Title: Service and Relationship Marketing Module:1
1Service and Relationship MarketingModule1
Chapter1 Basics of Service Marketing
2Service and Relationship Marketing
Module1Chapter1 Basics of Service Marketing
- What are services?
- The word service originally associated with the
work performed by servants for their masters. - the action of serving, helping or benefiting
conduct tending to the welfare or advantage of
another - Services are acts, deeds, performance or
efforts. - The aim of service is to provide solution to the
customers problem. -
-
3- Services is an activity or series of activities
take place by interaction between customer and
service employees - Its an economic activity which is consumed at a
time it is produced and provide added value in
forms of Convenience, amusement, timeliness ,
comfort or health
4Services Defined
- Activities, Benefits or Satisfactions
- which are offered for sale
- or
- provided in connection with the sale of goods
- American Marketing Association
5Services Defined
- Separately identifiable, intangible activities
which provide want satisfaction - when marketed to consumers and/or industrial
users - and which are not necessarily tied to the sale of
a product or another service - William J. Stanton
6Services Defined
- Any activity or benefit that one party can
offer to another that is essentially intangible
and does not result in the ownership of anything. - Its production may or may not be tied to a
physical product - Philip Kotler and Bloom
7Goods Vs. Services
Why Services Marketing ???
- Goods are tangible
- Goods are homogeneous
- Goods are produced in the factory
- Production, distribution and consumption are
separate and independent functions in goods
- Services are intangible
- Services are heterogeneous
- Services are produced in buyer-seller
interactions - Production, distribution and consumption take
place simultaneously in the case of services
8Goods Vs. Services
- Consumers do not generally participate in the
production of goods - Goods can be stored
- In sale of goods, transfer of ownership takes
place
- Consumers are co-producers in services
- Services can not be stored
- In the sale of services, transfer of ownership
will not take place
9Characteristics of Services
- Intangibility
- Inseparability
- Variability
- Perishability
- Customer participation
- No ownership
10Intangibility
- Challenges
- Cannot be communicated easily
- Consumer suspects due to absence of concrete
evidences - Design of total service package not possible
- Comparative presentation is not possible
- Strategic Options
- Making the service process tangible to the
maximum possible extent - Managing and promoting word-of-mouth
communication - Strengthening internal and external marketing
- Use of Relationship Marketing
11Inseparability
- Challenges
- Problems of market expansion
- Maintenance of service quality
- Compulsory presence of consumer
- Limited production capacity
- Operation at limited capacity
- Strategic Options
- Minimization of customer interactions
- Innovating techniques of indirect interaction
- Standardization to the maximum possible extent
- Developing distribution network with quality
control mechanisms
12Variability
- Challenges
- Limited scope for standardization
- Not possible to communicate exactly what the
consumer is going to receive - Quality can be determined only after the service
is consumed
- Strategic Options
- More focus on standardization
- Internal marketing and employee training
- Positioning variation as a strength of innovation
- Promote research and innovation
13Perishability
- Challenges
- Storage of service is not possible
- Sales volume continuously in relation to the
capacity - Time pressure in sales
- Strategic Options
- Demand management
- Capacity management
- Tactical approaches
- Continuous study on demand patterns and
competitive parameters
14Customer Participation
- Challenges
- Customers are not controllable
- Production quality also depends upon customers
knowledge and ability to participate - Customers are evaluating at every stage of
service production
- Strategic Options
- Effective external marketing
- Customer education and training
- Effective interactive marketing
- Management of movements of truth
- Effective internal marketing
15No ownership
- Challenges
- Nothing remains after consumption
- Very less time to the consumer to evaluate the
product - High consumer dissonance
- Strategic Options
- Making communication tangible
- Customer relationship marketing
- Managing high level of company image
16- Sources for service sector growth
- Innovation
- - Push Theory of Innovation
- - Pull theory of Innovation
- Social Trends
17- Reasons for Growth in Services Sector
- Growth in intermediate demand from firm
- Growth in final demand from customers
- Increase in affluence
- More leisure time
- Working woman
- Growth in population of DINKS
- Greater life expectancy
- Greater complexity of products
- Greater complexity in life
- Greater concern for resource scarcity and ecology
- Increasing number of new products
18Service Sector in Indian Economy
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20- Reasons for growth of Services in India
- Economic Affluence
- Changing Role of Women
- Cultural Changes
- IT Revolution
- Development of Markets
- Unbundling Corporations
