Title: Relationship Between Customer Perceptions of Quality and Customer Satisfaction
1Relationship Between Customer Perceptions of
Quality and Customer Satisfaction
2Customer Perceptions of Service
Chapter
5
- Customer Perceptions
- Transaction vs. cumulative perceptions
- Transaction-specific encounters building block
for cumulative perceptions - Customer loyalty results from customers
assessment of all experiences, not just one
single encounter
3Customer Perceptions of Service
Chapter
5
- What is customer satisfaction?
- Customers evaluation of a product or service in
terms of whether that product or service has met
the customers needs and expectations - Dissatisfaction an outcome of a failure to meet
needs and expectations - A dynamic, moving target that may evolve over time
4Customer Perceptions of Service
Chapter
5
- What determines customer satisfaction?
- Product and service features
- Consumer emotions
- Attributions for service success or failure
- Perceptions of equity or fairness
- Other consumers, family members, and coworkers.
5Customer Perceptions of Service
Chapter
5
- Customer Satisfaction
- National Customer satisfaction Indexes
- Measure and track customer satisfaction at a
macro level - Get at the quality of economic output
- American Customer satisfaction Index (ACSI)
- Measure of quality of goods and services as
experienced by consumers - U.S. consumers are least satisfied with services
6Customer Perceptions of Service
Chapter
5
- Outcomes of Customer Satisfaction
- Increased customer retention
- Positive word-of-mouth communications
- Increased revenues
7Relationship between Customer Satisfaction and
Loyalty in Competitive Industries
Source James L. Heskett, W. Earl Sasser, Jr.,
and Leonard A. Schlesinger, The Service Profit
Chain, (New York, NY The Free Press, 1997), p.
83.
8Customer Perceptions of Service
Chapter
5
- Service Quality
- The customers judgment of overall excellence of
the service provided in relation to the quality
that was expected.
9Customer Perceptions of Service
Chapter
5
- Service quality assessments are formed on
judgments of - Outcome
- Interaction
- Physical Environment Quality
10The Five Dimensions of Service Quality
Reliability
- Five dimensions which act as drivers of service
quality. - Represent how consumers organize information
about service quality in their minds. - Sometimes customers will use all of the
dimensions to determine service qualitysometimes
not.
Assurance
Tangibles
Empathy
Responsiveness
11SERVQUAL Attributes
RELIABILITY
EMPATHY
- Giving customers individual attention
- Employees who deal with customers in a caring
fashion - Having the customers best interest at heart
- Employees who understand the needs of their
customers - Convenient business hours
- Providing service as promised
- Dependability in handling customers service
problems - Performing services right the first time
- Providing services at the promised time
- Maintaining error-free records
RESPONSIVENESS
TANGIBLES
- Keeping customers informed as to when services
will be performed - Prompt service to customers
- Willingness to help customers
- Readiness to respond to customers requests
- Modern equipment
- Visually appealing facilities
- Employees who have a neat, professional
appearance - Visually appealing materials associated with the
service
ASSURANCE
- Employees who instill confidence in customers
- Making customers feel safe in their transactions
- Employees who are consistently courteous
- Employees who have the knowledge to answer
customer questions
12Costs of Service Quality
- Failure costs Detection
costs Prevention costs - External failure Process
control Quality
planning - Customer complaints Peer review
Training program - Warranty charges Supervision
Quality audits - Liability insurance Customer
comment card Data acquisition and
analysis - Legal judgments Inspection
Preventive
maintenance - Loss of repeat service
Supplier
evaluation -
Recruitment and selection - Internal failure
- Scrap
- Rework
- Recovery
- Expedite
- Labor and materials
13Customer Perceptions of Service
Chapter
5
- Service Encounters The Building Blocks for
Customer Perceptions - Service encounters or moments of truth
- When the customer interacts with the service firm
- can potentially be critical in determining
customer satisfaction and loyalty
14A Service Encounter Cascadefor a Hotel Visit
Check-In
Bellboy Takes to Room
Restaurant Meal
Request Wake-Up Call
Checkout
15The Service Encounter
- Types of service encounters
- remote encounters no direct human contact
- phone encounters
- face-to-face encounters - encounter between an
employee and a customer in direct contact - A Service encounter is an opportunity to
- build trust
- reinforce quality
- build brand identity
- increase loyalty
16Critical Service Encounters Research
- GOAL
- understanding actual events and behaviors that
cause customer dis/satisfaction in service
encounters - METHOD
- Critical Incident Technique
- DATA
- stories from customers and employees
- OUTPUT
- identification of 4 common themes underlying
satisfaction and dissatisfaction with service
encounters
17Common Themes in CriticalService Encounters
Research
Recovery
employee response to service delivery system
failure
18Recovery
DO
DONT
- Acknowledge problem
- Explain causes
- Apologize
- Compensate/upgrade
- Lay out options
- Take responsibility
- Ignore customer
- Blame customer
- Leave customer to fend for him/herself
- Downgrade
- Act as if nothing is wrong
- Pass the buck
19Common Themes in CriticalService Encounters
Research
Recovery
Adaptability
employee response to service delivery system
failure
employee response to customer needs and requests
20Adaptability
DO
DONT
- Recognize the seriousness of the need
- Acknowledge
- Anticipate
- Attempt to accommodate
- Adjust the system
- Explain rules/policies
- Take responsibility
- Ignore
- Promise, but fail to follow through
- Show unwillingness to try
- Embarrass the customer
- Laugh at the customer
- Avoid responsibility
- Pass the buck
21Common Themes in CriticalService Encounters
Research
Recovery
Adaptability
employee response to service delivery system
failure
employee response to customer needs and requests
Spontaneity
unprompted and unsolicited employee actions and
attitudes
22Spontaneity
DO
DONT
- Take time
- Be attentive
- Anticipate needs
- Listen
- Provide information
- Show empathy
- Exhibit impatience
- Ignore
- Yell/laugh/swear
- Steal from customers
- Discriminate
23Common Themes in CriticalService Encounters
Research
Recovery
Adaptability
employee response to service delivery system
failure
employee response to customer needs and requests
Spontaneity
Coping
unprompted and unsolicited employee actions and
attitudes
employee response to problem customers
24Coping
DO
DONT
- Listen
- Try to accommodate
- Explain
- Let go of the customer
- Take customers dissatisfaction personally
- Let customers dissatisfaction affect others
25Evidence of Service from theCustomers Point of
View
- Operational flow of activities
- Steps in process
- Flexibility vs. standard
- Technology vs. human
Process
Source From Managing the Evidence of Service
by M. J. Bitner from The Service Quality
Handbook, eds. E. E. Scheuing and W. F.
Christopher (1993), pp. 358-70.
26Evidence of Service from theCustomers Point of
View
- Contact employees
- Customer him/herself
- Other customers
- Operational flow of activities
- Steps in process
- Flexibility vs. standard
- Technology vs. human
People
Process
Source From Managing the Evidence of Service
by M. J. Bitner from The Service Quality
Handbook, eds. E. E. Scheuing and W. F.
Christopher (1993), pp. 358-70.
27Evidence of Service from theCustomers Point of
View
- Contact employees
- Customer him/herself
- Other customers
- Operational flow of activities
- Steps in process
- Flexibility vs. standard
- Technology vs. human
People
Physical Evidence
- Tangible communication
- Servicescape
- Guarantees
- Technology
- Website
Process
Source From Managing the Evidence of Service
by M. J. Bitner from The Service Quality
Handbook, eds. E. E. Scheuing and W. F.
Christopher (1993), pp. 358-70.