Services Marketing Notes
Services Marketing Notes
Services Marketing Notes
and Characteristics
Introduction
The world economy nowadays is increasingly characterized as a service economy. This
is primarily due to the increasing importance and share of the service sector in the
economies of most developed and developing countries. In fact, the growth of the
service sector has long been considered as indicative of a countrys economic progress.
Economic history tells us that all developing nations have invariably experienced a shift
from agriculture to industry and then to the service sector as the main stay of the
economy.
This shift has also brought about a change in the definition of goods and services
themselves. No longer are goods considered separate from services. Rather, services
now increasingly represent an integral part of the product and this interconnectedness
of goods and services is represented on a goods-services continuum.
Types of Services
1. Core Services: A service that is the primary purpose of the transaction. Eg: a
haircut or the services of lawyer or teacher.
2. Supplementary Services: Services that are rendered as a corollary to the sale
of a tangible product. Eg: Home delivery options offered by restaurants above a
minimum bill value.
Services
A physical commodity
A process or activity
Tangible
Intangible
Homogenous
Heterogeneous
Can be stored
Cannot be stored
The U.S. economy has evolved into a service economy with services like health care, education
and consulting making up a larger part of the overall economy. Marketing such services is an
important skill--and a tough one--for businesses to have. Without a tangible product to show and
tell customers about, service marketers must be adept at pulling together all the pieces of the
marketing mix to create value for their intended consumers.
Multiple Touchpoints
Service marketing involves many touchpoints for the consumer. Interactions with multiple
people and experiences that are less tangible than when buying an actual product all impact the
consumer's perspective of the purchase process. These touchpoints work together to establish a
perception in the consumer's mind.
Services Proliferate
Consumers have many service options to choose from, and because the product is intangible, the
challenge for the service marketer is to somehow make her services stand out from the crowd.
Because service marketing is so prolific, marketers must think of ways to communicate the
benefits of the service they offer in language that reflects consumer need and value.
Technology Impacts
Technology is having a major impact on the service economy. You can use technology to
streamline service activities and provide do-it-yourself options for consumers. Internet-based
services, for instance, allow consumers to participate actively in the service marketing process,
often never involving contact with another human being. Having a website is important, because
people like to get information about service providers before deciding which one to use.
The Service Economy
The world economy is increasingly characterized as a service economy. This is
primarily due to the increasing importance and share of the service sector in the
economies of most developed and developing countries. In fact, the growth of the
service sector has long been considered as an indicator of a country's economic
progress. Economic history tells us that all developing nations have invariably
experienced a shift from agriculture to industry and then to the service sector as the
mainstay of the economy. This shift has also brought about a change in the definition of
goods and services themselves.
Service organizations vary widely in size. At one end of the scale are huge international
corporations operating in such industries as airlines, banking, insurance,
telecommunications, and hotels. At the other end of the scale are a vast array of locally
owned and operated small businesses, such as restaurants, laundries, optometrists,
beauty parlors, and numerous business-to-business services.
The service sector is going through revolutionary change, which dramatically affects the
way in which we live and work. New services are continually being launched to satisfy
our existing needs and to meet needs that we did not even know we had. Nearly fifty
years ago, when the first electronic file sharing system was created, few people likely
anticipated the future demand for online banking, website hosting, or email providers.
Today, many of us feel we can't do without them. Similar transformations are occurring
in business-to-business markets.
The Role Of the Service Economy In Development
As of 2008, services constituted over 50% of GDP in low income countries. As their
economies continue to develop, the importance of the service sector continues to grow.
For instance, services accounted for 47% of economic growth in sub-Saharan Africa
over the period 20002005, while industry only contributed 37% and agriculture only
16% in that same period. This means that recent economic growth in Africa relied as
much on services as on natural resources or textiles, despite many of those countries
benefiting from trade preferences in primary and secondary goods.
As a result of these changes, people are leaving the agricultural sector to find work in
the service economy. This job creation is particularly useful as often it provides
employment for unskilled workers in the tourism and retail sectors, which benefits the
poor and represents an overall net increase in employment. The service economy in
developing countries is most often made up of the following industries: financial
services, tourism, distribution, health, and education.
