND LOYALTY IN
COMPETITIVE INDUSTRY
100
80
60
40
20
1 2 3 4 5
Very Dissatisfied Neither Satisfied Very
Dissatisfied satisfied nor Satisfied
dissatisfied
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28. RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CUSTOMER SATISFACTION AND LOYALTY IN
COMPETITIVE INDUSTRY
SERVICE QUALITY
Service quality is a focused evaluation that reflects the customer’s perception of specific dimensions
of services:- Reliability, Responsiveness, Assurance, Empathy, Tangibles.
PROCESS VERSUS TECHNICAL OUTCOME QUALITY
Ultimately the consumers judge the quality of services on their perceptions of the technical outcome
provided and on how that outcome was delivered.
e.g. Restaurant customer will judge the service on her perceptions of the meal (technical
outcome quality) and on how the meal was served and how the employees interacted wit her
(process quality)
When outcome is difficult to evaluate the customer will base their judgment of quality on process
dimensions
In most of the legal service or service where face to face interaction was their, courtesy was an
extremely powerful signal and the level of courtesy accounted for at least 60% of the variation in
how happy or angry a respondent was with the attorney.
SERVICE QUALITY DIMENSION
Research suggests that customers do not perceive quality as a unidimensional concept. That is,
customer’s assessment of quality include perception of multiple factors.
Researchers have found that consumers consider five dimensions in their assessment of service
quality;
• RELIABILITY:- Ability to perform the promised service dependably and accurately.
• RESPONSIVENESS:- Willingness to help customers and provide prompt service.
• ASSURANCE:- Employee’s knowledge and courtesy and their ability to inspire trust and
confidence
• EMPATHY:- Caring, individualized attention given to customers
• TANGIBLES:- Appearance of physical facilities, equipment, personnel, and written
material
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29. EXAMPLES OF HOW CUSTOMERS JUDGE THE FIVE DIMENSIONS OF SERVICE
QUALITY
CAR REPAIR INFORMATION
(COMSUMER) PROCESSING(INTERNAL)
Reliability Problem fixed the first time Provides needed information
and ready when promised when requested
Responsiveness Accessible; no waiting; Prompt response to requests;
responds to requests not “Bureaucratic”, deals with
problems promptly
Assurance Knowledge mechanics Knowledge staff: well trained;
credentials
Empathy Acknowledges customers by Knows internal customers as
name; remembers previous individuals; understands
problems and preferences individual and departmental
needs
Tangibles Repair facility; waiting area; Internal reports; office area;
uniforms; equipment dress of employees
BUILDING BLOCKS OF SATISFACTION AND SERVICE QUALITY
The service encounter or the moment of truth.
Interactive marketing
This is where the promises are kept or broken. Real time marketing
It is from these service encounters that customers build their perceptions.
SERVICE ENCOUNTER OR “MOMENTS OF TRUTH”
From a customer’s point of view, the most vivid impression of service occurs in the service
encounter, or the “moment of truth”.
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30. e.g. For a hotel customer service encounters are checking into the hotel, being taken into the room
by a bell boy, eating a restaurant meal, requesting a wake up call, checking out.
From the organizations point of view, each encounter thus presents an opportunity to prove its
potential as a quality service provider and to increase customer loyalty.
For Disney Amusement park – 74 customer encounters
For Mariott Hotel - 4 of the top 5 factors come into play in the first 10 minutes of the guest stay.
THE IMPORTANCE OF ENCOUNTERS
CHECK IN
BELL PERSON TAKES TO ROOM
RESTAURANT MEAL
WAKE UP CALL
CHECK OUT
A SERVICE ENCOUNTER CASCADE FOR A HOTEL VISIT
TYPES OF SERVICE ENCOUNTERS
A service encounter occurs every time a customer interact with the service organization:
There are three types of service encounters:-
1) REMOTE ENCOUNTER
2) PHONE
3) FACE-TO-FACE
1) REMOTE ENCOUNTER:- Encounters which occur without any direct human contacts (e.g.
ATM, Co having sent a bill).
In this encounters the tangible evidence of the service and the technical process and systems
become primary basis for judging.
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31. 2) PHONE ENCOUNTERS:- There is a greater potential variability in the interaction compared to
remote encounter
Tone of voice, employee knowledge, and effectiveness / efficiency in handling customer issues
become important criteria for judging quality in these encounters.
