Description
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- Contents
- About the Authors
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- PART I: UNDERSTANDING SERVICE PRODUCTS, 2 MARKETS, AND CUSTOMERS
- 1. Creating Value in the Service Economy
- OPENING VIGNETTE
- Introduction to the World of Services Marketing
- 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 SERVICE MARKETS
- BUSINESS-TO-BUSINESS 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
- Information Processing
- SERVICES POSE DISTINCT MARKETING CHALLENGES
- THE 7 PS OF SERVICES 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
- CONCLUSION
- 2. Understanding Service Consumers
- OPENING VIGNETTE
- Susan Munro, Service Consumer
- THE THREE-STAGE MODEL OF SERVICE CONSUMPTION
- PREPURCHASE 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
- Role and Script Theories
- Perceived Control Theory
- POST-ENCOUNTER STAGE
- Customer Satisfaction
- Service Quality
- Customer Loyalty
- CONCLUSION
- 3. Positioning Services in Competitive Markets
- OPENING VIGNETTE
- Positioning a Chain of Childcare Centers Away from the Competition
- 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 Industry
- Mapping Future Scenarios to Identify Potential Competitive Responses
- Positioning Charts Help Executives Visualize Strategy
- POSITIONING DIGITAL SERVICES AND PLATFORMS
- Attributes of Digital Service Available for Positioning
- Ecosystem Orchestration and Governance
- Direct and Indirect Network Effects
- DEVELOPING AN EFFECTIVE POSITIONING STRATEGY
- CONCLUSION
- PART II: APPLYING THE 4 PS OF MARKETING TO SERVICES
- 4. Developing Service Products and Brands
- OPENING VIGNETTE
- UNDERSTANDING SERVICE PRODUCTS
- What is a Service Product?
- What are the Benefits of Well-Developed Service Products?
- Creating Service Products
- THE FLOWER OF SERVICE
- THE FLOWER OF SERVICE
- Facilitating Supplementary Services
- Enhancing Supplementary Services
- Managing the Flower of Service
- BRANDING SERVICES
- Service Brand Architecture at the Corporate Level
- Branding Service Products and Experiences
- Branding Service Levels — Service Tiering
- Building Brand Equity
- Delivering Branded Service Experiences
- NEW SERVICE DEVELOPMENT
- A Hierarchy of New Service Categories
- Design Thinking in New Service Development
- Achieving Success in New Service Development
- CONCLUSION
- 5. Distributing Services Through Physical and Electronic Channels
- OPENING VIGNETTE
- Being Global in an Instant? … Or Does It Take Forever?
- 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
- Other Intermediaries
- 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?
- CONCLUSION
- 6. Service Pricing and Revenue Management
- OPENING VIGNETTE
- Dynamic Pricing is Here to Stay
- 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 Nonmonetary Costs
- Competition-Based Pricing
- REVENUE MANAGEMENT: WHAT IT IS AND HOW IT WORKS9
- Reserving Capacity for High-Yield Customers
- How Can We Measure the Effectiveness of a Firm’s Revenue Management?
- How Does Competitors’ 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?
- CONCLUSION
- 7. Service Marketing Communications
- OPENING VIGNETTE
- Oscar is Having the Time of His Life
- INTEGRATED SERVICE MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS
- DEFINING THE TARGET AUDIENCE
- SPECIFYING SERVICE COMMUNICATION OBJECTIVES
- Strategic Service Communication Objectives
- Tactical Service Communication Objectives
- Promote Tangible Cues to Communicate Quality
- CRAFTING EFFECTIVE SERVICE COMMUNICATION MESSAGES
- Problems of Intangibility
- Overcoming the Problems of Intangibility
- THE SERVICE MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS MIX
- Service Communications Media and Their Effectiveness
- Communications Originate from Different Sources
- Messages Transmitted Through Traditional Marketing Channels
- Messages Transmitted Online
- Messages Transmitted Through Service Delivery Channels
- Messages Originating from Outside the Organization
- TIMING DECISIONS OF SERVICE MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS
- BUDGET DECISIONS AND PROGRAM EVALUATION
- ETHICAL AND CONSUMER PRIVACY ISSUES IN COMMUNICATIONS
- THE ROLE OF CORPORATE DESIGN
- INTEGRATED MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS
- CONCLUSION
- PART III: MANAGING THE CUSTOMER INTERFACE
- 8. Designing Service Processes
- OPENING VIGNETTE
- Redesigning Customer Service in a Small Hospital Practice
- The Redesigned Service Model
- 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
- Customers as Service Co-Creators
- Reducing Service Failures Caused by Customers
- SELF-SERVICE TECHNOLOGIES, SERVICE ROBOTS, AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
- Customer Benefits and Adoption of Self-Service Technology
- Customer Disadvantages and Barriers of Adoption of Self-Service Technology
- Assessing and Improving Self-Service Technologies
- Managing Customers’ Reluctance to Change
- SERVICE ROBOTS IN THE FRONTLINE
- Beginning of the Service Revolution
- What are Service Robots and How Do They Differ from Traditional Self-Service Technologies?