- Increasing Consciousness of Health Care
- Economic Liberalization
- Migration
- Export Potential
- Service Tax
21- Factors Stimulation the transformation of the
Service Economy - Government Policies
- Change in regulation
- Privatization
- New rules to protect customer, employees and the
environment - New agreements on trade in services
- Social Changes
- Rising consumer Expectation
- More affluence
- More people short of time
- Increased desire for buying experience vs things
- Rising consumer ownership of computer, cell
phones, and high tech equipments
22- Rising consumer ownership of computer, cell
phones, and high tech equipments - Easier access to more information
- Immigration
- Gewoning but aging population
- Business Trends
- Push to increase shareholders value
- Emphasis on productivity and cost saving
- Manufacturera add value through service service
and sell services - More strategic alliances and outsourcing
- Focus on quality and customer satisfaction
- Growth of franchising
- Marketing emphasis by nonprofits
-
23- Advance in Information Technology
- Growth of Internet
- Greater bandwidth
- Compact Mobile Equipment
- Wireless networking
- Faster, more powerful software
- Digitization of text, graphics, audio and video
- Globalization
- More companies operation on transnational basis
- Increased international Travel
- International merger and acquisitions, JVs
- Off shoring of customer service
- Foreign competitors invade domestic markets
24Role (Type) of Services in Economy
- Value Added Services
- Financing, Leasing, Insurance
- Infrastructure service
- Communications, Transportation, Utilities,
Banking - Manufacturing Services inside company
- Finance, Accounting, Legal , RD and design
- Distribution service
- Wholesaling, Retailing, Repairing
- Personal Service
- Health care, Restaurants, Hotels
- Business Service supporting Manufacturing
- Consulting, Auditing, Advertising, Waste
Disposal - Governments Service
- Military, Education, Judicial, Police and fire
protection -
25Service Classification Service process Matrix
Degree of Interaction and Customization
LOW
High
- Service factory
- Airlines
- Trucking
- Hotels
- Resorts Recreation
- Service Shop
- Hospitals
- Auto Repair
- Other repair services
LOW
Degree of Labor intensity
- Mass services
- Retailing
- Wholesaling
- School
- Retail aspect of commercial Banking
- Professional Services
- Physicians
- Lawyers
- Accountants
- Architects
High
26How to win customer in Service Business(USPs)
- Availability
- How accessible is the service?
- (ATMs service beyond the traditional bankers
hours) - Convenience
- (The location of service where customer must
travel to that service-Fast food restaurants) - Dependability
- Hoe reliable is the service?
- (Airlines- on time departure arrival
performance will build huge trust) - Personalization
- need for Customization -Are you treated as an
individual? -
27- Price
- The price is viewed as being a surrogate for
quality. - Quality
- Quality is judged by both the process of
services delivery and the put comes of the
service. It is difference between service
expectation service experience - Reputation
- Unlike a product, a poor service experience can
note exchanged or returned for a different model.
Positive word-of-mouth is the most effective form
of advertising. - Safety
- In air travel and medicine, the customers are
putting their lives in the hands of the service
provider - Speed
- How long must I wait for service? For emergency
service such as fire or police protection,
response time is the major criterion of
performance.
28Technology in Services
- The introduction of technology often empowers
the customer to perform the service unassisted. - For, example ,
- the credit card reader at the pump facilitates
the purchase of a gasoline without help and - Internet allows customer to book their own
flights
29- Technology in Service Encounter
- Advances in communication and information
technology are having profound effect on ways
customers interface with service providers. - There are five modes of technologys
contribution to the service encounter. - Technology free service encounter
- where the customer is in physical proximity to
and interacts with a human service provider. - This mode represents the traditional high-touch
service in which technology does not pay a direct
role. Such as Saloon, hair dresser, tailor -
TECHNOLOGY
CUSTOMER
SERVER
30- (B)Technology-assisted service encounter
- Here only the service provider has access to the
technology to improve the quality of face to face
service. - A health care service performed by technology
which is operated by only professionals
TECHNOLOGY
CUSTOMER
SERVER
31- (C)Technology- facilitated service encounter
- Here both the customer and service provider have
access to the same technology. - For example
- a financial planner in consultation with a
client can refer to a financial model on a
personal computer to illustrate projected returns
for different risk profiles
TECHNOLOGY
SERVER
CUSTOMER
32- (D)Technology-meditated service encounter
- The customer and human service provider are not
physically together and thus the service
encounter no longer is the traditional face to
face contact. - Its about Getting technical help on a distance
call . - Example
- GPS services or services provided by Just dial .
