Title: SERVICE QUALITY MODEL
1SERVICE QUALITY MODEL
WORD OF MOUTH COMMUNICATIONS
PERSONAL NEEDS
PAST EXPERIENCE
EXPECTED SERVICE
GAP 1
GAP 5
PERCEIVED SERVICE
EXTERNAL COMMUNICATION TO CONSUMERS
SERVICE DELIVERY (INCLUDING PRE AND POST CONTACTS)
GAP 4
2SERVICE QUALITY MODEL-Contd
EXPECTED SERVICE
GAP 1
GAP 5
PERCEIVED SERVICE
EXTERNAL COMMUNICATION TO CONSUMERS
SERVICE DELIVERY (INCLUDING PRE AND POST CONTACTS)
GAP 4
GAP 3
TRANSLATION OF PERCEPTIONS IN TO SERVICE QUALITY
SPECIFICATIONS
GAP 2
MANAGEMENT PERCEPTIONS OF CONSUMER EXPECTATIONS
3THE GAPS MODEL OF SERVICE QUALITY
- GAP 1 NOT Knowing what customers expect
- GAP 2The wrong service quality standards
- GAP 3 The Service Performance Gap
- GAP 4 When promises do not match delivery
- GAP 5 Expected Service-perceived Service Gap
4GAP 1 NOT Knowing what customers expect
- According to the model, the first GAP ocurs
bacause of the difference betwen what customers
expect and what managers perceive they expect.
Major reasons for this gapare lack of marketing
research orientation, evidenced by insufficient
marketing research, inadequate use of research
findings, and lack of interaction between
management and customers. Inadequate upward
communication from contact personnel and
management and too many levels of management
seperating contact personnel from top managers
are the other two reasons for this gap.
5GAP 3 The Service Performance Gap
- The discrepancy between service specifications
and the actual service delivered initiates this
gap. In general, this gap appears when employees
are unable and/or unwilling to perform the
service at the desired level. Various reasons
are role ambiguity, role conflict, poor
employee-job fit, poor technology-job fit,
inappropriate supervisory control systems leading
to inappropriate evaluation/compensation system,
lack of perceived control on the part of
employees, and lack of teamwork.
6GAP 4 When promises do not match delivery
- The difference between what a firm promises about
a service and what it actually delivers is
described as Gap 4. Two factors contribute to
this gap - Inadequate communication among operations,marketin
g, and human resources, as well as across
branches and - Propensity to over-promise in communications
7GAP 5 Expected Service-perceived Service Gap
- Gaps 1 through 4 contribute to the emergence of
Gap 5, which is the difference between what the
customer expected to receive from the service and
what she believes she actually did receive. - Customers perceptions are influenced by many
sources, which include word-of-mouth
communications, personal needs,past experiences,
and communications from the service organization - The most important gap, if perceived service
falls short of the customers expectations, she
will be disappointed and dissatisfied.
Conversely, if the peceived service exceeds the
customers expectations, she will be not only
satisfied but delighted.
8Service Quality Gap Model
Service Quality Gap Model