3) FACE-TO-FACE ENCOUNTERS:- this is direct contact between an employee and a customer.
Determining and understanding service quality issues in face-to-face counters is the most
complex of all. Both verbal and non verbal behaviors are important determinants of quality, as
are tangible cues such as employees dress etc.
SOURCE OF PLEASURE AND DISPLEASURE IN SERVICE ENCOUNTERS
Critical incidence technique is used to get customers and employees to provide verbatim stories
about satisfying and dissatisfying service encounters they have experienced.
With this technique, customers (either internal or external) are asked the following questions:
Think of a time when, as a customer you had a particularly satisfying (or dissatisfying)
interaction with –
When did the incidence happen?
What specific circumstances led up this situation?
Exactly what did the employee (firm) say or do?
What resulted that made you feel the interaction was satisfying (or
dissatisfying)?
What could or should have been done differently?
On this basis of thousands on service encounter stories, four common themes-
1) RECOVERY (after failure)
2) ADAPTABILITY
3) SPONTANIETY
4) COPING
Have been identified as the sources of customer satisfaction / dissatisfaction in memorable service
encounter.
1) RECOVERY : Employee response to service delivery system pailures
2) ADAPTABILITY: Employee response to customer needs and requests
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32. 3) SPONTANEITY: Unprompted and unsolicited employee action
4) COPING: Employee response to problem customers
GENERAL SERVICE BEHAVIORS – DO’S AND DON’T
THEME DO DON’T
Recovery Acknowledge problem Ignore customer blame
explain causes apologize customer leave customer to
“fend for him/herself”
Compensate / upgrade Downgrade
layout options Act as if nothing
Take responsibility “Pass the buck”
Adaptability Recognize the seriousness Ignore
of the need acknowledge
Promise, but fail to follow
Anticipate through show
unwillingness to try
Attempt to accommodate
Embarrass the customer
Adjust the system laugh at the customer
avoid responsibility “pass
Explain rules / policies the buck”
take responsibility
Spontaneity Take time be attentive Exhibit impatience ignore
anticipate needs listen yell / laugh / swear steal
provide information show from customer
empathy discriminate
Coping Listen Take customer’s
dissatisfaction personally
Try to accommodate Let customer’s
dissatisfaction affect others
Explain let go of the
customer
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33. BUILDING CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP
RELATIONSHIP MARKETING
There has been a shift from a transactions to a relationship focus in marketing.
Customers become partners and the firm must make long-term commitments to maintaining those
relationships with quality, service and innovation.
Relationship marketing essentially represents a paradigm shift within marketing-
Away from an acquisitions / transactions focus toward a retention / relationship focus.
Relationship marketing (or relationship management) is a philosophy of doing business, a strategic
orientation, that focuses on keeping and improving current customers, rather than acquiring new
customers.
Historically, marketers have been more concerned with acquisition of customers, so a shift to a
relationship strategy often represents :
• Change in mind set
• Organizational culture
• And employee reward systems.
GOALS OF RELATIONSHIP MARKETING
The primary goal of relationship marketing is to build and maintain a base of committed customers
who are profitable for the organization.
To achieve this goal, the firm will focus on the attraction, retention and enhancement of customer
relationships.
ENHANSING
RETAINING
SATISFYING
ACQUIRING
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34. CUSTOMER GOALS OF RELATIONSHIP MARKETING
Loyal customers not only provide a solid base for the organization, they may represent growth
potentials.
BENEFITS OF CUSTOMER / FIRM RELATIONSHIPS
Both parties benefit i.e., customer / firm from customer retention. It is not only in the best interest of
the organization to build and maintain a loyal customer base, but customers themselves also benefit
from long-term associations.
BENEFITS FOR CUSTOMERS
Customers will remain loyal to a firm when they receive greater value relative to what they expect
from competing firms
Value represents a trade-off for the consumer between the “given” and the “get” components.
Consumers are more likely to stay in a relationship when the gets (quality, satisfaction, specific
benefits) exceed the gives (monetary and non monetary costs)
Beyond the specific inherent benefits of receiving service value, customers also benefit in other
ways from long term associations with firm.
Research has uncovered specific types of relational benefits, these are:-
• CONFIDENCE BENEFITS
• SOCIAL BENEFITS
• SPECIAL TREATMENT BENEFITS
CONFIDENCE BENEFITS
These benefits comprise feelings of trust or confidence in the providers, alongwith a sense of a
reduced anxiety and comfort in knowing what to expect.
