2012 11-11-servicesmarketingnotes-130228085619-phpapp01
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servicemarketingTRANSCRIPT
SERVICES MARKETING
1. What are services? Categorize them.
INTRODUCTION:
The world economy is increasingly characterised as a services economy. This is
because of the increased importance & the share of service sector in the economies
of most developed & developing countries. There has been a rapid shift from
agriculture to industry & then to the service sector. The shift has brought about a
change in the definition of goods & services. Goods are no longer considered
separate from services but represent an integral part of the product & this
interconnectedness of goods & services is represented on a goods-services
continuum.
Definition & characteristics of services:
According to the American Marketing Association services is defined as –activities,
benefits & satisfactions which are offered for sale or provided in connection with the
sale of goods.
Services are deeds, processes &performances provided or co produced by one entity
or person for another entity or person. eg: IBM –Global leader in IT, services &
consulting ;Intangible deeds & performances are provided for its customers.
Services are all economic activities whose output is not a physical product or
construction. It is generally consumed at the time it is produced & provides added
value in forms such as convenience ,amusement, timeliness, comfort or health that
are essentially intangible concerns of its first purchaser.
Service industries: Services as products, customer service & derived service
Services- 4 categories
1. Service industry & company
2. Services as products
3. Customer service
4. Derived service
SERVICE INDUSTRIES & COMPANIES: Includes those industries & Companies are
typically classified within service sector whose core product is a service.
PURE SERVICE COMPANIES: Taj palace hotels-lodging
Air India-transportation
Birla sunlife-Insurance & financial services
Fortis- healthcare
Columbia asia –health care
SERVICES AS PRODUCTS:
Services as products represent a wide range of intangible product offerings that
customers pay for in the market place. Service products are sold by service cos’&
non-service cos’ such as manufacturing & technological cos’ .eg: IBM &HP offer IT
consulting services to the marketplace competing with firms such as EDS,
ACCENTURE, which are traditional pure service firms.
CUSTOMER SERVICE:
It is also a critical aspect of what we mean by “service.” It is the service provided in
support of a company’s core products. Cos’ typically do not charge for customer
service provided. Many companies operate customer service call centers, often
staffed around the clock. Quality customer service is essential to build customer
relationships. It should not be confused with services provided for sale by the
company.
DERIVED SERVICE: The value derived from physical goods is really the service
provided by the good, not the good itself.eg: Computers provide information.
MODULE-3
1) Define customer expectations, customer satisfaction & customer delight.
Should service marketers delight their customers?
CUSTOMER EXPECTATIONS:
They are beliefs about service delivery that serve as standards or reference
points against which performance is judged. Customers are accustomed to
compare their perceptions of performance with reference points when they are
evaluating service quality. Therefore thorough knowledge about customers
expectations is critical to services marketing. A service provider can deliver
quality service only when he is aware about customer’s expectations. If he
gauges customer’s expectations in a wrong way,then he is bound to lose out in
the competitive market & may incur financial losses.
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION:
When the customer gets the desired treatment that he expects from the
service provider. eg: When you visit a super market, you find the required
product & also the sales executives very pleasing &informative. You are
satisfied at the end of the purchase.
CUSTOMER DELIGHT:
As a customer you get value addition, something more than you actually
expect from the service provider which is a desirable experience. eg: When
you fly in Emirates, you get a, call from them asking about your choice of
music & on the day of travel there is a chauffeur driven car-limousine at your
service, playing your favourite music & all along you feel like a queen/king with
all this service. This is something more you get beyond you expectation-
customer delight.
2) What is the difference between desired service & adequate service? Why
should a service marketer understand both the services?
MEANING & TYPES OF SERVICE EXPECTATIONS:
Usually, the level of expectation varies widely depending up on the reference
point which the customer holds. Lets imagine that we are planning to dine in a
restaurant.
Ideal expectations or desires- HIGH-Everyone says that this place has
fantastic service philosophy & I want to celebrate my birthday here.
NORMATIVE ‘should’ EXPECTATIONS:HIGH-This is quite an expensive
restaurant & so food ought to be good & service must be excellent.
EXPERIENCE BASED NORMS: ADEQUATE-Most of the time, this place is
good but when it gets busy the service is slow.