TECHNOLOGY
CUSTOMER
SERVER
33- (E)Technology-generated service encounter
- Human service provider is replaced entirely with
technology that allows the customer to
self-service. - It reduces the cost of service delivery
- For Example
- bank ATMs, website based information,
e-commerce
TECHNOLOGY
CUSTOMER
SERVER
34- The Emergence of Self Service
-
- Elimination of labor costs for nonproductive
activity is the principle driver for the service
provider. - Customer acceptance results from increased
opportunity for customization, accuracy,
convenience and speed. - Cost saving and place Time has lead the
buisiness to become Self Service by customer
him/herself.
35- Evolution of Self Service
36- Automation in Services
- Automation means replacing human manual activity
by the machine. -
- for Example-
- -an automatic lawn sprinkler system a hotel
- -automated answering systems that route callers
by means of Touch -Tone pones like Toll free or
customer care services of the service provider - David A Collier has suggested following
automation categories - Fixed sequence (F)
- A machine that repetitively performs successive
steps in a given operation according to a
predetermined sequence, condition and position
and whose set information cannot be changed
easily. E.g. automatic parking lot gate - 2. Variable sequence(V)
- A machine same as fixed sequence robot but
whose set information can be changed easily. E.g.
automated teller machine
37- 3. Playback(P)
- A machine that can produce operation from
memory that were originally executed under human
control. E.g. telephone answering machine - 4. Numerical Controlled(N)
- A machine that can perform task according to
sequence as command by stored information tat can
be reprogrammed easily. E.g. animated character
at an amusement park. - 5. Intelligent(I)
- A machine with sensory perception devices, such
as visual or tactile receptors, that
can detect changes in the work environment or
task by itself and has its own decision-making
abilities. E.g. autopilot for a commercial
airplane
38- 6. Expert system(E)
- A computer program that uses an inference engine
(e.g. decision rules) and a knowledge base (i.e.
information on a particular subject) to diagnose
problem - ex- maintenance trouble shooting for elevator
repair - 7. Totally automated system(T)
- A system of machine and computers that performs
all the physical and intellectual tasks that are
required to produce or deliver a service. - ex- electronic fund transfer
39- Internet Services
- Websites can be used in many different ways
- As a channel to sell a product or service
(amazone.com, wine.com) - As a supplemental channel (online booking of
order) - For technical support (dell.com, nike.com)
- To Embellish existing service (HBR cases
Research paper) - To convey information (Dr. Koop, wikipedia)
- To communicate with Membership
- To play Games
- Internet Models
- Internet Access Provider
- Portal
- Information content
- Online Retailer
- Transaction Enablers
- Market Makers
-
40- Comparison of Electronic and Traditional Services
41- E-Business Models
- Peter Weill and Michael Vitale have described
eight generic e-business models. - Content Provider
- Provides content such as information, digital
products and services. Ex- Reuters, a British
news agency - Direct to customer
- Provides goods services directly to the
customer, often bypassing traditional retail
channel memebers. Ex-Dell computer - Full service Provider
- Provide full range of service in one domain
directly. E.g. financial, health, indusyrial
chemicals. Ex General Electric Supply - I
42- Intermediary
- Brings together buyers and sellers by
concentrating information. Ex-eBay - Shared Infrastructure
- Brings together multiple competitors to
cooperate by sharing common IT infrastructure. An
example is SABRE reservation system for airlines. - Value Net Integrator
- Coordinates activities across the value net by
gathering, synthesizing, and distributing
information. Ex 7-eleven Japan - Virtual Community
- Created facilitates online community of people
with Monster.com, the job-placement service firm. - Whole-of-Enterprise
- Provides a firm wide single point of contact,
consolidating all services provides by a large
multiunit organization. An example is the U S
federal government
43- Managing the New Technology Adoption Process
Technology opportunity Analysis
Functional specification
Application requirements analysis
Orientation Education
Design specification
Managing the New Technology Adoption
Implementation Planning
Equipment selection and contract commitments
Implementation
Testing of technology
Review of Results
44- 8ps of Services Marketing Mix
- Product elements - the core and periphery
service elements at the centre of the company's
marketing strategy - Place and Time - delivering product elements to
customers can be done physically and/or
electronically, depending upon the service. Speed
and convenience are essential to the customer and
are important value-adds - Price and Other User Outlays - pricing is only a
part of what customers may part with when
purchasing a service one must also consider time
and convenience - Promotion and Education - speaks for itself, but
the marketer must make sure communications not
only provide information, but also persuade the
customer of the service's relevance to the
customer's particular 'problem' -
45- Process - the means by which the firm delivers
product elements - People - front-line staff will have a direct
impact on perceptions and - Physical Environment - the appearance of the
place where the services are delivered may have a
significant impact upon whether the service was
satisfactoryProductivity and Quality -
improving productivity is a requisite in cost
management but quality, as defined by the
customer, is essential for a service to
differentiate itself from other providers.