Across all of the services studied in the research just cited, confidence benefits were the most
important to customers.
e.g. Child Care Provider
Once the child care has been identified and established a satisfying relationship with a good
caregiver family stress is reduced and the quality of life improved.
SOCIAL BENEFITS
Overtime, customers develop a sense of familiarity and even a social relationship with their service
providers.
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35. In some long-term customer / firm relationship a service provider may actually become part of the
customer’s social support system.
A quote from the research where a customer describes her hair stylist: “I like him….. he’s really
funny and always has lots of good jokes. He’s kind of like a friends now…..it’s you’re used to. You
enjoy doing business with them”.
SPECIAL TREAMTEMT BENEFITS
Special treatment includes such things as getting the benefit of doubt, being given a special deal or
price, getting preferential treatment.
e.g. Doctor asking you to come is minutes before starting his consultation with the customers.
BENEFITS FOR THE ORGANISATIONS
The benefits to an organization of maintaining and developing a loyal customer base are numerous.
They can be linked directly to the firm’s bottom line.
• INCREASING PURCHASES
• LOWER COSTS
• FREE ADVERTISING THROUGH WORD OF MOUTH
• EMPLOYEE RETENTION
LIFE TIME VALUE OF A CUSTOMER
Life time value of a customer is a concept or calculation that looks at customer from the point of
view of their lifetime revenue and profitability contributions to a company.
ESTIMATING LIFETIME VALUE
If companies knew how much it really costs to lose a customer, they would be able to make
accurate evaluations of investments designed to retain customers.
e.g. Tom Peters calculated lifetime value of his small firm (20 person office) as a customer of
Federal Express as follows
Business from Tom Peters office per month $ 1500
Assuming a 10-year average lifetime for a customer in the express mail industry, the value $ 1500 /
month x 12 month / year x 10 years = $180000
Going further, a happy customer will create at least one new customer via word of mouth
$ 180,000 x 2 (New customers) = $ 360,000
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36. Thus the value of his company’s business for Federal Express was about $ 360,000
It is estimated that the average fed ex delivery person stops at 40 business the size of Peter’s
business each day
$ 360,000 / company x 40 companies
$ 14,000,000
Thus the average employee of Federal Express is managing a $ 14,000,000 portfolio of lifetime
business for the company.
THE CUSTOMER ISN’T ALWAYS RIGHT
THE WRONG SEGMENT: A company cannot target its services to all customers; some segments
will be more appropriate than the others. It would not be beneficial to either the company or the
customer to establish a relationship with the customer whose needs the company can’t meet.
e.g; a resort company which gets the old people and young crowd together at the same time at the
resort.
NOT PROFITABLE IN THE LONG TERM : some segments of the customers will not be
profitable for the company even if their needs can be met by the services offered.
e.g; a credit card company will not like deal with the customer who doesn’t pay the bills on time or
someone who doesn’t uses it to an extent the company expect.
DIFFICULT CUSTOMER: some customers put huge demands on the company and as such
company would not be Interested in such customer.
Eg. Some ad agencies say that some clients would make them do lot many presentations and finally
at times award the contracts to someoneelse who is known to them.
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37. SERVICE RECOVERY
Service Recovery refers to the action taken by an organization response to a service failure.
Failure occurs for all kinds of reasons
- The service may be unavailable when promised
- It may be delivered late or too slowly
- The outcome may be incorrect or poorly executed
- Employees may be rude or uncaring
All of these types of failures bring about negative feelings and responses for the customers.
Left Unfixed
- They can result in customers leaving
- Telling other customers about their negative experiences
- Even challenging the organization through customers rights organizations or legal channels
Research has shown that resolving customer problems effectively has a strong impact on
- Customer satisfaction
- Loyalty
- Bottom line performance
It has been observed that customers who experience service failures, but are ultimately satisfied
based on recovery efforts by the firm, will be more loyal than those whose problems are not
resolved.
Those who complain and their problems resolved quickly are much more likely to repurchase than
are those whose complaints were not resolved.