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Growth of service sector in indiaServices Sector Growth Rate in India GDP has been very rapid in the last few years. The Services
Sector contributes the most to the Indian GDP. The Growth Rate of the Services Sector in India GDP has
risen due to several reasons and it has also given a major boost to the Indian economy.
The Indian economy is the second fastest major growing economy in the whole world with the growing
rate of the GDP at 9.4% in 2006- 2007. The economy of India is the twelfth biggest in the world for it has
the GDP of US$ 1.09 trillion in 2007. The real reason for the growth of the service sector is due to the
increase in urbanization, privatization and more demand for intermediate and final consumer services.
Availability of quality services is vital for the well being of the economy. Along with the global trends,
Indian service sector has witnessed a major boom and is one of the major contributors to both
employment and national income in recent times. The activities under the purview of the service sector
are quite diverse. Trading, transportation and communication, financial, real estate and business
services, community, social and personal services come within the gambit of the service industry.
Step to increase the cash outflow through reduction in the statutory liquidity andcash reserve ratio.
Nationalized banks including SBI were allowed to sell stakes to private sector and private investors
were allowed to enter the banking domain. Foreign banks were given greater access to the domestic
market, both as subsidiaries and branches, provided the foreign banks maintained a minimum assigned
capital and would be governed by the same rules and regulations governing domestic banks.
Banks were given greater freedom to leverage the capital markets and determine their asset portfolios.
The banks were allowed to provide advances against equity provided as collateral and provide bank
guarantees to the broking community.
Insurance Sector
The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority Act 1999 (IRDA Act) allowed the participation of
private insurance companies in the insurance sector. The primary role of IRDA was to safeguard the
interest of insurance policy holders, to regulate, promote and ensure orderly growth of the insurance
industry. The insurance sector could invest in the capital markets and other than traditional insurance
products, various market link insurance products were available to the end customer to choose from.
Future Trends
Following the success of US and UK, more countries in the European Union would outsource their
business.
Technological power shift from the West to the East as India and China emerge as major players.
Political backlash over outsourcing would come down as companies reap the benefit of outsourcing.
Classification of services
In order to be able to make a clear and relevant classification of
services, we would first need to understand the concept of the
word itself. Services usually refer to processes and not physical
products. Some services may include people whereas other
services (like online services) may including objects which are
managed by people.
Examples of services which include people can be a hair salon,
education, theater, restaurants, public transportation. On the
Stage 3 Alternative evaluation: You have a bad opinion of the Indian restaurant since youve
been sick the last time (inept set). The pizzeria is both recommended by your friend and also
happens to be a well-known brand (positive perception evoked set). As for the sushi
restaurant, it got good reviews on Tripadvisor (positive perception evoked set).
Stage 4 Purchase decision: After evaluating the possibilities, youve decided to choose the
well-known pizza delivery chain. In addition, a new episode of your favorite TV show is
broadcasted tonight on TV.
Stage 5 Post-purchase behavior: The pizza was good (positive review). But you know there
was too many calories and you regret a little bit (mixed feelings about yourself). The next time
you will choose the sushi restaurant. There is less fat in sushi than pizza (next purchase
behavior)!
Customer satisfaction reflects the expectations and experiences that the customer has
with a product or service. Expectations reflect both past and current product evaluation
and use experiences.
Think about any major purchases youve made recently. Did you research your
purchase? Did you collect information from advertising, salespersons, friends,
associates, or even test the product?
This information influences our expectations and gives us the ability to evaluate quality,
value, and the ability of the product or service to meet our needs.
Customers hold both explicit and implicit performance expectations for attributes,
features, and benefits of products and services. The nature of these expectations will
dictate the form and even the wording of customer satisfaction survey questions. Let me
repeat this: the nature of these expectations will dictate the form and even the wording
of your satisfaction questions.
Understanding the following 7 customer expectations is critical before you set out to
measure customer satisfaction.
1. Explicit Expectations
Explicit expectations are mental targets for product performance, such as well-identified
performance standards.
