Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin 6 Service Quality.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Service Quality Chapter 8.
Advertisements

Services: Design and Quality Chapter 5. Distinctive Characteristics of Services Customer participation Simultaneity Perishability Intangibility Heterogeneity.
Service Quality.
Management in Organisations Quality. The definition of quality The benefits from higher quality The quality cycle The economics of Quality Dimensions.
Chapter 06 Service Quality
2 Service: The Heart of Hospitality. 2 Service: The Heart of Hospitality.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2003. The McGraw-Hill Companies. All Rights Reserved Chapter 4 Customer Perceptions of Service Customer Perceptions Customer Satisfaction.
5 Chapter Customer Perceptions of Service  Customer Perceptions  Customer Satisfaction  Service Quality  Service Encounters: The Building Blocks for.
5-1 Customer Perceptions of Service  Customer Perceptions  Customer Satisfaction  Service Quality  Service Encounters: The Building Blocks for Customer.
McGraw-Hill © 2000 The McGraw-Hill Companies 1 S M S M McGraw-Hill © 2000 The McGraw-Hill Companies Chapter 4 CUSTOMER PERCEPTIONS OF SERVICE.
8 Chapter Service Recovery  The Impact of Service Failure and Recovery  How Customers Respond to Service Failures  Customers’ Recovery Expectations.
Service Quality. Quality ‘There is no limit to the quality that can be produced, even in the most menial job’ Dave Thomas quoted in D Bone and R Griggs,
8 Service Recovery Chapter The Impact of Service Failure and Recovery
Service Quality.
1 Service Quality. 2 What is service quality? u Q is conformance to specifications u Q is the degree to which customer expectations are satisfied u Q.
 Service : activity done for another person  Hospitality is the business of satisfying people’s needs  Customer Service : total customer experience.
Service Quality MD854 Management of Service Operations Professor Joy Field.
Service Quality FM : Anis Gunawan,MM
Chapter 06 Service Quality McGraw-Hill/Irwin Service Management: Operations, Strategy, and Information Technology, 6e Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill.
Service Quality Chapter 6. Dimensions of Service Quality  Reliability  Responsiveness  Assurance  Empathy  Tangibles.
 About Tourism Services :  Intangible : cannot be placed in inventories  Highly perishable : lose their value with the passage of time  Services, where.
Chapter – 6 Service Quality
KelleyFall 2001 Marketing Management 1291 How to Get Customer Satisfaction Defining Customer Satisfaction Performance Measures of Service Quality Retaining.
Moments of Truth Each customer contact is called a moment of truth. You have the ability to either satisfy or dissatisfy them when you contact them. A.
Managing Quality 1. Quality Back in 1964 a Justice of the US Supreme Court, Potter Stewart, wrote in an opinion something to the effect that obscene was.
ISM 270 Service Engineering and Management Lecture 4: Service Quality.
Service Quality.
Chapter 19 Customer Service McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
THE MANAGEMENT AND CONTROL OF QUALITY, 5e, © 2002 South-Western/Thomson Learning TM 1 Chapter 4 Focusing on Customers.
Chapter 4 Focusing on Customers.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Slide 5.1 Chapter 5 Focusing on Customers. Session Overview n Importance of Customer Satisfaction n Creating Satisfied Customers n Practices of Successful.
Quality Management Lecture 2. Quality of Services.
ISM 270 Service Engineering and Management Lecture 4: Service Quality.
Chapter 4 Focusing on Customers.
Customer Perceptions of Quality and Customer Satisfaction
Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT SEMESTER /2013 AMW342 SERVICES MARKETING.
Dimensions of Service Quality
5-1 Customer Perceptions of Service  Customer Perceptions  Customer Satisfaction  Service Quality  Service Encounters: The Building Blocks for Customer.
Slack, Chambers and Johnston, Operations Management 5 th Edition © Nigel Slack, Stuart Chambers, and Robert Johnston 2007 Chapter 17 Quality planning and.
Service: The Heart of Hospitality Chapter 2 Hospitality & Tourism.
Chapter 06 Service Quality McGraw-Hill/Irwin Service Management: Operations, Strategy, and Information Technology, 6e Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill.
Chapter 6. Service Quality
Service Quality. Learning Objectives  Describe the five dimensions of service quality.  Use the service quality gap model to diagnose quality problems.
Customer Service. What is customer service and why is it important? The total customer experience with a hospitality or tourism related business – Includes.
Quality Systems PG Diploma in Hospitality Management
5-1 The Customer Gap. 5-2 The Customer Gap What a customer believes should or will happen Subjective assessments of actual service experiences (reality.
Customer Delight The Bridge to Our Customers Mahesh K Prasad Head- Human Resources Cell:
ENTREPRENEURSHIP Lecture No: 28 Resource Person: Malik Jawad Saboor Assistant Professor Department of Management Sciences COMSATS Institute of Information.
Reaching New Heights... Quality Service Foundation Chapter III Integrating Marketing in the Leisure Industry.
5-1 Customer Perceptions of Service  Customer Perceptions  Customer Satisfaction  Service Quality  Service Encounters: The Building Blocks for Customer.
Service Quality Orientation of Management Employee Satisfaction Employee Retention Customer Satisfaction Delivery of Service Quality Customer Retention.
13-1 Copyright © 2016 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
© BLR ® —Business & Legal Resources 1501 Customer Service Skills How We Can All Improve.
Copyright © 2014 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin SERVICE QUALITY Chapter 6.
The Servqual Model SERVICE QUALITY.
1. SERVICE QUALITY Presented by: Faisal Hayat and Muhammad Zia R.#: 01, 04 BS.c (Hons.) Food Science & Technology Institute Of Food Science & Nutrition.
Hospitality Services. Definition of Service A service is an activity or series of activities of more or less intangible nature that normally, but not.
Delivering Service Quality and Guaranteeing Services.
McGraw-Hill © 2000 The McGraw-Hill Companies 1 S M S M McGraw-Hill © 2000 The McGraw-Hill Companies Chapter 4 CUSTOMER PERCEPTIONS OF SERVICE.
ISM 270 Service Engineering and Management Lecture 4: Service Quality.
Chapter 06 Service Quality
Service Quality 6 McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Service Systems Productivity and Quality
Service Quality.
2 Service: The Heart of Hospitality. 2 Service: The Heart of Hospitality.
Chapter 4 Focusing on Customers.
Moments of Truth Each customer contact is called a moment of truth.
Operations Management
Presentation transcript:

Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin 6 Service Quality

Service Guarantee (100% Satisfaction Guarantee)  Offer dissatisfied customer a refund, discount, or free service.  Advertising the firm’s commitment to quality  Focuses employees by defining performance standards explicitly  Builds a loyal customer base  Motivating effect on employees  Customer feedback

 Service Quality is measured by comparing a customer’s expected service, which comes from word-of-mouth, personal needs and past experience, with his or her perceptions of service.  The Measurement of Satisfaction is based on whether the expectations were met, not met, or exceeded.

 Each customer contact is called a moment of truth.  You have the ability to either satisfy or dissatisfy them when you contact them.  A service recovery is satisfying a previously dissatisfied customer and making them a loyal customer. Moments of Truth

 Reliability: Perform promised service dependably and accurately. Example: receive mail at same time each day.  Responsiveness: Willingness to help customers promptly. Example: avoid keeping customers waiting for no apparent reason. Dimensions of Service Quality

 Assurance: Ability to convey trust and confidence. Example: being polite and showing respect for customer.  Empathy: Ability to be approachable. Example: being a good listener.  Tangibles: Physical facilities and facilitating goods. Example: cleanliness. Dimensions of Service Quality

Word of mouth Personal needs Past experience Expected service Perceived service Service Quality Dimensions Reliability Responsiveness Assurance Empathy Tangibles Service Quality Assessment 1. Expectations exceeded ES<PS (Quality surprise) 2. Expectations met ES~PS (Satisfactory quality) 3. Expectations not met ES>PS (Unacceptable quality) Perceived Service Quality

