Description
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- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Brief Contents
- Contents
- About the Authors
- About the Contributors of the Case Studies
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- PART I: UNDERSTANDING SERVICE PRODUCTS, CONSUMERS, AND MARKETS
- 1. Creating Value in the Service Economy
- Why Study Services
- • Services Dominate the Global Economy
- • Most New Jobs are Generated by Services
- • Understanding Services Offers Personal Competitive Advantage
- What Are the Principal Industries of the Service Sector?
- • Contribution to Gross Domestic Product
- Powerful Forces are Transforming the Service Markets
- B2B Services as a Core Engine of Economic Development
- Outsourcing and Offshoring Often Work in Tandem
- What Are Services
- • The Historical View
- Benefits Without Ownership
- • Defining Services
- • Service Products versus Customer Service and After-Sales Service
- Four Broad Categories of Services – A Process Perspective
- • People Processing
- • Possession Processing
- • Mental Stimulus Processing
- • Information Processing
- Services Pose Distinct Marketing Challenges
- The 7Ps of Marketing
- The Traditional Marketing Mix Applied to Services
- • Product Elements
- • Place and Time
- • Price and Other User Outlays
- • Promotion and Education
- The Extended Services Marketing Mix for Managing the Customer Interface
- • Process
- • Physical Environment
- • People
- Marketing Must be Integrated with Other Management Functions
- The Service–Profit Chain
- A Framework for Developing Effective Service Marketing Strategies
- • Understanding Service Products, Consumers and Markets
- • Applying the 4 Ps of Marketing to Services
- • Managing the Customer Interface
- • Developing Customer Relationships
- • Striving for Service Excellence
- 2. Understanding Service Consumers
- The Three-Stage Model of Service Consumption
- Pre-purchase Stage
- • Need Awareness
- • Information Search
- • Evaluation of Alternative Services
- • Purchase Decision
- Service Encounter Stage
- • Service Encounters are “Moments of Truth”
- • Service Encounters Range from High Contact to Low Contact
- • The Servuction System
- • Theater as Metaphor for Service Delivery: An Integrative Perspective
- • Role and Script Theories
- • Perceived Control Theory
- Post-Encounter Stage
- • Customer Satisfaction
- • Service Quality
- • Customer Loyalty
- 3. Positioning Services in Competitive Markets
- Customer-Driven Services Marketing Strategy
- • Customer, Competitor and Company Analysis (3 Cs)
- • Segmentation, Targeting and Positioning (STP)
- Segmenting Service Markets
- • Important versus Determinant Service Attributes
- • Segmentation Based on Service Levels
- Targeting Service Markets
- • Achieving Competitive Advantage through Focus
- Principles of Positioning Services Using
- Positioning Maps to Plot Competitive Strategy
- • An Example of Applying Positioning Maps to the Hotel Indsutry
- • Mapping Future Scenarios to Identify Potential Competitive Responses
- • Positioning Charts Help Executives Visualize Strategy
- Developing an Effective Positioning Strategy
- PART II: APPLYING THE 4 PS OF MARKETING TO SERVICES
- 4. Developing Service Products and Brands
- Creating Service Products
- • What are the Components of a Service Product?
- The Flower of Service
- • Facilitating Supplementary Services
- • Enhancing Supplementary Services
- • Managerial Implications
- Branding Service Firms, Products and Experiences
- • Branding Strategies for Services
- Tiering Service Products with Branding
- Building Brand Equity
- Delivering Branded Service Experiences
- New Service Development
- • A Hierarchy of New Service Categories
- Achieving Success in New Service Development
- 5. Distributing Services Through Physical and Electronic Channels
- Distribution In a Services Context
- What Is Being Distributed?
- How Should A Service Be Distributed?
- • Customers Visit the Service Site
- • Service Providers Go to their Customers
- • The Service Transaction is Conducted Remotely
- • Channel Preferences Vary among Customers
- • Channel Integration is Key
- Where Should a Service Facility be Located?
- • Strategic Location Considerations
- • Tactical Location Considerations
- • Locational Constraints
- • Innovative Location Strategies
- When Should Service be Delivered?
