Title: Production and Operations Management: Manufacturing and Services
1CHASE AQUILANO JACOBS
Operations Management
For Competitive Advantage
Chapter 6
Product Design Process Selection - Services
ninth edition
2Chapter 6Product Design and process Selection
Services
- Service Generalizations
- Service Strategy Focus Advantage
- Service-System Design Matrix
- Service Blueprinting
- Service Fail-safing
- Characteristics of a Well-Designed Service
Delivery System
3Service Generalizations
- 1. Everyone is an expert on services.
- 2. Services are idiosyncratic.
- 3. Quality of work is not quality of service.
- 4. Most services contain a mix of tangible and
intangible attributes.
4Service Generalizations (Continued)
- 5. High-contact services are experienced, whereas
goods are consumed. - 6. Effective management of services requires an
understanding of marketing and personnel, as well
as operations. - 7. Services often take the form of cycles of
encounters involving face-to-face, phone,
internet, electromechanical, and/or mail
interactions.
5Service Businesses
- Management of organizations whose primary
business requires interaction with the customer
to produce the service - Includes service providers like banks, airlines,
law offices, etc. - Has two major types
- Facilities-based services
- Customer must go to the service facility
- Field-based services
- Production/consumption of service take place in
customers environment
6Internal Services
- Management of services required to support
activities of the larger organization - Includes data processing, accounting,
engineering, maintenance
7The Service Triangle
Exhibit 6.1
8Classification of Service Level of Contact
- High Degree of Customer Contact
- Customer is involved in the process
- Usually more difficult to control
- More difficult to rationalize
- Customer affects time of demand, nature of
service - Low Degree of Customer Contact
- Customer has less involvement in the process
9Designing Service Organizations
- Services cannot be inventoried
- Demand must be met as it arises
- Capacity is dominant issue
- If too much, excess costs (Discount fares,
specials) - If not enough, lost sales (Specials, rain checks)
- How do you know how much to provide for?
- Some form of analysis
10Elements of Service Organization Design
- Identification of target market
- Who is your customer?
- Service concept
- How do you differentiate your service in the
market? - Service strategy
- What is your service package and operating focus?
- Service delivery system
- What are the actual processes, staff, and
facilities by which the services are created?
11Service Strategy Focus and AdvantagePerformance
Priorities
- Treatment of the customer
- Speed and convenience of service delivery
- Price
- Variety
- Quality of the tangible goods
- Unique skills that constitute the service offering
12Service-System Design Matrix
Exhibit 6.6
Degree of customer/server contact
Buffered
Permeable
Reactive
core (none)
system (some)
system (much)
High
Low
Face-to-face total customization
Face-to-face loose specs
Sales Opportunity
Production Efficiency
Face-to-face tight specs
Phone Contact
Internet on-site technology
Mail contact
High
Low
13Service Blueprinting Steps
1. Identify processes 2. Isolate fail points 3.
Establish a time frame 4. Analyze profitability ?
14Example of Service Blueprinting
15Service Recovery (Just in case)
- A real-time response to a service failure.
- Blueprinting can guide recovery planning (fail
points). - Recovery planning involves training front-line
workers to respond to such situations as
overbooking, lost luggage, or a bad meal.
16Service Fail-safingPoka-Yokes (A Proactive
Approach)
- Keeping a mistake from becoming a service defect.
- How can we fail-safe the three Ts?
17Have we compromised one of the 3 Ts?
18Three Contrasting Service Designs
- The production line approach
- Treat service delivery as a manufacturing process
- Example McDonalds restaurants
- The self-service approach
- Involve the customer in production of the service
- Examples are ATMs and self-service gas stations
- The personal attention approach
- Anything to satisfy the customer
19What is a Good Service Guarantee?
- Unconditional (No hidden clauses)
- Meaningful to the customer
- The payoff fully covers customer dissatisfaction
- Easy to understand and communicate
- For customers and
- For employees
- Painless to invoke
- Given proactively ?
20Characteristics of a Well-Designed Service System
- 1. Each element of the service system is
consistent with the operating focus of the firm. - 2. It is user-friendly.
- - The customer can interact with it easily
- 3. It is robust.
- - Cope with variations in demand and resources
- 4. It is structured so that consistent
performance by its people and systems is easily
maintained.
21Characteristics of a Well-Designed Service System
(Continued)
- 5. It provides effective links between the back
office and the front office so that nothing falls
between the cracks. - 6. It manages the evidence of service quality in
such a way that customers see the value of the
service provided. - 7. It is cost-effective.
- - There is minimum waste of time and resources in
delivering the service