Service Quality Gap Model

 Quality in the Service Package Budget Hotel example  Taguchi Methods (Robustness) Notifying maids of rooms for cleaning  Poka-yoke (fail-safing) Height bar at amusement park  Quality Function Deployment House of Quality Quality Service by Design

Poka-yoke  Shigeo Shingo believed that Low-cost, In-process quality-control mechanisms and routines used by employees in their work could achieve high quality w/o costly inspection.  Use checklists or manual devices that do not let the employee make a mistake. “Foolproof” devices  Enhances cleanliness and the aesthetic quality of the service.  Reminds workers of steps often forgotten in hurrying to satisfy customers in a timely manner.

Classification of Service Failures with Poka-Yoke Opportunities Server Errors Task: Doing work incorrectly Treatment: Failure to listen to customer Tangible: Failure to wear clean uniform Customer Errors Preparation: Failure to bring necessary materials Encounter: Failure to follow system flow Resolution: Failure to signal service failure

House of Quality (Q Function Development) Customer Input at Product Design Stage

 Cost of Quality (Juran)  Service Process Control  Statistical Process Control (Deming)  Unconditional Service Guarantee Achieving Service Quality

Costs of Service Quality (Bank Example)

Control Chart of Departure Delays expected Lower Control Limit

Resources Identify reason for nonconformance Establish measure of performance Monitor conformance to requirements Take corrective action Service concept Customer input Customer output Service process Service Process Control

 Unconditional (L.L. Bean)  Easy to understand and communicate (Bennigan’s)  Meaningful (Domino’s Pizza)  Easy to invoke (Cititravel)  Easy to collect (Manpower) Unconditional Service Guarantee: Customer View

 Focuses on customers (British Airways: Care, Concern, Initiative, Problem Solving, Recovery)  Sets clear standards (FedEx)  Guarantees feedback (Manpower)  Promotes an understanding of the service delivery system (Bug Killer)  Builds customer loyalty by making expectations explicit Unconditional Service Guarantee: Management View

Disney’s SERVICE  Smile  Eye contact & Body language  Respect & Welcome  Value the Magic  Initiate Guest Contact  Create Service Solutions  End W/ a "Thank You"

 All customers want to be satisfied.  Customer loyalty is only due to the lack of a better alternative.  Giving customers some extra value will delight them by exceeding their expectations and insure their return. Customer Satisfaction

Categories of Tipping Behavior  Person-to-Person Service  Time the server spends at table doing extra...  # visits to table by server after entree’s been served  Average # of times server refills drink glasses  Service Delays -- customers don’t want to be ignored once they have arrived  Ambience Variables--  Lighting Level  Music Level  Color Scheme  Presence of Cooking Smells  Check Presentation  Promotion and Suggestive Selling

 The average business only hears from 4% of their customers who are dissatisfied with their products or services. Of the 96% who do not bother to complain, 25% of them have serious problems.  The 4% complainers are more likely to stay with the supplier than are the 96% non- complainers. Customer Feedback and Word-of-Mouth

 About 60% of the complainers would stay as customers if their problem was resolved and 95% would stay if the problem was resolved quickly.  A dissatisfied customer will tell between 10 and 20 other people about their problem.  A customer who has had a problem resolved by a company will tell about 5 people about their situation. Customer Feedback and Word-of-Mouth (Cont)

 Service delivery system should conform to customer expectations.  Customer impression of service influenced by use of all senses.  Service managers lose sensitivity due to familiarity.  Need detailed service audit from a customer’s perspective. Walk-Through-Audit

Approaches to Service Recovery  Case-by-case addresses each customer’s complaint individually but could lead to perception of unfairness.  Systematic response uses a protocol to handle complaints but needs prior identification of critical failure points and continuous updating.  Early intervention attempts to fix problem before the customer is affected.  Substitute service allows rival firm to provide service but could lead to loss of customer.