46Service and Relationship Marketing
Module1Chapter2 Customer Behavior in Service
Encounter
- Four Broad Categories of Service- A Process
Perspective - In service, people, physical objects, and data
can be processed , and the nature of the
processing can be tangible or intangible. - Tangible actions are performed on peoples
bodies or to their physical possession.
Intangible actions are performed on peoples
minds or to their intangible assets. - This gives rise to classification of services
into four broad categories. - They are
- People processing
- Possession processing
- Mental stimulus processing
- Information processing
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48- The Three Stage Model of Service Consumption/
- Customer Decision Making
Pre-purchase Stage
Service Encounter Stage
Post-encounter Stage
49Pre-purchase Stage
50Pre-purchase Stage - Overview
- Customers seek solutions to aroused needs
- Evaluating a service may be difficult
- Uncertainty about outcomes Increases perceived
risk - What risk reduction strategies can service
suppliers develop? - Understanding customers service expectations
- Components of customer expectations
- Making a service purchase decision
51Need Arousal
- Decision to buy or use a service is triggered by
need arousal - Triggers of need
- Unconscious minds (e.g., personal identity and
aspirations) - Physical conditions (e.g., hunger )
- External sources (e.g., a service firms
marketing activities) - Consumers are then motivated to find a solution
for their need
Courtesy of Masterfile Corporation
52Information Search
- Need arousal leads to attempts to find a solution
- Evoked set a set of products and brands that a
consumer considers during the decision-making
process that is derived from past experiences
or external sources - Alternatives then need to be evaluated before a
final decision is made
53Evaluating Alternatives Service Attributes
- Search attributes help customers evaluate a
product before purchase - E.g., type of food, location, type of restaurant
and price - Experience attributes cannot be evaluated before
purchase - The consumer will not know how much s/he will
enjoy the food, the service, and the atmosphere
until the actual experience - Credence attributes are those that customers find
impossible to evaluate confidently even after
purchase and consumption - E.g., hygiene conditions of the kitchen and the
healthiness of the cooking ingredients
54How Product Attributes Affect Ease of Evaluation
Source Adapted from Valarie A. Zeithaml , How
Consumer Evaluation Processes Differ Between
Goods Services, in J.H. Donelly and W. R.
George, Marketing of Services (Chicago American
Marketing Association, 1981)
55Perceived Risks of Purchasing and Using Services
- Functional unsatisfactory performance outcomes
- Financial monetary loss, unexpected extra costs
- Temporal wasted time, delays leading to
problems - Physical personal injury, damage to possessions
- Psychological fears and negative emotions
- Social how others may think and react
- Sensory unwanted impact on any of five senses
56How Might Consumers Handle Perceived Risk?