Those who never complain are likely least likely to repurchase
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38. Unhappy Customers 9%
who donot
complain 37%
Unhappy customers
who do complain
19%
Complaints not
resolved 46%
54%
Complaints 70%
resolved
Complaints resolved 82%
quickly
95%
Percentage of Customers who will buy again
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39. An effective Service Recovery strategy can
- Increase customer Satisfaction and Loyalty
- Generate positive Word of Mouth
A well designed, well documented services strategy also provides information that can be used to
improve service as part of a continuous improvement effort
Ineffective Service Recovery Strategies can lead to customers who are so dissatisfied they become
“Terrorist”, actively pursuing opportunities to openly criticize the company.
Repeated Service Failures without an effective Recovery Strategy in place can aggravate even the
best employees.
The costs in Employee Morale and even lost employee can be huge.
THE RECOVERY PARADOX
It is suggested that customers who are dissatisfied, but experience a high level of excellent service
recovery, may ultimately be even more satisfied and more likely to repurchase than are those who
were satisfied I the first place.
The logical but not very rational conclusion is that companies should plan to disappoint customers
so that they can recover and gain even greater loyalty from them as a result.
This idea has become known as the RECOVERY PAPADOX.
Recovery Paradox is more complex than it may seem on the surface.
1 It is expensive to fix mistakes.
2 Empirical Research suggests that only under the very highest levels of customers’ Service
Recovery ratings will we observe increased satisfaction and loyalty.
It is safe to say that “ Doing it right the first time “ is still the best and safest strategy.
However, when a failure does occur, then every effort at a superior Recovery should be made to
mitigate its negative effects.
In cases where the failure can be fully overcome, the failure is less critical, or the Recovery Effort is
clearly superlative, it may be possible to observe evidence of the Recovery Paradox.
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40. How Customers Respond To Service Failures
Service Failure
Dissatisfaction/
Negative Emotions
Complaint Action No Complaint Action
Complain to Negative word Third Party
Provider of mouth Action
Exit/Switch Stay Exit/Switch Stay
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41. Customer Complaint Action Following Service Failure
Variety of negative emotions can occur following a service failure, including such feelings as anger,
discontent, disappointment, self pity and anxiety.
These initial negative responses will affect how customers evaluate the Service Recovery effort and
presumably their ultimate decision to return to the service provider or not.
Many customers are very passive about their dissatisfaction, simply saying or doing nothing.
It is known that those who donot complain are least likely to return.
For companies, customer passivity in the face of dissatisfaction is threat to future success.
TYPES OF CUSTOMER COMPLAINT ACTIONS
If customers initiate actions following service failure , the action can be of various types as shown
in the Fig.
From company’s point of view any customer who complains on the spot is the best case scenario.
Company has the chance to respond immediately.
If they don’t complain immediately, customers may choose to complain later to the provider by
phone or in writing, or even write or call the corporate offices of the company.
In all the above cases, the company has a chance to recover.
These Proactive types of complaining behavior is preferred as voice responses or Seeking Redress.
TYPES OF COMPLAINERS
Four categories on how the customers respond to failures have been identifies.
These categories are:
(1) Passives (2) Voicers (3) Irate (4)Activist
(1) Passives: This group of customers is least likely to take any action .
- They are unlikely to say anything to the provider
- Less likely than others to spread negative Word of Mouth, unlikely to complain to third
party.
- They often doubt the effectiveness of complaining, thinking the consequences will not merit
the time and the effort they will expend.
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42. (2) Voicers: These customers actively complain to the service provider
- Less likely to spread the negative word of mouth, to switch patronage, or to go to third
parties with their complaints.
- These customers to be viewed as the service providers friend.
- Actively complain and give company a second chance.
- They believe complaining has social benefits and therefore don’t hesitate to voice their
opinion.
(3) Irates: These customers are more likely to engage in negative word of mouth to friends and
relatives and to switch providers than are others.
- They feel alienated from the market place.
- They are angry with the service provider although they do believe that complaining to the
service provider can have a social benefits.
- They are less likely to give the service provide a second chance.
(4) Activists: These consumers are characterized by above average propensity to complain on all
dimensions.
- They will complain to the provider, they will tell others, and they are more likely than
any other group to complain to third parties.
- They have a very optimistic sense of the potential positive consequences of all types of
complaining.
WHY DO ( AND DON’T) PEOPLE COMPLAIN?
The categories just described suggest that some customers are more likely to complain than others.
As individuals, these customers believe that positive consequences may occur and that there are
social benefits of complaining, and their personal norms support their complaining behavior.
They believe they will and should be provided compensation for the service failure in some form.
They believe that fair treatment and an good service are their due, and that in case of service failure,
someone should make good.