For example, if expectations for a color printer were for 17 pages per minute and high
quality color printing, but the product actually delivered 3 pages per minute and good
quality color printing, then the cognitive evaluation comparing product performance and
expectations would be 17 PPM 3 PPM + High Good, with each item weighted by the
associated importance.
2. Implicit Expectations
Static performance expectations address how performance and quality are defined for a
specific application. Performance measures related to quality of outcome may include
the evaluation of accessibility, customization, dependability, timeliness, accuracy, and
user friendly interfaces.
Static performance expectations are the visible part of the iceberg; they are the
performance we see andoften erroneouslyare assumed to be the only dimensions
of performance that exist.
4. Dynamic Performance Expectations
Dynamic performance expectations are about how the product or service is expected to
evolve over time. Dynamic expectations may be about the changes in support, product,
or service needed to meet future business or use environments.
Dynamic performance expectations may help to produce static performance
expectations as new uses, integrations, or system requirements develop and become
more stable.
5. Technological Expectations
For example, mobile phones are continually evolving, leading to higher expectations of
new features.
Mobile service providers, in an effort to limit a consumers ability to switch to new
technology phones, have marketed rate plans with high cancellation penalties for
switching providers, but with liberal upgrade plans for the phones they offer.
The availability of low profile phones with email, camera, MP3, blue tooth technology,
and increased storage will change technology expectations as well as the static and
dynamic performance expectations of the product.
These highly involving products are not just feature based, but raise expectations that
enhance perceptions of status, ego, self-image, and can even evoke emotions of
isolation and fear when the product is not available.
6. Interpersonal Expectations
Interpersonal expectations reflect the relationship between the customer and the
product or service provider.
In building a customer satisfaction survey, it is also helpful to evaluate why prepurchase expectations or post-purchase satisfaction may or may not be fulfilled or even
measurable.
Expectations may not include unanticipated service attributes that are new to that
consumer.
The product use may attract so little attention as to produce no conscious affect
or cognition (evaluation). When measured, this results in meaningless
satisfaction or dissatisfaction information.
The product purchaser, influencer and user may have each been a different type
of individual, each having different expectations.
Your research study may also benefit from considering expectations related to
perceived quality and value.
Customer Expectations
Remember to keep these 7 customer expectations in mind before you set out to
measure customer satisfaction. Understanding these will ensure that your customer
satisfaction research will provide accurate insights. Having a top-notch online survey
software is one thing, using it correctly is another.
Factors that influence customer expectations of service
2. Lasting service intensifiers individual factors that lead the customer to a heightened sensitivity to
service
Importance
In todays increasingly service driven markets and with the proliferation of multiple
providers for every type of product or service, moments of truth have become an
important fact of customer interaction that marketers need to keep in mind. They are
critical as they determine a customers perception of, and reaction to, a brand. Moments
of truth can make or break an organizations relationship with its customers.
This is more so in the case of service providers since they are selling intangibles by
creating customer expectations. Services are often differentiated in the minds of the
customer by promises of what is to come. Managing these expectations constitutes a
critical component of creating favorable moments of truth which in turn are critical for
business success.
overall feelings about the company will decrease and repurchase intentions will
also reduce. If the recovery effort is absolutely superlative then the negative
impression can be overcome.
There is a recent study which shows no support to recovery paradox. It shows the
overall satisfaction was consistently lower for those customers who had
experienced a service failure than for those who had experienced no failure, no
matter what the recovery effort is. The explanation for why no recovery paradox is
suggested by the magnitude of the service failure in this study it is-a three hour
airplane flight delay. This type of failure may be too much to be overcome by any
recovery effort. Considering mixed opinions on if recovery paradox exists it is safe
to say doing it right the first time is the best and safest strategy. When a failure
does occur then every effort at superior recovery should be made. In cases where
the failure can be fully overcome the failure is less critical, or the recovery effort is
clearly superlative, it may be possible to observe evidence of the recovery paradox.
How Customers Respond to Service Failure
If customers initiate action following service failure, the action can be various
types. A dissatisfied customer can choose complaint on the spot to the service
provider, giving the company the opportunity to respond immediately. This is often
the best-case scenario for the company it has the second chance right at that
movement to satisfy the customer, keep his or her business in the future, and
potentially avoids any negative word of mouth.