- The Role of Intermediaries
- • Benefits and Costs of Alternative Distribution Channels
- Franchising
- The Challenge of Distribution in Large Domestic Markets
- Distributing Services Internationally
- • Factors Favoring Adoption of Transnational Strategies
- • How does the Nature of a Service Affect International Distribution?
- • Barriers to International Trade in Services
- • How to Enter International Markets?
- 6. Service Pricing and Revenue Management
- Effective Pricing is Central to Financial Success
- • Objectives for Establishing Prices
- Pricing Strategy Stands on Three Foundations
- • Cost-based Pricing
- • Value-based Pricing
- • Reducing Related Monetary and Non-monetary Costs
- • Competition-based Pricing
- Revenue Management: What It Is and How It Works
- • Reserving Capacity for High-yield Customers
- • How can we Measure the Effectiveness of a Firm’s Revenue Management?
- • How does Competitor’s Pricing Affect Revenue Management?
- • Price Elasticity
- • Designing Rate Fences
- Fairness and Ethical Concerns in Service Pricing
- • Service Pricing is Complex
- • Piling on the Fees
- • Designing Fairness into Revenue Management
- Putting Service Pricing Into Practice
- • How Much to Charge?
- • What Should be the Specified Basis for Pricing?
- • Who Should Collect Payment and Where Should Payment be Made?
- • When Should Payment be Made?
- • How Should Payment be Made?
- • How Should Prices be Communicated to the Target Markets?
- 7. Service Marketing Communications
- Integrated Service Marketing Communications
- Defining the Target Audience
- Specifying Service Communication Objectives
- • Strategic Service Communications Objectives
- Tactical Service Communications Objectives
- • Promote Tangible Cues to Communicate Quality
- Crafting Effective Service Communication Messages
- • Problems of Intangibility
- • Overcoming the Problems of Intangibility
- The Services Marketing Communication Mix
- • Communications Originate from Different Sources
- • Messages Transmitted through Traditional Marketing Sources
- • Messages Transmitted Online
- • Messages Transmitted through Service Delivery Channels
- • Messages Originating from Outside the Organization
- Timing Decisions of Services Marketing Communication
- Budget Decisions and Program Evaluation
- Ethical and Consumer Privacy Issues in Communications
- The Role of Corporate Design
- Integrated Marketing Communications
- PART III: MANAGING THE CUSTOMER INTERFACE
- 8. Designing Service Processes
- What is a Service Process?
- Designing and Documenting Service Processes
- Developing a Service Blueprint
- • Blueprinting the Restaurant Experience: a Three-Act Performance
- • Identifying Fail Points
- • Fail-Proofing to Design Fail Points out of Service Processes
- • Setting Service Standards and Targets
- • Consumer Perceptions and Emotions in Service Process Design
- Service Process Redesign
- • Service Process Redesign Should Improve Both Quality and Productivity
- Customer Participation in Service Processes
- • Levels of Customer Participation
- • Customer as Co-creators
- • Reducing Service Failures Caused by Customers
- Self-Service Technologies
- • Customer Benefits and Adoption of Self-Service Technology
- • Customer Disadvantages and Barriers of Adoption of Self-Service Technology
- • Assessing and Improving SSTs
- • Managing Customer’s Reluctance to Change
- 9. Balancing Demand and Capacity
- Fluctuations in Demand Threaten Profitability
- • From Excess Demand to Excess Capacity
- • Building Blocks of Managing Capacity and Demand
- Defining Productive Service Capacity
- Managing Capacity
- • Stretching Capacity Levels
- • Adjusting Capacity to Match Demand
- Understanding Patterns of Demand
- Managing Demand
- • Marketing Mix Elements Can be used to Shape Demand Patterns
- Inventory Demand Through Waiting Lines and Queuing Systems
- • Waiting is a Universal Phenomenon
- • Managing Waiting Lines
- • Different Queue Configurations
- • Virtual Waits
- • Queuing Systems can be Tailored to Market Segments
- Customer Perceptions of Waiting Time
- • The Psychology of Waiting Time
- Inventory Demand Through Reservation Systems
- • Reservation Strategies Should Focus on Yield
- Create Alternative Use for Otherwise Wasted Capacity
- 10. Crafting the Service Environment
- Service Environments – An Important Element of The Service Marketing Mix
- What is the Purpose of Service Environments?
