Title: Chapter
12
Service Management (5e) Operations, Strategy,
Information Technology By Fitzsimmons and
Fitzsimmons
- Chapter 2
- The Nature of Services
2Learning Objectives
- Classify a service into one of four categories
using the service process matrix. - Describe a service using the four dimensions of
the service package. - Discuss the managerial implications of the
distinctive characteristics of a service
operation. - Discuss the insights obtained from a strategic
classification of services. - Discuss the role of a service manager from an
open-systems view of service.
3An Integrated Approach to Service Management
- The Eight Components Product Elements
Place, Cyberspace, and Time Promotion and
Education Price and Other User Outlays
Process Productivity and Quality People
Physical Evidence - Require the Integration of Marketing, Operations,
and Human - Resources
4Service/Product Bundle
Element Core Goods Example Core Service Example
Business Custom clothier Business hotel
Core Business suits Room for the night
Peripheral Goods Garment bag Bath robe
Peripheral Service Deferred payment plans In house restaurant
Variant Coffee lounge Airport shuttle
5The Service Process Matrix
6The Service Package
- Supporting Facility The physical resources that
must be in place before a service can be sold.
Examples are golf course, ski lift, hospital,
airplane. - Facilitating Goods The material consumed by the
buyer or items provided by the consumer.
Examples are food items, legal documents, golf
clubs, medical history. - Information Operations data or information that
is provided by the customer to enable efficient
and customized service. Examples are patient
medical records, seats available on a flight,
customer preferences, location of customer to
dispatch a taxi.
7The Service Package (cont.)
- Explicit Services Benefits readily observable
by the senses. The essential or intrinsic
features. Examples are quality of meal, attitude
of the waiter, on-time departure. - Implicit Services Psychological benefits or
extrinsic features which the consumer may sense
only vaguely. Examples are privacy of loan
office, security of a well lighted parking lot.
8Distinctive Characteristics of Services
- Customer Participation in the Service Process
attention to facility design but opportunities
for co-production - Simultaneity opportunities for personal
selling, interaction creates customer
perceptions of quality - Perishability cannot inventory, opportunity
loss of idle capacity, need to match supply with
demand - Intangibility creative advertising, no patent
protection, importance of reputation - Heterogeneity customer participation in
delivery process results in variability
9Strategic Service Classification (Nature of the
Service Act)
10Strategic Service Classification (Relationship
with Customers)
11Strategic Service Classification (Customization
and Judgment)
12Strategic Service Classification (Nature of
Demand and Supply)
13Strategic Service Classification (Method of
Service Delivery)
14Open Systems View of Services
15Topics for Discussion
- What are the characteristics of services that
will be most appropriate for Internet delivery? - When does collecting information through service
membership become an invasion of privacy? - What are some management problems associated with
allowing service employees to exercise judgement
in meeting customer needs? - What factors are important for a manager to
consider when attempting to enhance a service
firms image? - What contributions to the management of
professional service firms can a business school
graduate provide?