ACCEPTABLE EXPECTATIONS: ADEQUATE- I expect this restaurant to
serve me in a adequate way.
MINIMUM TOLERABLE EXPECTATIONS: LOW- I expect terrible service
from this restaurant but I have come as the price is low.
CUSTOMER EXPECTATIONS:
Deeper & broader than requirement
Usually un stated
Drives all your intentions & decisions
Primary measure of your success
EXPECTATIONS OF SERVICE:
Desired service expectations are influenced by explicit service promises, implicit
service promises, word of mouth communication & past experience.
SUB CATEGORIES OF SERVICE:
Restaurant-expensive, ethnic, fast food or airport-desired expectations across
categories of service i.e fast food restaurant-quick convenient tasty food in a clean
setting while in an expensive restaurant-elegant surroundings, gracious employees,
candle light dinner, fine food.
3) Explain zone of tolerance with examples.
ZONE OF TOLERANCE: Range or window in which customers do not particularly
notice service performance. When it falls out of the range –very high or low; the
service attracts the customer’s attention either in a positive or negative way. eg:
Service at a check –out line in a grocery store. If service consumes a period of 5 to
10 mins ,he may grumble & look at the watch. The longer the wait is below the zone
of tolerance[10 min],the more frustrated he becomes.
Performance basically varies across providers, across employees from the same
providers & even with the same service employee.
The extent to which the customers recognise & are willing to accept this variation is
called as zone of tolerance.
This zone of tolerance can expand or contract for a given customer. An airline
customer’s zone of tolerance will narrow when she is running late & she has to make
the plane while on the other hand, a customer who arrives at the airport early may
have a longer zone of tolerance, making the wait in line far less noticeable, then
when he is pressed for time.
Different customers possess different zones of tolerance. Very busy customers are
time pressed & desire short waiting time. eg: when it comes to having repair
personnel or guy who presses clothes, working women in particular have a more
restricted window of acceptable time duration for that appointment than customers
who work from home or the ones who are homemakers.
An individual customer’s zone of tolerance increase or decreases depending on a
number of factors including company controlled factors such as price. When there is
increase in price, customers are less tolerant of poor service.
Zone of tolerance vary for service dimensions. Customers’ tolerance zones vary for
different service attributes or dimensions. Customers are likely to be less tolerant
about unreliable services[broken promises or service errors]than other service
deficiencies.
Desired service is relatively idiosyncratic & stable compared with adequate service
which moves up & down in response to competition & other factors.
4. Which are the factors that influence customer’s expectations?
Factors that influence customer’s expectations of service
Personal needs
Lasting service intensifiers
1. Personal needs are those states or conditions essential to the physical or
psychological wellbeing of the customer. They are pivotal factors that decide
what the customers decide in service.
Personal needs can be categorised into four divisions:
o Physical
o Social
o Psychological
o Functional
A person who goes to a café right after work expects quick & efficient service
as he is hungry & tired, while a person who goes to chat with friends would
wait longer to get served as he comes there for entertainment purpose.
2. Lasting service intensifiers: They are individual stable factors that lead the
customer that lead the customer to a heightened sensitivity to service. One of
the most important of these factors is1. Desired service expectations ,which
occur when customer expectations are driven by another person or group of
people. eg: A parent choosing a vacation for the family-customer’s individual
expectation is intensified because they represent & must answer to other
parties who derive the service.
3. Personal service philosophy: the customer’s underlying generic attitude
about the meaning of service & the proper conduct of service providers.
Customers who are themselves into service business have strong service
philosophies. eg:An air hostess who is trained for ettiquecy will be well
mannered & courteous. She would expect similar treatment from another
person of the same job profile & her expectations from the service providers
will be intensified.
5. Which are the factors that influence adequate service?
Sources of adequate service expectations;
1. Adequate service-is the level of service the customer finds acceptable. These
influences are short term & tend to fluctuate more compared to desired service
expectations.
