Handling Customer Complaints and Managing Service Recovery
Handling Customer Complaints and Managing Service Recovery
Handling Customer Complaints and Managing Service Recovery
Handling Customer
Complaints and
Managing Service
Recovery
Chapter 5 Objectives
z To outline the courses of action open to
a dissatisfied customer
z Explain the factors influencing complaint
behaviour
z Identify the principles of an effective
service-recovery system
z Explain the techniques for identifying
the root cause of service failures
Complain to business,
Take private, or govt.
some agencies
action
Dissatisfaction
occurs Decide to stop buying
product or brand or
boycott seller
Take some form
of private action
70
60 55% All respon-
dents
50
37% 34%
40
27%
30
18%
20
10
0
1 2 3-4 5+
27% 19% 30% 24%
Number of contracts (Average: 3.4)
Lovelock, Patterson, Walker: Services Marketing 3e © 2004 Pearson Education Australia 16
Figure 5.6
Impact of problem experience/complaining
on Customer loyalty for all products/services
% Exceeded/satisfied expectations with action taken
100 95
%
90 83
80 %
70
60
46
50
%
40
23 23
30 % %
20 10
10 %
0
No Exceeded Satisfied Dissatisfied Non-
Mollified
problem expectations complainants complainant
Lovelock, Patterson, Walker: Services Marketing 3e © 2004 Pearson Education Australia 17
Figure 5.7 Components of an
effective service-recovery system
Conduct research
Identify service Monitor complaints
complaints Develop ‘complaints as
opportunity’ culture
Develop effective
Resolve complaints
systems & training in
effectively complaints handling
Justice Considerations
Source: S.Tax and S.W. Brown, Handbook of Services Marketing and Management, © 2000, Reprinted by permission of
Sage Publications Inc.
Lovelock, Patterson, Walker: Services Marketing 3e © 2004 Pearson Education Australia 20
The Role of Justice in the
Complaint Handling Procedure
z Fishbone diagram: a
cause and effect analysis