Some customer chooses not to complaint directly to the provider but rather spread
negative word of the mouth about the company to friend, relatives, and coworkers.
This negative word of mouth can be extremely detrimental because it can reinforce
the customers feeling of negativism and spread that negative impression to other
as well. Further, the company has no chance to recover unless the negative word of
mouth is accompanied by a complaint directly to the company.
Customers want that they should not be made to feel that they are the cause of
the problem. (Though in many cases they are responsible for nuisance)
There are again five steps involved in order to deal with service failure. They are
mentioned as below
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in military science. The highest-level officers shape the strategy and revise it
over time, while the line officers make tactical decisions in support of carrying
out the strategy. In business as in military affairs, the boundaries between
levels are not always distinct; tactical information dynamically informs
strategy, and individual people often move between roles over time.
What is service productivity? Explain strategies for improving it?
Ans.
The productivity of process is related to how effectively input resources are transformed
developing technologies and automation. For eg Customers not only interact with a contact
person, they also transact using an ATM or a computer (website). According Normann, there are
five main reasons for using information technologies:
(a)
(b)
Standardizing services.
(c)
computers).
(d)
(e)
2.
performance cannot be undermined. For e.g. it is the receptionist who first interacts with the
customer or the hairstylist who cuts the hair etc. To a large extent, it is on the basis of interaction
with this employee that the customer forms his perception. Therefore, employees and staff
must not only be trained in functional/technical skills but also in soft skills. Training should be
looked as an investment and not a cost.
3.
understood, accepted and practiced by all. For e.g. quality and customer service must be seen as
an invaluable partner, not just for gatekeepers or receptionists but even managers and directors.
4.
resources. It should understand what each department requires so it can find the best employees.
They can take inputs from each department and design job descriptions which help find the best
fit employee. Better suited employees lead to increased productivity
5.
Reducing service level: By allotting less time to a service offering, productivity can be
increased. For e.g., a doctor gives less time to his patients so he can see more patients in a given
day. However, care should be taken that quality does not suffer, otherwise it would lead to
customer dissatisfaction
6.
For e.g. a doctor can start a pathology lab in his premises, or hotels can add event planners to
their list of service offerings etc.
7.
Changes in demand and supply: These forces play a role in determining the service
productivity. For e.g. to meet an increased demand, companies can hire part- time employees and
where capacity is restricted, companies can promote non peak times
To summarize, in the words of Paul Krugman, Productivity isnt everything, but in the long run
it is almost everything. A countrys ability to improve its standard of living over time depends
almost entirely on its ability to raise its output per worker.
Strategies to match demand and capacity
When an organization has a clear grasp of its capacity constraints and an understanding of
demand patterns. It is in a good position to develop strategies for matching supply and demand.
There are two general approaches for accomplishing demand and capacity.
The first is to smooth the demand fluctuations themselves by shifting demand to match
existing supply.
The second general strategy is to adjust capacity to match fluctuations in demand.
late in the year and until April 15. When federal taxes are due in the United States. During other
times of the year they can focus on audits and general consulting activities.
Air lines even change the configuration of their plane seating to match the demand from different
market segments. In some planes there may be no first-class section at all. On routes with a large
demand for first-class seating, a significant proportion of seats may be placed in first class..
Care should be exercised in implementing strategies to change the service offering. Because such
changes may easily imply and require alterations. Other marketing mix variables are promotion,
pricing and staffing to match the new offering. Unless these additional mix variables are altered
effectively to support the offering, the strategy may not work. Even when done well, the
downside of such changes can be a confusion in the organizations image from the customers
perspective or a loss of strategic focus for the organization and its employees.
Communicate with customers
Another approach for shifting demand and capacity is to communicate with the customers. It
helps them know the times of peak demand so that they can choose to use the service at
alternative times and avoid crowding or delays. E.g signs in banks and post offices let customers
know their busiest hours and busiest days of the week can serve as a warning. This allows
customers to shift their demand to another time if possible.