Factors that influence adequate service:
Temporary service intensifiers
Perceived service alternatives
Customer self perceived service role
Situational factors
Predicted service
Temporary service intensifiers: Personal emergency situations where there is an
urgent need for service eg: accidents-need for automobile insurance
Perceived service alternatives: Other service providers
Customer’s self perceived service role: they specify the level of service expected.
eg:I want my dosa piping hot, nicely roasted & golden in color
2) PERCEIVED SERVICE ALTERNATIVES: Other providers from whom
customers can obtain service. If customers believe that they have multiple
service providers to choose from or if they can provide the service for
themselves, their levels of adequate service are higher than those of
customers who believe that it is not possible to get better service anywhere.
3) Customer’s self perceived service role: Customer’s perceptions of the
degree to which customers exert an influence on the level of service they
receive.
4) SITUATIONAL FACTORS: Service performance that many people conditions
that customers view as beyond the control of service provider. eg:
catastrophes like earthquakes which affect a large no of people-for insurance
companies ,customers service expectations will reduce because people
recognize that there are inundated demands for their service.
6. Which sources hold good for both desired & predictable services?
SOURCES:
1) EXPLICIT SERVICE PROMISES-They are personal & non-personal
statements about service made by the organization to the customer.
Statements are personal when they are communicated by sales people or
repair personnel; they are non-personal when they come from web
pages ,advertising, brochures & other written publications.
2) IMPLICIT SERVICE PROVIDERS-service related cues that lead to inferences
about what these service should & would be like. These quality cues are
dominated by price & tangibles associated with service.
3) WORD –OF –THE-MOUTH COMMUNICATION-It is unbiased. Influences both
desired & predicted service.
4) PAST EXPERIENCE-Customer’s previous exposure to service that is relevant
to the focal service, is another force in shaping predictions & desires.
6. How do we measure the quality of service in marketing? Outline the
importance of service quality in marketing with relevant illustrations.
Quality in service is defined by the degree of compliance between stated goals &
achieved targets. It is easy to conform to a standard. Because of intangibility factor, it
is difficult to understand service & comprehend it.
Perception of service quality is felt by all parties involved in a service delivery
process: service providers, customers & suppliers. Quality can be viewed from
multiple perspectives:
Product-based: Based on measurable parameters.
It is suitable for goods but is a challenge for services. The number of times the
telephone rings before the receiver is picked up by a service provider can be a basis
of measuring service quality.
IMPORTANCE OF QUALITY IN SERVICE:
Lower costs-Quality control processes lower cost & increase productivity.
Immune or less vulnerable to price wars: High quality services have higher
price. eg: Bose music systems.
Higher customer loyalty: SQ ensures customer satisfaction that drives
customer loyalty & enhanced profits.
Higher market share: loyal customers contribute to positive word –of-mouth
publicity.
Higher ROI-High quality service contributes to higher profitability. eg: Apple
QUALITY IN SERVICE :
The measurement & assessment of service quality is very challenging owing to
the intangibility factor.
Quality can be viewed on following basis:
Product based-The no of times a phone rings before its attended by service
provider can be a basis of measuring responsiveness.
User based: Quality is in the eyes of the beholder.
TYPES OF SERVICE QUALITY:
MANUFACTURING BASED
Conformance based
Output is considered to be of high quality if it conforms to design
specifications.
VALUE BASED: Service provider must strike a balance between conformance
& performance.
Transcendental: Quality can only be experienced; cannot be described or
documented. eg: tourism
Sub categories:
Internal service quality: conformance & compliance to design standards.
External quality: it is customer’s perception
7. Service dimensions are determinants of service quality & performance. Justify.
The various service dimensions are:
Eight dimensions were identified by David. A. Garvin.
PERFORMANCE
FEATURES
RELIABILITY
CONFORMANCE-Delivery quality meeting design standards.
SERVICABILITY-behavioral dimension; politeness
AESTHETICS-external appearance
PERCEIVED QUALITY
Eg: When we consider the case of ‘The Mumbai dabbawalahs’,we understand
their commitment towards their work which was 99.99% accurate. Their work
culture is amazing where they give importance to delivering quality products
that are inexpensive that’s affordable by the common man & are punctual,
reliable & conform with quality standards (six sigma)qualifying all the service
dimensions, thus set an example that working in teams is effective to
implement their action plan.
8. What are the challenges posed by service industry?
Main challenges are:
Intangibility factor.