In some cases they feel a social obligation to complain – to help others avoid similar situations or to
punish the service provider.
A very small number of consumers have “ complaining” personalities – they just like to complain or
cause trouble.
Those who are unlikely to take any action hold the opposite beliefs.
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43. They often see complaining as a waste of their effort .
WHEN THEY COMPLAIN, WHAT DO CUSTOMERS EXPECT
Customers want justice and fairness in handling their complaints
Customers are looking for: OUTCAME FAIRNESS
PROCEDURAL FAIRNESS
INTERACTIONAL FAIRNESS
1. Outcome Fairness: They expect equity in the exchange- i.e. they want to feel that the
company has “Paid” for its mistakes in a manner at least equal to what the customer has
suffered.
The company’s “ punishment should fit the crime”.
They also appreciate it when a company gives them choices in terms of compensation. E.g.
A hotel guest should be offered the choice of a refund or free upgrade to a better room in
compensation for a room not being available on arrival.
On the other hand, customers can be comfortable if they are overly compensated. E.g.
Domino’s Pizza offered not to charge if the driver arrived after 30 minutes guarantee
delivery time. Many customers were not comfortable asking for this level of compensation,
especially if the driver was only few minutes late.
2. Procedural Fairness: In addition to fair compensation, customers expect fairness in terms
of policies, rule and timeliness of the complaint process.
They want easy access to the complaint process and they want things handled quickly,
preferably by the first person they contact.
Fair procedures are characterized by clarity, speed and absence of hassles.
Unfair procedures are those that customers perceive as slow, prolonged and inconvenient.
Customers also feel it is unfair if they have to prove their case- when the assumption seems
to be they are wrong or lying until they can prove otherwise.
3. Interactive Fairness: Customers expect to be treated politely, with care and honesty.
This form of fairness can dominate the others if customers feel the company and its
employees have uncaring attitudes and have done little to try to resolve the problem.
Often rude and uncaring behavior of employees is due to lack of training and empowerment-
a frustrated, frontline employee who has no authority to compensate the customer may
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44. easily respond in an aloof and uncaring manner, especially if the customer is angry and/or
rude.
SWITCHING VERSUS STAYING FOLLOWING SERVICE RECOVERY
Ultimately, how a Service Recovery failure is handled and the customer’s reaction to
recovery effort can influence future decisions to remain loyal to the service provider or to
switch to another provider.
The more serious the failure, the more likely the customer to switch no matter what the
recovery effort.
The nature of the Customer’s Relationship with the firm may also influence whether the
customer stays or switches providers.
There are three types of relationships viz.
-“True Relationships” where the customer has had repeated contact overtime with the
same service provider.
These customers are more forgiving of poorly handled service failures and are less likely to
switch than others.
- “First Time Encounter” Relationship is where the customer has had only one contact, on
a transaction basis, with the provider.
These customers are more likely to change.
- “Pseudo Relationship” is one where the customer has interacted many times with the
same company, but with different service provider (people) each time.
Individual customer’s attitude towards switching will strongly influence whether he or she
ultimately stays with the provider.
Thus certain customers will have greater propensity to switch service providers no matter
how their Service Failure situations are handled.
Finally, the decision to switch to a different service provider may not occur immediately
following service failure or poor service recovery, but may follow an accumulation of
events.
The service switching can be viewed as a process resulting from a series of decisions and
critical service encounters overtime, rather than one specific moment in time when a
decision is made.
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45. This process orientation suggests that companies could potentially track customer
interactions and predict the likelihood of defection based on a series of events.
By intervening earlier in the process companies can prevent at time customer’s decision to
switch.
SERVICE BLUEPRINTING
Services commonly lack concrete specifications.
Products on the other hand are produced with concrete and detailed plans, written specifications
and engineering drawings.
A Service ,even a complex one, might be introduced without any formal, objective depiction of
process.
A Service Blueprint is a picture or map that accurately portrays the service system.
This is to assume that the different people involved in providing it can understand and deal with
it objectively regardless of their individual points of view.
Blueprints are particularly useful at the design and redesign stage of development.
A Service Blueprint visually displays the service by simultaneously depicting the process of
service delivery, the points of customer contact, the roles of customers and employees, and the
visible elements of the service.
Process
Service Points of Contacts
Blueprint
Evidence
Service Blueprinting
Blueprint Components
The key components of Service Blueprints are shown in the fig.