Forewarning customers about busy times and possible waits can have added benefits. Many
customer service phone lines provide a similar warning by informing waiting customers of
approximately how long it will be until they are served. Those who dont want to wait may
choose to call back later when the lines are less busy. Research in a bank context found that
customers who were forewarned about the banks busiest hours were more satisfied. Even when
they had to wait than were customers who were not forewarned.
In addition to signage communicating peak demand times to customers, advertising and other
forms of promotion can emphasize different service benefits during peak and slow periods.
Advertising and sales messages can also remind customers about peak demand times.
As noted earlier, sometimes it is difficult to know in advance, particularly in the case of human
resources, when capacity has been stretched too far.
Align capacity with demand fluctuations
This basic strategy is sometimes known as a chase demand strategy. By adjusting service
resources creatively, organizations can in effect chase the demand curves to match capacity with
customer demand patterns. Time, labor, facilities, and equipment are again the focus, this time
with an eye toward adjusting the basic mix and use of these resources.
Specific actions might include the following:
Use part-time employees: In this case the organizations labor resource is being aligned
with demand. Retailers hire part-time employees during the holiday rush, tax accountants
engage temporary help during tax season, tourist resorts bring in extra workers during
peak season. Restaurants often ask employees to work split shifts (work the lunch shift,
leave for a few hours, and come back for the dinner rush) during peak mealtime hours.
Outsourcing: Firms that find they have a temporary peak in demand for a service that
they cannot perform themselves may choose to outsource the entire service. For
example, in recent years, many firms have found they dont have the capacity to fulfill
their own needs for technology support, Web design, and software-related services.
Rather than try to hire and train additional employees, these companies look to firms that
specialize in outsourcing these types of functions as a temporary (or sometimes longterm) solution.
Another strategy may involve moving the service to a new location to meet customer demand or
even bringing the service to customers. Mobile training facilities, libraries, and blood donation
facilities are examples of services that physically follow customers.
PHYSIVCAL EVIDENCE:
Physical evidence comprises of the elements which are incorporated into a service to to make it
tangible and somewhat measurable. At the same time, physical evidence also helps in the
positioning of the brand and for targeting the right kind of customers. The best example of
Physical evidence in use is the hospitality industry. Airlines offer premium travel as well as
economy classes. Similarly, restaurants are known to be 3 star, 4 star, 5 star. All such
differentiation, and the target customer that accompanies such differentiation, is because of
the use of physical evidence in marketing.
Role of physical evidence in marketing mix
The marketing mix is always made after segmentation, targeting and positioning. The objective
of the marketing mix is to incorporate the right elements which attract the desired customer
profile. Thus, in services, to attract the right segment and target, and to achieve the right
positioning, physical evidence is used. Off course, physical evidence in marketing is not used for
services only but also for products nowadays. This is because products are nowadays sold
through mainly retail and e commerce. Both these areas are services within themselves. And
hence retailers always focus on elements which can make their services better.
Tools of physical evidence
Ambiance The look and feel of a restaurant can be described as the ambiance. For example
the Sofa that the restaurant uses, the music that it plays, the lighting it has maintained etc.
Layout Especially applicable in retail, the layout of the showroom contributes to the role of
physical evidence in marketing. For example in Ikes, the store is laid out in such a manner that
the customer is able to get to his choice of furniture very fast.
Branding Although part of promotions, the packaging, branding and use of corporate
communications also plays an important role in physical evidence in the marketing mix.
For more tools of physical evidence, this site is an excellent resource.
How physical evidence effects other Ps in marketing mix
Incorporating physical evidence is not free of charge and has an inherent cost involved. Thus, if
you want to establish a premium restaurant, then you need to invest for plush furniture,
promote in premium areas, get the right people, so on and so forth. The pricing for a premium
restaurant will be higher also. Thus, physical evidence in marketing is dynamic in nature, and a
change in physical evidence factors will bring a change to all other Ps in the marketing mix.
Thus, if you want to succeed in your business endeavor, you need to plan all the Ps of
marketing mix. And if you are in the services sector, then physical evidence as well as people
are two of the most important Ps of the marketing mix.