- • Shape Customer’s Service Experience and Behaviors
- • Signal Quality and Position, Differentiate and Strengthen the Brand
- • Core Component of The Value Proposition
- • Facilitate the Service Encounter and Enhance Productivity
- The Theory Behind Consumer Responses to Service Environments
- • Feelings are a Key Driver of Customer Responses to Service Environments
- • The Servicescape Model – An Integrative Framework
- Dimensions of the Service Environment
- • The Effect of Ambient Condition
- • Spatial Layout and Functionality
- • Signs, Symbols and Artifacts
- • People are Part of the Service Environment too
- Putting It All Together
- • Design with a Holistic View
- • Design from a Customer’s Perspective
- 11. Managing People for Service Advantage
- Service Employees are Extremely Important
- • Service Personnel as a Source of Customer Loyalty and Competitive Advantage
- • The Frontline in Low-Contact Services
- Frontline Work is Difficult and Stressful
- • Service Jobs are Boundary Spanning Positions
- • Sources of Role Conflict
- • Emotional Labor
- • Service Sweatshops?
- Cycles of Failure, Mediocrity and Success
- • The Cycle of Failure
- • The Cycle of Mediocrity
- • The Cycle of Success
- Human Resource Management – How to Get it Right
- • Hire the Right People
- • Tools to Identify the Best Candidates
- • Train Service Employees Actively
- • Internal Communications to Shape the Service Culture and Behaviors
- • Empower the Frontline
- • When are High Levels of Empowerment Appropriate?
- • Build High-Performance Service-Delivery Teams
- • Integrate Teams Across Departments and Functional Areas
- • Motivate and Energize People
- • The Role of Labor Unions
- Service Culture, Climate and Leadership
- • Building a Service-Oriented Culture
- • A Climate for Service
- • Qualities of Effective Leaders in Service Organizations
- • Leadership Styles, Focus on the Basics, and Role Modelling
- • Focusing the Entire Organization on the Frontline
- PART IV: DEVELOPING CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIPS
- 12. Managing Relationships and Building Loyalty
- The Search for Customer Loyalty
- • Why Is Customer Loyalty So Important to a Firm’s Profitability?
- • Assessing the Value of a Loyal Customer
- • Worksheet for Calculating Customer Lifetime Value
- • The Gap between Actual and Potential Customer Value
- • Why Are Customers Loyal?
- The Wheel of Loyalty
- Building A Foundation For Loyalty
- • Target the Right Customers
- • Search for Value, Not Just Volume
- • Manage the Customer Base through Effective Tiering of Service
- • Customer Satisfaction and Service Quality Are Prerequisites for Loyalty
- Strategies for Developing Loyalty Bonds with Customers
- • Deepen the Relationship
- • Encourage Loyalty through Financial and Non-financial Rewards
- • Build Higher-Level Bonds
- Strategies for Reducing Customer Defections
- • Analyze Customer Defections and Monitor Declining Accounts
- • Address Key Churn Drivers
- • Implement Effective Complaint Handling and Service Recovery Procedures
- • Increase Switching Costs
- Enablers of Customer Loyalty Strategies
- • Customer Loyalty in a Transactional Marketing Context
- • Relationship Marketing
- • Creating “Membership-Type” Relationships as Enablers for Loyalty Strategies
- CRM: Customer Relationship Management
- • Common Objectives of CRM Systems
- • What Does a Comprehensive CRM Strategy Include?
- • Common Failures in CRM Implementation
- • How to Get CRM Implementation Right
- 13. Complaint Handling and Service Recovery
- Customer Complaining Behavior
- • Customer Response Options to Service Failure
- • Understanding Customer Complaining Behavior
- • What Do Customers Expect Once They Have Made A Complaint?