They are Customers actions, “ On Stage” Contact Employee Actions, “BackStage” Contact
Employee Action and Support processes.
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46. Physical Evidence
Customer Actions
Line of Interaction
On Stage Contact
Employees Actions
Line Of Visibility
Back Stage Contact
Employee Actions
Line of Internal Interaction
Support Processes
SERVICE BLUEPRINT COMPONENTS
The customer actions area encompasses the steps, choices, activities and interactions that the
customer performs in the process of purchasing, consuming and evaluating the service.
E.g. Ina legal services the customer actions might include a decision to contact an attorney,
phone calls to the attorney, face to face meetings, receipt of documents and receipt of bill.
Onstage Employee actions are the steps and activities that the contact employee performs that
are visible to the customer.
Backstage employee actions are the steps and actions that occur behind the scenes to support the
on stage activities.
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47. The support processes cover the internal services, steps and interactions that take place to
support the contact employees in delivering the service.
Line of Interaction represents the direct interactions between the customer and the organization.
Anytime a vertical line crosses the horizontal line of interaction, a direct contact between the
customer and the organization or a service encounter has occurred.
Line of Visibility separates all service activities that are visible to the customer from those that
are not visible.
Line of Internal Interaction separates contact employee activities from those of other service
support activities and people.
Vertical Lines cutting across the line of Internal Interaction represent internal service
encounters.
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48. MARKETING INFORMATION SYSTEM
Marketing Information System is defined as an assembly of inter-related information subsystems:
receiving, processing and disseminating information on a continued basis to help make marketing
decision.
Type of Research Primary Research Objectives
Complaint solicitation To identify/attend to dissatisfied customers
To identify common service failure points
Critical incident studies To identify “best practices” at transaction level
To identify customers requirements as input for
qualitative studies
To identify common service failure points
To identify systemic strengths and weaknesses
in customer-contact services
Requirements To identify customer requirements as input for
research qualitative research
Trailer calls To obtain immediate feedback on performance
of service transactions
To measure effectiveness of changes in service
delivery
To assess service performance of individuals
and teams
To use as input for process improvements
To identify common service failure points
Service expectation meetings and reviews To create dialogue with important customers
To identify what individual large customers
expect and then to assure that it is delivered
To close the loop with important customers
Process checkpoint evaluations To determine customer perceptions of long term
professional services during service provision
To identify service problems and solve them
early in the service relationship
Market –oriented ethnography To research customers in natural settings
To study customers from cultures other than
your home country
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49. Type of Research Primary Research Objectives
Mystery To measure individual employee performance
shopping for evaluation , recognition and rewards
To identify systemic strengths and weaknesses
in customer-contact services
Customer To monitor changing customer expectations
panels To provide a forum for customers to suggest and
evaluate new service ideas
Lost customer research To identify reasons for customer defection
Database marketing research To identify the individual requirements of
customers using information technology and
database information
Future expectations To forecast future expectations of customers
research To develop and test new service ideas
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50. EMPLOYEES’ ROLE IN SERVICE DELIVERY
CUSTOMER
Service Delivery
COMPANY
Service
Performance
Gap
Customer-Driven
Service Designs and
Standards
The Critical Importance of Service Employees
It is very important to focus on employees because :
• They are the service
• They are the organization in the customer’s eyes
• They are the brands
• They are the marketers
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51. In many cases , the contact employee is the service – there is nothing else. E.g. in most personal and
professional services (like haircutting, physical trainers, child care , cleaning /maintenance etc.) the
contact employees provide s the entire service single handedly. The offering is the employee. Thus
investing in the employee to improve the service parallels making a direct investment in the
improvement of a manufactured product.
Because contact employees represent the organization and can directly influence customer
satisfaction, they perform the role of marketers. They physically embody the product and are the
walking billboards from the promotional point of view.
Whether acknowledged or not , actively selling or not, service employees perform marketing
functions. They can perform these functions well, to the organization’s advantage, or poorly to the
organization’s detriment.
Employee Satisfaction, Customer Satisfaction and Profits
There is a concrete evidence that satisfied employees make for satisfied customers (satisfied
customers can, in turn, reinforce employees’ sense of satisfaction in their jobs). Some have gone so
far as to suggest that unless service employees are happy in their jobs, customer satisfaction will be
difficult to achieve.
Research has shown that both a climate for service and a climate for employee well-being are
highly correlated with overall customer perceptions of service quality.
