Introduction To Service Marketing: Presented By: Antra Singh
Introduction To Service Marketing: Presented By: Antra Singh
Introduction To Service Marketing: Presented By: Antra Singh
Marketing
Presented By:
Antra Singh
Goods – Services - Products
• Goods – defined as objects, devices or things
• Services – defined as deeds, efforts or
performances
• Products – refers to both goods and services
• Ford has been long engaged in finance ( Ford
Credit) and in maintenance and car
components (Visteon)
• Eventually the company moved into car
insurance and general after sales care and web
retailing (fordjourney.com)
• It also formed a joint venture with Wingcast,
Qualcomm, a wireless electronics company
and Cartel, a telematics equipment supplier to
provide ‘in-vehicle’ navigational assistance,
internet and entertainment services.
• Fiat took over full control of Toro
Assicurazioni some years ago to provide
insurance and other financial services to its
customers.
• Rolls Royce has acquired aero engine repair
and maintenance companies worldwide.
• This aspect of marketing or servicization
phenomenon is termed as ‘service
encapsulation’
Introduction to service economy
• Services account for 54% of the GDP and is
the fastest growing sector of the economy.
• Among the services ‘transport and
communications’ is fastest growing with
growth averaging 15.3% per annum
• Banking, insurance and business services grew
at 13.9%
• Zeithmal and Bitner defined services as ‘deeds,
processes and performances’
Deeds – actions of service provider
Processes – steps in the provision of services
Performance – customer’s understanding of how
service has been delivered
• “ Any act or performance that one party can offer to
another that is essentially intangible and does not
result in the ownership of anything. Its production
may not be tied to a physical product”
– Kotler, 1991
Goods and Services Continuum
• Goods and services offerings are being intermingled
in an unprecedented manner, in different proportions
are termed as goods and services continuum.
• Tangible Goods – soaps, toothpaste, salt
• Tangible goods with some services – washing
machine, refrigerator, water purifier
• Goods and services in equal manner – bar, restaurants
• Services with minor goods – airline services, ISPs
• Pure services – visit to gym, consultation visit to a
lawyer
Scale of Market Entities
• It displays a continuum of products based on their tangibility
where goods are tangible dominant and services are intangible
dominants
• Tangible dominant typically involves a physical possession
• Intangible dominant involves only experience
• Tangible aspects of an intangible dominant product and the
intangible aspects of a tangible dominant product are an important
source of product differentiation and new revenue streams
• Adding service aspects to a product often transforms the product
from a commodity into an experience and increases the revenue
producing opportunities of the product dramatically
Applicability of unique characteristics of services to
different types of services
Physical action to a person Hair Cut
Beauty Treatment
Medical Surgeries
Restaurant Food Service
Physical action to the object of a Repair and Maintenance of equipment
customer Interior Designing
Transportation of Goods
Non-physical action at the mind Advertising
Theatre
Lecturer/ Talks
Non-physical action directed at the Information Processing
data Consulting
Characteristics of services
• Intangibility
• Inseparability/ Simultaneity
• Variability
• Perishability
Intangibility
• Differentiate
• Remind
• Inform
• Persuade
Communication Process
Elements of promotion mix