- What Services Will Robots Deliver?
- CONCLUSION
- 9. Balancing Demand and Capacity
- OPENING VIGNETTE
- Summer on the Ski Slopes
- 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
- UNDERSTAND 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
- CONCLUSION
- 10. Crafting the Service Environment
- OPENING VIGNETTE
- The Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao
- SERVICE ENVIRONMENTS — AN IMPORTANT ELEMENT OF THE SERVICES MARKETING MIX
- WHAT IS THE PURPOSE OF SERVICE ENVIRONMENTS?
- Shape Customers’ Service Experiences 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 Conditions
- Scent
- Color
- 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
- Tools to Guide Servicescape Design
- CONCLUSION
- 11. Managing People for Service Advantage
- OPENING VIGNETTE
- Cora Griffith — The Outstanding Waitress
- 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 and Role Stress
- Emotional Labor
- Service Sweatshops?
- CYCLES OF FAILURE, MEDIOCRITY, AND SUCCESS
- The Cycle of Failure
- The Cycle of Success
- HUMAN RESOURCES 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
- 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 Modeling
- Focusing the Entire Organization on the Frontline
- CONCLUSION
- PART IV: DEVELOPING CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIPS
- 12. Managing Relationships and Building Loyalty
- OPENING VIGNETTE
- Caesars Entertainment’s Customer Relationship Management
- 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 Nonfinancial Rewards
- Build Higher-Level Bonds
- STRATEGIES FOR REDUCING CUSTOMER SWITCHING
- Analyze Customer Switching 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
- CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT
- Common Objectives of CRM Systems
- What Does a Comprehensive CRM Strategy Include?
- Common Failures in CRM Implementation
- How to Get a CRM Implementation Right
- CONCLUSION
- 13. Complaint Handling and Service Recovery
- OPENING VIGNETTE
- Too Little, Too Late — Jet Blue’s 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 Customers 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 Customer Fraud
- CONCLUSION
- PART V: STRIVING FOR SERVICE EXCELLENCE
- 14. Improving Service Quality and Productivity
- OPENING VIGNETTE
- Improving Service Quality in a Ferry Company
- 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
- How to Close Service Quality Gaps?
- MEASURING SERVICE QUALITY
- Soft and Hard Service Quality Measures
- LEARNING FROM CUSTOMER FEEDBACK
- Key Objectives of Effective Customer Feedback System
- 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 SYSTEMATIC APPROACHES TO IMPROVING SERVICE QUALITY AND PRODUCTIVITY
- Total Quality Management
- ISO 9000 Certification
- Six Sigma
- Malcolm-Baldrige and European Foundation for Quality Management Approaches
- Which Approach Should a Firm Adopt?
- CONCLUSION
- 15. Building a World-Class Service Organization
- INTRODUCTION
- CUSTOMER SATISFACTION AND CORPORATE PERFORMANCE
- CUSTOMER SATISFACTION AND THE WALLET ALLOCATION RULE
- CREATING A WORLD-CLASS SERVICE ORGANIZATION
- From Losers to Leaders: Four Levels of Service Performance
- Moving to a Higher Level of Performance
- COST-EFFECTIVE SERVICE EXCELLENCE
- Dual Culture Strategy
- Operations Management Approach
- Focused Service Factory Strategy
- Business Models Based on Cost-Effective Service Excellence Pathways
- CONCLUSION
- APPENDIX: FURTHER RESOURCES ON SERVICES MARKETING AND MANAGEMENT
- PART VI: CASE STUDIES
- Case 1 Sullivan Ford Auto World
- Case 2 Dr. Beckett’s Dental Office
- Case 3 Digital Luxury Services: Tradition versus Innovation in Luxury Fashion
- LUXURY BRANDS AND DIGITAL SERVICES
- THE PARADOX OF DIGITAL LUXURY
- WHAT IS THE RIGHT DIGITAL SERVICE STRATEGY FOR LUXURY BRANDS?