Service marketers are faced with the need to provide value to consumers
based on intangibles that can be difficult to quantify and deliver. Increasingly,
consumers are requiring higher and higher levels of service and more
convenient access to information. With tangible products, consistency can be
maintained more readily and quality can be monitored and impacted.
In service industries, the number of people or touch-points involved in the
delivery process and the inconsistencies in human behaviors and actions
make maintaining quality and brand consistency an ongoing challenge.
Ultimately past experience given by the service provider plays a vital role in making
future decisions regarding consumption of the service repeatedly from the same
service provider.
Innovation in service is also expected by youth centric customers that poses a
challenge in services marketing. The profit a customer is expected to
generate while he maintains a relationship with the company.
CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT:
1) Why marketing concepts & philosophies are premises for developing a CRM
system?
CRM consists of three components; customer, relationship & management.
Customer: The customer is the only source of company’s present profit & future growth.
A good customer who provides more profit with less resource is scarce because
customers are knowledgeable & the competition is fierce. CRM can be thought as a
marketing approach that is based on customer information.
Relationship: The relationship between a company & its customers involves continuous
bidirectional communication & interaction. The relationship can be short term or long
term continuous or discrete, repeating or one-time. It can be attitudinal or behavioural.
Customers may have positive attitude towards the company & its products but their
buying behaviour is highly situational.
Management: It is not only a marketing activity but also involves continuous corporate
change in culture & processes. CRM requires a comprehensive change in the
organisation & its people.
CRM extends itself from customer acquisition to customer retention to customer delight.
The important steps are:
1) Identifying the right customer:
Right customer segmentation. The segmentation criteria must change needs to
changer from conventional demographic/psychographic segmentation to need
based behavioural segmentation. This will need to right definition of the right
target customer. Consumer behavioural variables are more relevant & actionable
& can help in right targeting. Hence marketers can develop sustainable business
models & can differentiate themselves from others by using high-level consumer
behavioural variables.
2) Retaining the right customer:
It is v. important to measure customer profitability.
ROC (return on customers) should be calculated on three dimensions that are
Frequency of customer purchase, Value per transaction, Profitability. The
customers who are low on all these dimensions need least focus. The customers
scoring high on all these three need maximum focus. The customers lying
between these two extremes need to be carefully analyzed to decide the degree
of focus required for each of the segments.
Marketers need to lay down systems & processes to keep track of these
dimensions. Identification & sizing of these clusters can help develop right
strategies of each customer group.
3) Delighting the customer:
Marketers need to develop strong value prepositions in terms of better products &
better services so that strategies are not only consumer-centric but also lead to
high profitability. Pleasing the customers should not be at the cost of hurting the
company.
The CRM BUSINESS CYCLE:
Acquire & retain
Understand & differentiate
Develop & customize
Interact & deliver
1) Acquisition & retaining: Acquisition is a vital stage in building customer
relationship. For the purpose of customer acquisition, an organization is likely to
focus its attention on prospects, enquiries, lapsed customers, former customers,
competitor’s customers’ referrals & the existing buyers.
2) Understand & differentiate: Organizations cannot have a relationship with
customers unless they understand them, find out what they value, what type of
services are important to them, how & when they like to interact & what they want
to buy. They should involve in these activities.
3) Develop & customize: Service provider should also cater to the nische segment
by customizing service to their requirements.
eg:. Dell has a service philosophy wherein the customer specifies his
configuration to the service provider & the same is delivered in 21 days.
4) Interact & deliver: Sales personnel must be pleasant with customers & offer them information relevant to the product or service provided; deliver desired service on time avoiding delays & deficiencies in service performance.
PRINCIPLES OF CRM:
Treat customers individually.
Acquire & retain customer loyalty through personal relationship.
Select “Good” customers instead of Bad customers based on life time value
EVOLUTION OF CRM:
Customers as strangers
Customers as acquaintances
Customers as friends
Customers as partners.
RELATIONSHIP CHALLENGES:
The customer is not always right.
The wrong segment
Not profitable in the long run
Difficult customers-dysfunctional customers
Ending business relationships
SHOULD FIRMS FIRE THEIR CUSTOMERS?
LIFETIME VALUE OF A CUSTOMER: The profit a customer is expected to generate while he maintains a relationship with the company.