The Service Profit Chain
BOUNDARY-SPANNING ROLES
The front-line service employees are referred to as boundary spanners because they operate at the
organization’s boundary. They provide link between the external customer and environment and
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52. internal operations of the organization. They serve the critical function in understanding , filtering
and interpreting information and resources to and from the organization and external constituencies.
Who are these boundary spanners? What type of people and positions comprise critical boundary-
spanning roles? Their skills and experience cover the full spectrum of jobs and careers.
In industries such as fast food, hotels, telecommunication, and retail, the boundary spanners are the
least skilled, lowest paid employees in the organization. They are order takers, front desk
employees, telephone operators, store clerks, truck drivers, and delivery people.
In other Industries, boundary spanners are well paid, highly educated professionals – for example,
doctors, lawyers, accountants, consultants, architects, and teachers.
No matter what the level of skill or pay, boundary-spanning positions are often high-stress jobs.
These positions require:
• Mental Labor
• Physical Labor
• Emotional Labor
Emotional Labor
This refers to the labor that goes beyond the physical or mental skills needed to deliver quality
service. It means delivering smiles, making eye contact, showing sincere interest, and engaging in
friendly conversation with people who are essentially strangers and who may or may not ever see
again.
Friendliness, courtesy, empathy, and responsiveness directed towards customers all require huge
amount of emotional labor from the front-line employees who shoulder the responsibility for the
organization.
Emotional Labor draws on people’s feeling (often requiring them to suppress their true feelings) to
be effective in their jobs. A front-line service employee who is having a bad day or isn’t feeling just
right is still expected to put on the face of the organization when dealing with customers.
The organizations need to carefully selecting the people who can handle emotional stress, training
them in needed skills (like listening and problem solving), and teaching or giving them coping
abilities and strategies (via job rotation, scheduled breaks, teamwork or other techniques).
SOURCES OF CONFLICT
Front-line employees often face interpersonal and interorganizational conflicts on the job. Their
frustration and confusion can, if left unattended, lead to stress, job dissatisfaction, a diminished
ability to serve customers, and burnout.
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53. As these employees represent the customer to the organization and often need to manage a number
of customers simultaneously, front liners inevitably have to deal with conflicts, including
person/role conflicts, organization/client conflict, and inter-client conflicts.
1. Person/Role Conflicts : In some situations the front-line employees feel conflict between what
they are asked to do and their own personalities, orientations, or values.
Person/role conflict also arises when employees are required to wear specific clothing or change
some aspect of their appearance to confirm to the job requirements. E.g A young lawyer, just out of
college may feel an internal conflict with his new role when his employer requires him to cut his
long hair and trade his casual clothes for three piece suit.
2. Organization/Client Conflict : A more common type of conflict for front-line service
employees is the conflict between their two bosses, the organization and the individual customer.
Service employees are typically rewarded for following certain standards , rules, and procedures.
Ideally these rules and standards are customer based. When they are not, or when a customers
makes excessive demand, the employee has to choose whether to follow the rules or satisfy the
demands.
So an employee has two bosses one customer and one in the organization to whom he is reporting.
These conflicts are especially severe when service employees depend directly on the customer for
income. E.g. employees who depend on tips or commissions are likely to face greater levels of
organization/client conflict because they have even greater incentives to identify with the customer.
3. Interclient Conflict : Sometimes conflict occurs for boundary spanners when there are
incompatible expectations and requirements from two or more customers. This occurs most often
when the service provider is serving the customers in turn (a bank teller, a ticketing agent, a doctor)
or is serving many customers simultaneously (teachers, entertainers).
In case of serving customers in turn , the service provider may satisfy one customer by spending
additional time, customizing the service , and being very flexible in meeting the customer’s needs>
Meanwhile, waiting customers are becoming dissatisfied because their needs are not being met in a
timely manner.
Beyond the timing issue, different clients may prefer different modes of service delivery. Having to
serve one client who prefers personal recognition and a degree of familiarity in the presence of
another client who is all business and would prefer little interpersonal interaction can also create
conflict for the employee.
In the case of serving many customers at the same time, it is often difficult or impossible to serve
the full range of needs of a group of heterogeneous customers simultaneously. This type of conflict
is readily apparent in any college classroom where the instructor must meet a multitude of
expectations and different preferences for formats and style.
