Chapt 3 - Customer Focus - Costs and Benefits
Chapt 3 - Customer Focus - Costs and Benefits
Chapt 3 - Customer Focus - Costs and Benefits
Customer Satisfaction
Customer Satisfaction with a purchase depends on the products performance relative to a buyers expectations. If performance exceeds or meets expectations the customer is highly satisfied or delighted.
Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 3e Philip Kotler, John Bowen, James Makens 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458 2
Customer Delight
Many organisations have come to realise that customer satisfaction (or, better still, customer delight) is the only route to long-term sustainable competitive advantage.
If an organisation does not know how good it is at delivering customer service, then it will tend to become complacent.
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Customer Delight
Problems and obstacles include the following: use of vague, generalised statements
like quite good, getting better, world class (without any comprehension of what being world class might actually entail)
Customer Delight
Problems and obstacles include the following: (contd)
customer perceptions
reliance on infrequent survey data about customer perceptions and the selective application of the data thus acquired
limited improvements
so-called improvements which only address front-line customer-care features like answering the telephone within three rings when what really matters is how customers are handled once the telephone has been picked up.
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creating dialogue
engage the customer in a dialogue, thus ensuring that the customer feels an affinity with the product or service on offer
Importance of relationships
Loyal customers are valuable because:
They do not have to be acquired they buy a broad range of products they cost less to service as they are familiar with the companys way of doing business they become less sensitive to price over time they can recommend by word of mouth
Partnership
The company works continuously with the customer to discover ways to develop better value.
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Orientation to customer retention Continuous customer contact Focus on customer value Long time scale High customer service emphasis High commitment to meeting customer expectations Quality is concern of all staff
Orientation to single sales Discontinuous customer contact Focus on product features Short time scale Little emphasis on customer service Limited commitment to meeting customer expectations Quality is the concern of the production staff
2003 Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458
Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 3e Philip Kotler, John Bowen, James Makens
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Relationship Marketing
The purpose of relationship marketing is to establish, maintain and enhance relationships with customers and other parties so that the objectives of both parties involved are met.
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Quality Programmes
The heart of quality programmes is the need to define, research and respond to customer need. This is the marketing orientation at work.
Top management should provide leadership and aims to take consumer consumer-driven approach. All parts of the organisation must be committed. It must be monitored and measured to check that the systems .are working,
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Result of TQM
The result of TQM is to aim to get it right, first time, and to improve service continuously. continuously. A very important way of achieving this is to train for quality and to design quality into every stage of the delivery of the organisations products and services to is customers.
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