Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byJunior Townsend Modified over 9 years ago
1
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 0 in Chapter 12 Chapter 12 Designing and Managing Services PowerPoint by Karen E. James Louisiana State University - Shreveport
2
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 1 in Chapter 12 Objectives Learn how services are defined and classified. Understand how service firms improve their competitive differentiation, service quality, and productivity. Identify how goods-producing companies can improve their customer support services.
3
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 2 in Chapter 12 Nature of Services The Service Industry includes the: –Government sector –Private nonprofit sector –Business sector –Manufacturing sector
4
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 3 in Chapter 12 Nature of Services Service Mix Categories: –Pure tangible good: no services –Tangible good with accompanying services –Hybrid: equal parts service and goods –Major service with accompanying minor goods and services –Pure service
5
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 4 in Chapter 12 Nature of Services Characteristics Intangibility Inseparability Variability Perishability Cannot be touched, seen, tasted, heard, or smelled before purchase Lack of trial means higher consumer risk Consumers rely on cues to draw quality inferences Marketers must try to “tangibilize the intangible”
6
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 5 in Chapter 12 Nature of Services Characteristics Intangibility Inseparability Variability Perishability Services are produced and consumed at the same time (air travel) Service providers and sometimes other customers become part of the service (restaurant) Strong preferences for service providers exist
7
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 6 in Chapter 12 Nature of Services Characteristics Intangibility Inseparability Variability Perishability Service providers vary with respect to attitudes, skills, mood, etc. Even the same provider may give different service on a different day. Quality control is critical: –Hiring the right people –Standardizing service –Monitoring satisfaction
8
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 7 in Chapter 12 Nature of Services Characteristics Intangibility Inseparability Variability Perishability Services can not be inventoried or otherwise stored Capacity / demand management is critical: –Demand side strategies –Supply side strategies
9
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 8 in Chapter 12 Nature of Services Demand-side strategies –Use differential pricing –Cultivate nonpeak demand –Develop complementary services –Install reservation systems Supply-side strategies –Hire part-time employees –Introduce peak-time efficiency routines –Increase consumer participation –Plan facilities for future expansion –Share services
10
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 9 in Chapter 12 Marketing Strategies People, physical evidence, and process must be considered in addition to the 4 “P’s” when creating external marketing plans. Successfully delivering a service often depends on staff being trained via internal marketing efforts.
11
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 10 in Chapter 12 Marketing Strategies Interactive marketing refers to the employees’ skill in serving the client. Customers judge a service by its: –Technical quality –Functional quality Search qualities, experience qualities and credence qualities are evaluated by customers.
12
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 11 in Chapter 12 Marketing Strategies Marketing Tasks Managing differentiation Managing service quality Managing productivity Can not differentiate on price alone Innovative features Delivery system –Reliability –Resilience –Innovativeness Image and branding
13
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 12 in Chapter 12 Marketing Strategies Marketing Tasks Managing differentiation Managing service quality Managing productivity The service quality model identifies five gaps that can cause service delivery failure Service companies that successfully address these gaps follow common practices
14
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 13 in Chapter 12 Marketing Strategies Consumer expectations and management perceptions Management perception and service-quality specification Service-quality specifications and service delivery Service delivery and external communications Service Delivery Failure Results from Gaps Between: Service-quality specifications and service delivery
15
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 14 in Chapter 12 Marketing Strategies A strategic concept Commitment from top-management High standards Firm and customer monitoring systems Well-Managed Service Firms Share These Characteristics Satisfaction of employees and customers
16
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 15 in Chapter 12 Marketing Strategies Marketing Tasks Managing differentiation Managing service quality Managing productivity Have service providers work more skillfully Decrease service quality, increase service quantity Industrialize the service Reduce need for service Design a more effective service Give customers incentives to serve themselves Use technology
17
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 16 in Chapter 12 Managing Product Support Services Product support services are often sources of competitive advantage When designing service support programs, marketers must consider key customer concerns: –Failure frequency –Downtime duration –Out-of-pocket expenses
18
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 17 in Chapter 12 Managing Product Support Services Marketers must design appealing and competitive service offerings that will attract customers. Service offerings should include: –Facilitating services –Value-augmenting services –Optional service contracts
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.