Service-scape: 4 Important Roles of the Service-scape Explained!
by Smriti Chand Service Management
Advertisements:
The service-scape can play many roles simultaneously. An examination of the variety of roles
and how they interact makes clear how strategically important it is to provide appropriate
physical evidence of the service.
1. Package:
Similar to a tangible products package, the service-scape and other elements of physical
evidence essentially wrap the service and convey an external image of what is inside to
consumers. The service-scape is the outward appearance of the organization and thus can be
critical in forming initial impressions or setting up customer expectations it is a visual
metaphor for the intangible service.
This packaging role is particularly important in creating expectations for new customers and for
newly established service organizations that are trying to build a particular image. The physical
surroundings offer an organization the opportunity to convey an image in a way not unlike the
way an individual chooses to dress for success.
2. Facilitator:
The service-scape can also serve as a facilitator in aiding the performances of persons in the
environment. How the setting is designed can enhance or inhibit the efficient flow of activities
in the service setting, making it easier or harder for customers and employees to accomplish
their goals.
A well-designed, functional facility can make the service a pleasure to experience from the
customers point of view and a pleasure to perform from the employees. On the other hand,
poor and inefficient design may frustrate both customers and employees.
3. Socializer:
The design of the service-scape aids in the socialization of both employees and customers in the
sense that it helps to convey expected roles, behaviours, and relationships. For example, a new
employee in a professional services firm would come to understand her position in the
hierarchy partially through noting her office assignment, the quality of her office furnishings,
and her location relative to others in the organization.
The design of the facility can also suggest to customers what their role is relative to employees,
what parts of the service-scape they are welcome in and which are for employees only, how
they should behave while in the environment, and what types of interactions are encouraged.
4. Differentiator:
The design of the physical facility can differentiate a firm from its competitors and signal the
market segment the service is intended for. Given its power as a differentiator, changes in the
physical environment can be used to reposition a firm and/or to attract new market segments.
In shopping malls the colours used in decor and displays and type of music wafting from a store
signal the intended market segment. The design of a physical setting can also differentiate one
area of a service organization from another. This is commonly the case in the hotel industry
where one large hotel may have several levels of dining possibilities, each signed by differences
in design.
While it is useful from a strategic point of view to think about the multiple roles of the servicescape and how they interact, making actual decisions about service-scape design requires an
understanding of why the effects occur and how to manage them.
Customers generally have a tendency to compare the service they 'experience' with the
service they 'expect' to receive; thus, when the experience does not match the
expectation, a gap arises.
GAP 1:
Gap between consumer expectation and management perception: This gap arises
when the management or service provider does not correctly perceive what the
customer wants or needs. For instance hotel administrators may think guests want
better food or in-house restaurant facilities, but guests may be more concerned with the
responsiveness of the staff or the cleanliness of their rooms.
Consumer Expectations
Hotel administrators may think guests want better food or in-house
restaurant facilities, but guests may be more concerned with the
responsiveness of the staff.
Before introducing a new product or service into the market, a company must conduct market research to
understand whether there would be any demand for the product, and what features should be
incorporated. The better this process is conducted, the smaller the knowledge gap will be.
There are methods of ensuring that customer desires are taken on board. These include: comprehensive
studies, gauging satisfaction after individual transactions (surveys immediately after a purchase is made),
customer panels and interviews, and through customer complaints.
Communication channels
The fewer the layers between management and customer contact personnel, the more likely that customer
preferences will be incorporated into higher-level decision making on the product.
GAP 2 :
Gap between management perception and service quality specification: This is when
the management or service provider might correctly perceive what the customer wants,
but may not set a performance standard. An example here would be that hospital
administrators may tell the nurse to respond to a request fast', but may not specify how
fast'.
GAP 3:
Gap between service quality specification and service delivery: This gap may arise in
situations pertaining to the service personnel. It could happen due to poor training,
incapability or unwillingness to meet the set service standard. An example would be
when a doctor's office has very specific standards of hygiene communicated but the
hired staff may have been poorly trained on the need to follow these strict protocols.
GAP 4 :
Gap between service delivery and external communication: Consumer expectations are
highly influenced by statements made by company representatives and advertisements.
