Title: Services Marketing
1Services Marketing
- Dr. David Andrus
- Lecture 1
- Exam 1
2THEMES OF MY PRESENTATION
- Services versus products
- Problems and marketing strategies for services
- Services marketing management
3MARKETING ACTIVITIES
- Analyze situation and identify target markets
based upon needs and wants. - Determine marketing objectives and select
marketing mix. - Implement marketing mix and establish control and
evaluation criteria. - Monitor environment and alter mix to meet
changing needs and wants.
4SERVICES VERSUS PRODUCTS
- Services are performances, deeds or efforts.
- Unique marketing challenges for services.
- Services are risky for clients.
- Intangible, perishable, variable, inseparable
- Satisfaction, value, and a client focus
- High quality, low prices, convenience, and
service are desired by customers.
5SERVICE FIRMS LAG BEHIND MANUFACTURERS
- Less likely to have marketing dept. perform
marketing mix activities. - Less likely to have sales training and overall
sales plan. - Less likely to use marketing research and
marketing consultants. - More likely to handle advertising internally and
spend less on marketing as a percent of gross
sales.
6Examples of Service Industries
- Health Care
- hospital, medical practice, dentistry, eye care
- Professional Services
- accounting, legal, architectural
- Financial Services
- banking, investment advising, insurance
- Hospitality
- restaurant, hotel/motel, bed breakfast,
- ski resort, rafting
- Travel
- airlines, travel agencies, theme park
- Others
- hair styling, pest control, plumbing, lawn
maintenance, counseling services, health club
7INTANGIBILITY
- Services are experienced when performed.
- Difficult for clients to understand.
- Difficult to display and communicate to clients.
- Quality is hard to determine for clients.
- Prices are difficult to set.
8Tangibility Spectrum
Salt
Soft Drinks
Detergents
Fast Food
Intangible Dominant
Tangible Dominant
Fast Food
Airlines
Consulting
Teaching
9SERVICE EVALUATION AND RISK
- Easy to Evaluate
- CLOTHING
- JEWELRY
- HOUSES
- RESTAURANT MEALS
- VACATION
- HAIRCUTS
- TELEVISION REPAIR
- LEGAL SERVICES
- AUTO REPAIR
- MEDICAL DIAGNOSIS
- Hard to Evaluate
Most Goods
Most Services
10MARKETING STRATEGIES FOR INTANGIBILITY
- Develop strong visual symbols for firm.
- Advertise a caring company that creates
successful results. - Present professional qualifications of staff in
advertisements. - Stress personal selling and post-purchase
follow-up programs.
11INSEPARABILITY
- Client is required to participate in production.
- Service delivered is tied to a particular
provider. - Amount of service depends upon provider.
- Strong provider/client link can create capacity
problems.
12MARKETING STRATEGIES FOR INSEPARABILITY
- Continual training about quality, policies, and
production techniques. - Multiple locations, web page, and e-mail with
clients for convenience. - Train in frontline service and complaint
resolution. - Production process is a marketing activity.
- Hire competent employees who know marketing.
13VARIABILITY
- Services are not always performed the same.
- Team selling can compound this problem.
- Variable quality raises perceived risk for
client. - Firms must reduce perceived risk.
14MARKETING STRATEGIES FOR VARIABILITY
- Standardize with automation of routine services
to ensure quality. - Spontaneity and flexibility are also important.
- Provide satisfaction guarantees for services.
- Deliver service in a group setting.
15PERISHABILITY
- Services cannot be inventoried, returned, or
resold. - Opportunity to sell services is quickly lost.
- Idle services during slow times represent revenue
lost forever.
16MARKETING STRATEGIES FOR PERISHABILITY
- Increase personal selling for new clients during
slow times. - Increase selling new services to existing clients
during slow times. - Set higher fees at peak usage times and lower
fees at nonpeak times. - Use reservation system to sell services in
advance. - Cross-train personnel for surges in demand.
17ADDITIONAL 3PS OF SERVICE MIX
- Participants Everyone who plays a part in
service delivery. - Physical evidence The servicescape in which
provider/clients interact. - Process of service assembly Flow of activities
through which the service is delivered.
18Products Versus Service Offerings
- Product
- Goods (mostly tangible)
- Guarantees and warranties
- Supplementary offerings
- Image and reputation
- Convenience of location, hours, credit, delivery,
etc.
- The Service Offering
- Services (mostly intangible processes)
- Guarantees and warranties
- Supplementary offerings (processes)
- Image and reputation
- Convenience of location, hours, credit, delivery,
etc. - Participants, to the extent they must be present
during service delivery
19Central Assumptions of Service Management
- Every organization is a service
- The primary purpose of the organization is to
satisfy customers and to make a profit - Customer requirements are constantly changing
20Guiding Principles for Service Marketing
- Improve service continuously.
- Concentrate on the areas most important to
customer retention. - Use customer satisfaction to expand revenues.
- Make sure service improvement efforts are
financially accountable. - Delight dont just satisfy the customer
21SERVICES MARKETING MANAGEMENT
- Focus on the marketing mix.
- Have client-oriented culture.
- Reward employees for outstanding service
quality. - Practice internal marketing to improve job
satisfaction - Have reputation for quality, speed, and
sensitivity.