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54. Strategies for Closing GAP 3
A complex combination of strategies is needed to ensure that service employees are willing and able
to deliver quality services and that they stay motivated to perform in customer-oriented, service
minded ways. These strategies for enabling service promises are often referred to as internal
marketing .
Even during slow economic times, the importance of attracting, developing, and retaining good
people in knowledge and service based industries cannot be overemphasized.
By approaching human resource decisions and strategies from the point of view that the primary
goal is to motivate and enable employees to deliver customer-oriented promises successfully, an
organization will move towards closing gap3.
To build a customer-oriented ,service-minded workforce, an organization must :
• Hire the right people
• Develop people to deliver service quality
• Provide the needed support systems
• Retain the best people
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55. HUMAN RESOURCE STRATEGIES FOR CLOSING GAP3
Hire for service
competencies
Compete and service Be the
for the inclination preferred
best employer
people
Measure and Train for
reward strong Hire the right technical and
service people interactive
skills
Develop
Treat Retain the Customer- people to
employees best Oriented deliver Empower
as people Service service employees
customers Delivery quality
Provide needed
Include Promote
support
employees systems teamwork
in the
company’s
vision Develop
service- Provide Measure internal
oriented supportive service quality
internal technology
processes and
equipment
CUSTOMER’S ROLES IN SERVICE DELIVERY
Service customers are often present in the “factory” (the place the service is produced and/or
consumed), interacting with employees and with other customers.
E.g In a classroom or training situation, students (customers) are sitting in the factory interacting
with the instructor and other students as they consume the educational services.
Since these customers are present during service production, customers can contribute to or detract
from the successful delivery of the service and to their own satisfaction.
The Importance of Customers in Service Delivery
Customer participation at some level is inevitable in service delivery. Services are actions or
performances, typically produced and consumed simultaneously. In many situations employees,
customers and even others in the service environment interact to produce the ultimate service
outcome.
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56. Because the customers receiving the service participates in the delivery process, he or she can
contribute to gap 3 through appropriate or inappropriate, effective or ineffective , productive or
unproductive behaviors.
Customers who are unprepared in terms of what they want to order can soak up the customer
service representative’s time as they seek advice. Similarly, shoppers who are not prepared with
their credit cards can “put the representative on hold” while they search for their credit cards or go
to another room or even out of their cars to get them. Meanwhile, other customers and calls are left
unattended, causing longer wait times and potential dissatisfaction.
The level of participation – low, medium, high – varies across services. In some cases, all that is
required is the customers physical presence (low level of participation), with the employees of the
firm doing all of the service production work, as in case of a ghazal concert. The listeners must be
present to receive the entertainment service.
In other cases, consumer inputs are required to aid the service organization in creating the service
(moderate level of participation). Inputs can include information, effort or physical possessions.
All three of these are required in case for a CA to prepare a client’s income tax return effectively.
Information in the form of tax history, marital status, and number of dependents. Effort in putting
the information together in a useful fashion. Physical Possessions such as receipts and past tax
returns.
Incase of long term consulting engagements involvement of the customers high as they co create the
service.
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57. LEVELS OF CUSTOMER PARTICIPATION ACROSS DIFFERENT SERVICES
Low: Consumer Presence Moderate : Consumer High : Customer Concretes the
Required during Service Inputs Required during Service Product
delivery Service Creation
Products are standardized . Client inputs customize a Active client participation
standard service. guides the customized service.
Service is provided regardless Provision for service requires Service cannot be created apart
of any individual purchase. customer purchase. from the customer’s purchase
and active participation
Payment may be the only Customer inputs Customer inputs are mandatory
required customer input. (information, materials) are and concrete the outcome.
necessary for an adequate
outcome, but the service firm
provides the service
End Consumer Examples
Airline travel Haircut Marriage counseling
Motel stay Annual physical test Personal training
Fast-food restaurant Full-service restaurant Weight reduction program
Major illness or surgery
Business-to-Business
Customers examples
Uniform cleaning service Agency-created advertising Management consulting
Pest Control campaign Executive management seminar
Interior greenery maintenance Payroll service Installation of computer
service Freight transportation network
OTHER CUSTOMERS
In many service contexts customers receive the service simultaneously with other customers or must
wait their turn while other customers are being served. In both cases, “other customers” are present
in the service environment and can effect the nature of the service outcome or process. Other
customers can either enhance or detract from customer satisfaction and the perception of quality.
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