The gap arises when these assumed expectations are not fulfilled at the time of delivery
of the service. For example a hospital printed on its brochure may have clean and
furnished rooms but in reality, it may be poorly maintained in this case the patient's
expectations are not met.
GAP 5:
Gap between expected service and experienced service: This gap arises when the
consumer misinterprets the service quality. The physician may keep visiting the patient
to show and ensure care, but the patient may interpret this as an indication that
something is really wrong.
Many researchers have struggled with the issue of how to measure service quality.
Perhaps the most widely used measure is based on a set of five dimensions which have
been consistently ranked by customers to be most important for service quality,
regardless of service industry. These dimensions defined by the SERVQUAL
measurement instrument are as follows:
Assurance: knowledge and courtesy of employees and their ability to convey trust and
confidence; and
Empathy: the caring, individualized attention the firm provides its customers.
These five SERVQUAL dimensions are used to measure the gap between customers
expectation for excellence and their perception of actual service delivered. The
SERVQUAL instrument, when applied over time, helps service providers understand
both customer expectations, perceptions of specific services, and areas of needed
quality improvements.
SERVQUAL has been used in many ways, such as identifying specific service elements
requiring improvement, and targeting training opportunities for service staff.
Proper development of items used in the SERVQUAL instrument provides rich itemlevel information that leads to practical implications for a service manager.
The service quality dimensions evaluated by SERVQUAL should be adjusted for optimal
performance in different industry, public and private sector applications.
SERVQUAL scores are highly reliable, but when used in different industries may fail to
produce a clear delineation of the five basic dimensions.Other measures, such as the
Six Sigma model should be considered for applicability in quantifying the gap between
service expectations and perceptions.
SERVQUAL SYSTEM
Concept[edit]
The SERVQUAL service quality model was developed by a group of American authors, 'Parsu'
Parasuraman, Valarie Zeithaml and Len Berry, in 1988. It highlights the main components of high
quality service. The SERVQUAL authors originally identified ten elements of service quality, but in
later work, these were collapsed into five factors - reliability, assurance, tangibles, empathy and
responsiveness - that create the acronym RATER.
Businesses using SERVQUAL to measure and manage service quality deploy a questionnaire that
measures both the customer expectations of service quality in terms of these five dimensions, and
their perceptions of the service they receive. When customer expectations are greater than their
perceptions of received delivery, service quality is deemed low.
In addition to being a measurement model, SERVQUAL is also a management model. The
SERVQUAL authors identified five Gaps that may cause customers to experience poor service
quality.
Deficiencies in human resource policies such as ineffective recruitment, role ambiguity, role
conflict, improper evaluation and compensation system
Six Sigma
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other uses, see Sigma 6.
Industry
Manufacturing methods
Batch production Job production
Flow production
Improvement methods
RCM TPM VDM
QRM TOC
Lean Six Sigma TQM ZD
Process control
PLC DCS
Six Sigma is a set of techniques and tools for process improvement. It was introduced by engineer
Bill Smith while working at Motorola in 1986.[1][2] Jack Welch made it central to his business strategy
at General Electric in 1995.[3] Today, it is used in many industrial sectors.[4]
Six Sigma seeks to improve the quality of the output of a process by identifying and removing the
causes of defects and minimizing variabilityin manufacturing and business processes. It uses a set
of quality management methods, mainly empirical, statistical methods, and creates a special
infrastructure of people within the organization, who are experts in these methods. Each Six Sigma
project carried out within an organization follows a defined sequence of steps and has specific value
targets, for example: reduce process cycle time, reduce pollution, reduce costs, increase customer
satisfaction, and increase profits.
The term Six Sigma originated from terminology associated with statistical modeling of
manufacturing processes. The maturity of a manufacturing process can be described by
a sigma rating indicating its yield or the percentage of defect-free products it creates. A six sigma
process is one in which 99.99966% of all opportunities to produce some feature of a part are
statistically expected to be free of defects (3.4 defective features per million opportunities), although
this defect level corresponds to only a 4.5 sigma level. Motorola set a goal of "six sigma" for all of its
manufacturing operations, and this goal became a by-word for the management and engineering
practices used to achieve it.