- Seek information from respected personal sources
- Compare service offerings and search for
independent reviews and ratings via the Internet - Relying on a firm with good reputation
- Looking for guarantees and warranties
- Visiting service facilities or going for trials
before purchase and examining tangible cues or
other physical evidence - Asking knowledgeable employees about competing
services
57Strategic Responses to Managing Customer
Perceptions of Risk
58Understanding Customers Service Expectations
- Customers evaluate service quality by comparing
what they expect against what they perceive - Situational and personal factors also considered
- Expectations of good service vary from one
business to another, and differently positioned
service providers in same industry - Expectations change over time
59Factors Influencing Customer Expectations of
Service
Source Adapted from Valarie A. Zeithaml, Leonard
A. Berry, and A. Parasuraman, The Nature and
Determinants of Customer Expectations of
Service, Journal of the Academy of Marketing
Science 21, no. 1 (1993) 1-12
60Components of Customer Expectations
61Purchase Decision
- Purchase Decision Possible alternatives are
compared and evaluated, whereby the best option
is selected - Simple if perceived risks are low and
alternatives are clear - Complex when trade-offs increase
- Trade-offs are often involved
- After making a decision, the consumer moves into
the service encounter stage
62Service Encounter Stage
63Service Encounter Stage - Overview
64Service Encounter Stage
- Service encounter a period of time during which
a customer interacts directly with the service
provider - Might be brief or extend over a period of time
(e.g., a phone call or visit to the hospital) - Models and frameworks
- Moments of Truth importance of managing
touchpoints - High/low contact model extent and nature of
contact points - Servuction model variations of interactions
- Theater metaphor staging service performances
65Moments of Truth
We could say that the perceived quality is
realized at the moment of truth, when the service
provider and the service customer confront one
another in the arena. At that moment they are
very much on their own It is the skill, the
motivation, and the tools employed by the firms
representative and the expectations and behavior
of the client which together will create the
service delivery process.
Richard Normann
66Service Encounters Range from High-Contact to
Low-Contact
67Distinctions between High-Contact and Low-Contact
Services
- High-Contact Services
- Customers visit service facility and remain
throughout service delivery - Active contact
- Includes most people-processing services
- Low-Contact Services
- Little or no physical contact
- Contact usually at arms length through
electronic or physical distribution channels - Facilitated by new technologies
68The Servuction System
Source Adapted and expanded from an original
concept by Eric Langeard and Pierre Eiglier
69The Servuction SystemService Production and
Delivery
- Servuction System visible front stage and
invisible backstage - Service Operations
- Technical core where inputs are processed and
service elements created - Contact people
- Inanimate environment
- Service Delivery
- Where final assembly of service elements takes
place and service is delivered - Includes customer interactions with operations
and other customers
70Theater as a Metaphor for Service Delivery
William Shakespeare As You Like It
71Theatrical Metaphor an Integrative Perspective
- Good metaphor as service delivery is a series of
events that customers experience as a performance
72Implications of Customer Participation in Service
Delivery
- Greater need for information/training
- Help customers to perform well, get desired
results - Customers should be given a realistic service
preview in advance of service delivery - This allows them to have a clear idea of their
expected role and their script in this whole
experience - Manages expectations and emotions
73Post-Encounter Stage
74Post-purchase Stage - Overview
75Customer Satisfaction with Service Experience
- Satisfaction attitude-like judgment following a
service purchase or series of service
interactions - Whereby customers have expectations prior to
consumption, observe service performance, compare
it to expectations - Satisfaction judgments are based on this
comparison - Positive disconfirmation (better)
- Confirmation (same)
- Negative disconfirmation (worse)
76Customer DelightGoing Beyond Satisfaction
- Research shows that delight is a function of
three components - Unexpectedly high levels of performance
- Arousal (e.g., surprise, excitement)
- Positive affect (e.g., pleasure, joy, or
happiness) - Strategic links exist between customer
satisfaction and corporate performance - By creating more value for customers (increased
satisfaction), the firm creates more value for
the owners
77Customer DelightGoing Beyond Satisfaction
- Best Practice in Action 2.1 Progressive
Insurance Delights Its Customers - Provided excellent customer service which allowed
them to lower costs and also increase customer
satisfaction and retention
78Summary
- Key Steps
- Need arousal
- Information search
- Evaluation of alternative solutions
- Purchase decision
- Customers face perceived risks which marketers
should reduce with some strategic responses - Zone of tolerance Adequate to desired.
Dissatisfaction if service level falls below
adequate level.
- Moments of Truth importance of effectively
managing touchpoints - High/low contact service model understanding
the extent and nature of contact points
-
- Servuction model variations of interactions
- Theater metaphor staging service performances
-