- Case 4 Uber’s Unintended Burdens
- THE BEGINNING
- THE INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERING
- ROCKY ROAD
- BACK TO THE UNITED STATES
- Endnotes
- Case 5 Kiwi Experience
- Case 6 Revenue Management at The View
- BASELINE PERFORMANCE
- Party Size Mix
- Occupancy
- Average Check per Person
- Server Performance
- Meal Duration
- Revenue per Available Seat-Hour
- Discounts
- Case 7 The Accra Beach Hotel: Block Booking of Capacity During a Peak Period
- Case 8 Aussie Pooch Mobile
- Case 9 Service Robots in the Frontline: How Will Aarion Bank’s Customers Respond?
- Case 10 Shouldice Hospital Limited (Abridged)
- HISTORY
- THE SHOULDICE METHOD
- The Patients’ Experience
- The Nurses’ Experience
- The Doctors’ Experience
- THE FACILITY
- ADMINISTRATION
- Operating Costs
- THE MARKET
- PROBLEMS AND PLANS
- Case 11 Singapore Airlines: Managing Human Resources for Cost-Effective Service Excellence
- HUMAN RESOURCES AND COST-EFFECTIVE SERVICE EXCELLENCE AT SINGAPORE AIRLINES
- STRINGENT SELECTION AND RECRUITMENT PROCESS
- EXTENSIVE INVESTMENT IN TRAINING AND RETRAINING
- BUILDING HIGH-PERFORMANCE SERVICE DELIVERY TEAMS
- EMPOWERMENT OF FRONTLINE TO DELIVER SERVICE QUALITY
- MOTIVATING STAFF THROUGH REWARDS AND RECOGNITION
- BEYOND HUMAN RESOURCES
- APPENDIX: CABIN CREW PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT QUESTIONS
- Case 12 National Library Board Singapore: Delivering Cost-Effective Service Excellence Through Innov
- Case 13 Menton Bank
- Case 14 Starbucks: Delivering Customer Service
- COMPANY BACKGROUND
- THE STARBUCKS VALUE PROPOSITION
- Channels of Distribution
- DELIVERING ON SERVICE
- Measuring Service Performance
- COMPETITION
- CAFFEINATING THE WORLD
- Retail Expansion
- Product Innovation
- Service Innovation
- STARBUCKS’ MARKET RESEARCH: TROUBLE BREWING?
- Starbucks’ Brand Meaning
- The Changing Customer
- Customer Behavior
- Measuring and Driving Customer Satisfaction
- REDISCOVERING THE STARBUCKS CUSTOMER
- Case 15 Platform versus Pipeline Business Models: Are Airbnb and Marriot Right to Move into Each Oth
- AIRBNB’S MOVE INTO PIPELINE BUSINESSES
- MARRIOTT’S MOVE INTO THE PEER TO-PEER PLATFORM BUSINESS MODEL
- ARE AIRBNB’S AND MARRIOTT’S STRATEGIES SOUND?
- Case 16 Dr. Mahalee Goes to London: Global Client Management
- Case 17 The Royal Dining Membership Program Dilemma
- Case 18 What Drives Share of Streaming Video? The Launch of HBO Max
- UNDERSTANDING CUSTOMER PERCEPTIONS
- CONNECTING THE KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS
- KEY DRIVERS
- KEY COMPETITOR PROFILES
- CONCLUSION
- Online Supplementary Materials
- Endnotes
- Case 19 LUX*: Staging a Service Revolution in a Resort Chain
- THE DARK AGES
- LUX* TRANSFORMATION
- Vision, Purpose, and Values
- Changing the Service Culture Through Training
- Innovation and Differentiation
- Measurement, Feedback, and Incentives
- FUTURE PLANS
- Name Index
- Subject Index
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