- Customer Responses to Effective Service Recovery
- • Impact of Effective Service Recovery on Customer Loyalty
- • The Service Recovery Paradox
- Principles of Effective Service Recovery Systems
- • Make It Easy for Customer to Give Feedback
- • Enable Effective Service Recovery
- • How Generous Should Compensation Be?
- • Dealing with Complaining Customers
- Service Guarantees
- • The Power of Service Guarantees
- • How to Design Service Guarantees
- • Is Full Satisfaction the Best You Can Guarantee?
- • Is It Always Beneficial to Introduce a Service Guarantee?
- Discouraging Abuse and Opportunistic Customer Behavior
- • Seven Types of Jaycustomers
- • Consequences of Dysfunctional Customer Behavior
- • Dealing with Consumer Fraud
- PART V: STRIVING FOR SERVICE EXCELLENCE
- 14. Improving Service Quality and Productivity
- Integrating Service Quality and Productivity Strategies
- • Service Quality, Productivity, and Profitability
- What is Service Quality?
- Identifying and Correcting Service Quality Problems
- • The Gaps Model in Service Design and Delivery
- • Key Ways to Close the Gaps in Service Quality
- Measuring Service Quality
- • Soft and Hard Service Quality Measures
- Learning from Customer Feedback
- • Key Objectives of Effective Customer Feedback Systems
- • Use a Mix of Customer Feedback Collection Tools
- • Analysis, Reporting, and Dissemination of Customer Feedback
- Hard Measures of Service Quality
- Tools to Analyze and Address Service Quality Problems
- • Root Cause Analysis: The Fishbone Diagram
- • Pareto Analysis
- • Blueprinting — A Powerful Tool for Identifying Fail Points
- Return on Quality
- • Assess Costs and Benefits of Quality Initiatives
- • Determine the Optimal Level of Reliability
- Defining and Measuring Productivity
- • Defining Productivity in a Service Context
- • Measuring Productivity
- • Service Productivity, Efficiency, and Effectiveness
- Improving Service Productivity
- • Generic Productivity Improvement Strategies
- • Customer-Driven Approaches to Improve Productivity
- • How Productivity Improvements Impact Quality and Value
- Integration and Systemic Approaches to Improving Service Quality and Productivity
- • Total Quality Management
- • ISO 9000 Certification
- • Six Sigma
- • Malcolm-Baldrige and EFQM Approaches
- • Which Approach Should a Firm Adopt?
- 15. Building a World Class Service Organization
- Creating a World-Class Service Organization
- • From Losers to Leaders: Four Levels of Service Performance
- • Moving to a Higher Level of Performance
- Customer Satisfaction and Corporate Performance
- PART VI: CASE STUDIES
- Case 1 Sullivan Ford Auto World
- Case 2 Dr. Beckett’s Dental Office
- Case 3 Bouleau & Huntley: Crossselling Professional Services
- Case 4 Uber: Competing as Market Leader in the US versus Being a Distant Second in China
- Case 5 Banyan Tree: Designing and Delivering a Branded Service Experience
- Case 6 Kiwi Experience
- Case 7 The Accra Beach Hotel: Block Booking of Capacity during a Peak Period
- Case 8 Aussie Pooch Mobile
- Case 9 Shouldice Hospital Limited (Abridged)
- Case 10 Delwarca Software Remote Support Unit
- Case 11 Red Lobster
- Case 12 Raleigh & Rosse: Measure to Motivate Exceptional Service
- Case 13 Singapore Airlines: Managing Human Resources for Cost-effective Service Excellence
- Case 14 Dr. Mahalee Goes to London: Global Client Management
- Case 15 Royal Dining Membership Program Dilemma
- Case 16 Starbucks: Delivering Customer Service
- Case 17 LUX*: Staging a Service Revolution in a Resort Chain
- Case 18 KidZania: Shaping a Strategic Service Vision for the Future
- Case 19-32 Additional Cases Available for Educators
- Glossary
- Name Index
- Subject Index
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