1 / 14

Service Process Design

Service Process Design. What is a Service?. Goods and services are produced in our economy. What is the difference between a good and a service?

vladimir
Download Presentation

Service Process Design

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Service Process Design

  2. What is a Service? Goods and services are produced in our economy. What is the difference between a good and a service? In a crude way a good is something you can take with you after purchase, whereas a service is more intangible. What do you bring home after a dental visit? Sore gums? The author of the text suggests that with a service production and consumption occur simultaneously. Plus, many services are interactions between the producer and the consumer. Doctors, lawyers and even teachers provide services.

  3. Service-Product Bundle Many services come as part of a larger package or bundle of things. The author suggests this service-product bundle consists of 1) The physical goods or facilitating goods, 2) The tangible service provided or explicit service, and 3) The psychological service or implicit service. Figure 5.1 has a continuum of products that range from heavily into goods to mainly services. On the one end you have grocery shopping where you have mainly goods being taken with the services of product information and checkout being provided. Haircuts on the other hand are almost all about the service. Can you take your cut hair home with you? Probably, if you plan ahead.

  4. Service-Product Bundle There is an example in the text about a winter ski resort. 1) The facilitating goods are the chair lifts, buildings and mountain itself at the resort. 2) The explicit service is primarily the skiing experience, but you also have the interaction with employees and the visual experience in the shops and sleeping quarters. 3) The implicit service pertains to the fun generated, the sense of security you have and the excitement of the skiing. It is important to pay attention to all these experiences. The author notes 80% of economy in US is service based. As an employee of a service organization (which might be in your future) you may want to take not that customers pay attention to their interaction with you and they want it to be a positive experience.

  5. Service Recovery Service recovery is the ability to quickly compensate for the failure of service delivery and restore, if possible, the service required by the customer. Airlines have to deal with weather and mechanical problems. When a flight is not on time, folks miss connecting flights, business meetings and social functions. Does recovery happen here? The airlines do what they can to get you on the next flight! Obviously, service failure should be held to a minimum, but the recovery can also mean the difference between success and failure of the company.

  6. Guarantees Imagine the following as an ad in a magazine: You see a big beautiful home with a big, green lawn and in bold type the words “Kill Roaches Dead!” In small type at the bottom you see the sentence “ We visit your home and get to work on the problem for $29.95 a visit.” When the company comes to your house a big burly guy comes in with a block of wood. He asks about the location of the problem and when he gets there he searches the area and when he sees a roach he smashes it with the board. In this silly example, by design, you see the service is not clearly defined in the ad.

  7. Guarantees When a customer sees a defect or imperfection in a good it can be returned. But can a service be returned? The money paid for the service can be returned, but the customer really wants the service. The author suggests that service guarantees help the company in clearly defining the process of service delivery and specifies the extent of service recovery, if needed. Thus a process can be designed to provide consistent service. What guarantee does Federal Express make?

  8. Cycle of Service In many service businesses the customer will come in contact with the business several times before the completion of the service. This usually begins with a customer inquiry and perhaps setting up an appointment to meet. The cycle is complete when the customer is on their merry way to their next endeavor. With the delivery of a service there may be several points were there is customer contact and each point can be defined as a “moment of truth.” Each time there is interaction with a customer the company can be successful or fail to meet the desire of the customer. One bad moment of truth can wipe out many positive moments.

  9. Perceived Service Perceived service is a function of all past moments of truth. Note, that bad moments of truth may carry a greater weight in the mind of the customer. Although not covered in the book, there is an old saying about social interaction that one should never discuss politics, sex or religion. Many people have very strong ideas about these topics. So, as a service provider, it is probably best not to broach these topics for fear of blowing a moment of truth.

  10. Customer Contact Contact with the customer may be characterized as either low contact or high contact. Low contact services -are used when face to face interaction is not required, -require employees with technical skills, efficient processing routines, and standardization of the product and process, and -can work to average demand levels and smooth out the peaks and valleys of demand.

  11. Customer contact High contact services -are used for changing or uncertain customer demand, -require employees who are flexible, personable, and willing to work with the customer, -must respond immediately as demand occurs in peak situations, and -generally requires higher prices and more customization due to the variable nature of the service required.

  12. Service Matrix Another way to think about service industries is to consider the service matrix. Part of the matrix, a fancy name for a table of information, categorizes the customer preferences. A main ingredient here is how much decision making power does the customer desire. Hair cuts and ATM machine banking are extremes here. When you get a hair cut you make lots of decisions, but at the ATM some basic options to choose from. The other aspect of the matrix is operationally how many ways can the service happen.

  13. Employees and Service The service-profit chain is an idea that suggests the best service producers focus their attention on front-line employees who deliver the service, the technology that supports them, training and customer satisfaction. On the revenue side a satisfied customer is often a loyal one who will come back time and again. Plus, through word of mouth, the satisfied customer will lead others to your door. On the cost side of things, satisfied employees are more easily retained in the business. It is the more long term employee that really gives value to the customer. Newer employees have to be trained, but also there is the cost of lower satisfaction in customers due to lack of knowledge of the newer workers.

  14. Anecdote Think about a time you went to a store that is supposed to have service, but the workers were grumpy. Was it a great experience that would make you want to return? I recall a time when I went to a shoe store with my parents and when we walked in the salesperson glumly said, “what do you want?” There was no happiness in the employee. He certainly didn’t seem happy to see us. My dad lead us out of the store never to return.

More Related