Lecture - 1: Introduction and Imperatives of Services
Lecture - 1: Introduction and Imperatives of Services
1.1 Introduction
Services play a vital role in our day to day life as well as in the economy of any
nation. The services can be seen between business to business service and business
to customer service. The services can be provided by government sector or private
sector or NGOs.
Services take place when customer direct some actions to service provider to get
some intangible benefits may or may not assisted with some goods. The output can
be in the form of action done on customer like surgery or on customer’s
possessions like repair of customer’s car.
Service sector include all economic activities whose output is not a physical
product or Construction and is generally consumed at the time it is produced, and
facilitates in the forms of convenience, comfort, timeliness or health that are
essentially intangible concerns of its customer - (Quinn, Baruch and Paquette,
1987).
A service is an activity or series of activities of more or less intangible nature that
normally, but not necessarily, take place in interactions between customer and
service employees and/or physical resources or goods and/or systems of the service
provider, which are provided as solutions to customer problems. - (Gronroos,
1990)
Services are deeds, processes, and performances. - (Zeithaml and Bitner, 1996)
Any act or performance that one party can offer to another that is essentially
intangible and does not result in ownership of anything. Its production may
or may not be tied to physical product. – (Kotler, 2003)
A crèche service facility takes care of baby and saves parents Time
Customer’s inputs and mostly physical presence are important to initiate the
service. In some self-services, customer acts as co-producer of service.
The simultaneous activities, customer request and service delivery, leads to the
perishable characteristic of services. A service process is shown in Figure 1.1.
• Employee – Waiter in
the restaurant
• Physical Resource
• Physical good
The need & dependency on services can be highly seen by the companies who
are not categorized as service sector like manufacturing. The following points
provide us some service imperatives.
The need of service can be realized in our daily personal requirements as can
be seen in Figure 1.2.
Need for cost effective and convenient services available anytime and from
anywhere.
Direct contact of customer: Feedback to innovate and improve.
Women are increasingly joining the workforce results in rising two-income
families hence there is more dependency on services like Care taker at home,
baby-sitting jobs, dry-cleaning and laundry services.
More industrialization and increasing penetration of companies in cross
border markets result in new and variety of services like advertising,
logistics, event management and placement services.
Competition between companies has been moved from mere technology and
process based to the service based competition.
FIGURE 1.2: DAY-TO-DAY SERVICE REQUIREMENTS OF
HUMAN
FIGURE 1.3: SERVICES REQUIRED BY MANUFACTURING
SECTOR
Organizational perspective
Routine machine tending jobs,
Shift to white-collar
occupation
Nation’s perspective
Nation’s security
Providing utilities
The service sector of any developed or developing nation has evolved from Pre-
industrial era through Industrial era to Post-industrial era as shown in Figure 1.5.
• Pre Industrial
• Struggle for survival where muscle determined survival and
power
• Activities: Agriculture, mining and fishing
• Life governed and conditioned by the elements of nature
• Industrial
• Standard of living was determined by quantity of goods
• Activities: Mass production of goods in factories under
hierarchical and bureaucratically organization structure bound by
strict rules and regulations
• Post Industrial
• Services predominantly determined the quality of life with
Information as key resource
• Service activities: Healthcare, Education and recreation service
sectors
• Main aim is to support industrial phase and encourage labor
saving initiatives
The service sector has been contributing to about 34% of total employment
14.40%
Services
Industrial
28.40% 57.20%
Agricultural
FIGURE 1.6: SERVICE SECTOR CONTRIBUTION IN INDIAN ECONOMY
Trade
Hotels and Restaurants
Railways
Other Transport & Storage
Communication (Post, Telecom)
Banking
Insurance
IT
IT enabled services (ITeS)
Real Estate
Business Services
Public Administration; Defense
Personal Services
Community Services
Other Services
The service sectors of Indian economy that have grown faster than the economy
are as follows:
Information Technology (the most leading service sectors in Indian
economy), IT-enabled services (ITeS), Telecommunications, Financial
Services, Community Services, Hotels and Restaurants.
Increasing income levels have resulted in higher spending by middle
class on value added services like communications, entertainment,
hospitality and healthcare, which has led Indian Service sector to high
levels of sustained growth.
(Source:http://www.ibef.org/industry/services.aspx)