Title: Chapter
14
Service Management (5e) Operations, Strategy,
Information Technology By Fitzsimmons and
Fitzsimmons
- Chapter 4
- New Service Development
2Learning Objectives
- Discuss the new service development process.
- Prepare a blueprint for a service operation.
- Describe a service process using the dimensions
of divergence and complexity. - Use the taxonomy of service processes to classify
a service operation. - Compare and contrast the generic approaches to
service system design.
3Levels of Service Innovation
- Radical Innovations
- Major Innovation
- new service driven by information and computer
based technology - Wells Fargo Internet banking launched in May 1995
- Start-up Business
- new service for existing market
- New Services for the Market Presently Served
- new services to customers of an organization
- Bank branches in Supermarkets
-
4Incremental Innovations
- Service Line Extensions
- augmentation of existing service line, such as
adding new menu items, new routes - Exclusive lounge at Airports for first class
passengers for some airlines - Service Improvements
- changes in features of currently offered service
- Delta Airlines use of ATM-like kiosks to
distribute boarding passes to passengers - Style Changes
- modest visible changes in appearances
- Some funeral homes now arrange for celebration of
life instead of mourn death
5Technology Driven Service Innovation
- Power/energy - International flights with jet
aircraft - Physical design - Enclosed sports stadiums, Hotel
Atrium - Materials - Astroturf
- Methods - JIT and TQM
- Information - E-commerce using the Internet
6Sources of New Services
- Customer suggestions
- Frontline employees
- Mining customer database
7New Service Development Cycle
8Service Design Elements1. Structural
- Delivery system
- Front and back office
- Automation
- Customer participation
- Facility design
- Size
- Aesthetics
- Layout
- Location
- Customer demographics
- Single versus multiple sites
- Competition
- Site characteristics
- Capacity planning
- Managing queues
- Number of servers
- Accomodating average or peak demand
9Service Design Elements2. Managerial
- Service encounter
- Service culture
- Motivation
- Selection and training
- Employee empowerment
- Quality
- Measurement
- Monitoring method
- Expectations versus perceptions
- Service guarantee
- Managing capacity and demand
- Strategies for altering demand and controlling
supply - Queue management
- Information
- Competitive resources
- Data collection
10Service Blueprint of Luxury Hotel
11Strategic Positioning Through Process Structure
- Degree of Complexity
- Measured by the number of steps in the service
blueprint. For example a clinic is less complex
than a general hospital. - Degree of Divergence
- Amount of discretion permitted the server to
customize the service. For example the
activities of an attorney contrasted with those
of a paralegal. - Figure 4.3 (pp 85)
- Allows us to see the market positioning of a
service based on degree of complexity and degree
of divergence allowed
12Structural Alternatives for a RestaurantTable
4.3 (pp 85)
LOWER COMPLEXITY/DIVERGENCE
CURRENT PROCESS HIGHER
COMPLEXITY/DIVERGENCE
13Taxonomy for Service Process Design
- Service processes can be classified using the
concept of - Divergence
- the object toward which service activity is
directed - Degree of customer contact
141. Degree of divergence
- Low divergence standardized service with high
volume - Tasks are routine
- Relatively low level of technical skills required
- Production-line approach, example, McDonalds
- High divergence customized services
- More technical and analytical skills required
- More flexibility required
- More capacity required
152. Object of the Service Process
- Working on goods of the customer, ex. Auto repair
- Property must be secured from damage or loss
- Services where the provider provides facilitating
goods ex restaurant - Appropriate stock levels and the quality of these
facilitating goods becomes a concern - Processing information
- Done in back office, ex. check processing at a
bank - Providing information over phone , ex. Phone
banking - Processing People, ex. Haircut or surgical
operation - High interpersonal skills required as well as
technical skills
163. Type of Customer Contact
- Decision on level of customer contact will decide
the type of training for employees and the design
of the facility - Indirect via electronic media no need for
service provider at the time of service delivery - Indirect via phone need for service provider at
the time of delivery and need for employee
interpersonal skills - Customer is physically present for part or full
service need for interpersonal skills and also
careful planning of service layout
17Taxonomy of Service ProcessesTable 4.4 (pp. 86)
18Generic Approaches to Service Design
- Production-line
- Customer as Coproducer
- Customer Contact
- Information Empowerment
191. Production-Line Approach
- Characteristics
- Routine and simple services
- High standardization
- Low customer contact
- Limited discretionary action of personnel to
get consistency in service performance - Division of Labor total job is broken into
groups of simple tasks - Substitution of technology for people example
ATM machines - Service standardization limited service options
creates opportunities for predictability and
preplanning
202. Customer as Co-Producer
- Characteristics
- For most services, the customer is present when
the service is being performed - We can use the customer as a productive worker
through proper design of the service - Either compensate the customer for their service
or design in such a way that he/she does not feel
as a co-producer - Self Service E-tickets over the Internet
provide convenience - Smoothing Service Demand will allow better use
of capacity, which is time-perishable - To implement demand-smoothing strategy, customers
must participate, adjusting the time of their
demand to match availability of the service. - Appointments, reservations, price incentives
213. Customer-Contact Approach
- Manufacturing
- is a controlled environment focused on maximizing
productivity and capacity utilization inventory
to decouple production from customer demand - Services
- When low contact then run them as manufacturing
in back-office, achieving high capacity
utilization and economies of scale - When high-contact the quality is determined by
customers experience both the process and the
outcome are important - Separate different components of service into
high and low contact areas to bring efficiency - Considerations that will impact high and low
contact are given in table 4.5 (pp 93)
224. Information Empowerment
- Employee empowerment faster and accurate
- Record keeping
- customer names
- Supplier relationship
- Communication with other firms
- All aspects of an operation can be integrated
(ERP systems) - Customer empowerment
- Customers can use Internet to educate themselves
23Customer Value
- Results produced for the customer
- It must satisfy the need for which it was
purchased - Process quality
- Since customer is a part of the process of
service delivery, therefore improvement in
service quality will be appreciated by the
customer - Price to the customer
- Greater consistency in service quality should
lower cost because that allows greater
alignment between customer perceptions and
expectations resulting in lower price being
offered to customer - Cost of acquiring the service
- Total cost of acquiring the service is important
to customers
24Customer Value Equation
25Discussion Questions
- What are the limits in the production-line
approach to service? - Give an example of a service in which isolation
of the technical core would be inappropriate. - What are some drawbacks of customer participation
in the service delivery process? - What ethical issues are raised in the promotion
of sales during a service transaction?