Module 3
Module 3
Module 3
Learning Outcomes
Quality means, serving in a manner which suits to the tourist within the limits of
the industry. It also refers to the quality provided to the people who have visited an
individuals' place. The best of the services provided by the operations team is called
quality
Since the delivery of hospitality service always involves people, these issues
center on the management of people, and in particular on the interactions between
guests and staff, interactions that are called service encounters. In the eyes of our
guests, our hospitality businesses will succeed or fail depending on the cumulative
impact of the service encounters in which they have participated.
The service sector took TQM from the manufacturing sector, and adapted it to the
characteristics of the tourism and hotel industry. Based on the manufacturing sectors
example and achieved good that results, the service sector adopted the business rule
that productivity, quality and profit constitute a single whole. This represented the
motive for the improvement and development of quality tourism services. Quality
becomes a decisive factor off efficiency and competitiveness on the turbulent tourism
market.
chains were the first to implement TQL and TQM, very good results were achieved. Such
systems of quality control are less used by small tourist agencies and smaller hotels.
In a going concern, services are developed to meet customers' needs and only if
there appears be a market, either now or in the future, can a service be justifiably
produced.
A world of options exists in the selection, definition, and design of services again
based on differentiation by offering a distinctly unique and high-quality services; low-
cost strategy, by designing a service that can be produced with a minimum cost; and
rapid response, executing the fastest and shortest time to get a service to market before
customer tastes change and to do so with the latest technology and innovations.
a. While 90% of businesses which are growing rapidly say design is integral
to or significant to them, only 26% of static companies say the same;
b. Using design can help to reduce costs by making processes more efficient
and cutting materials costs. It can reduce the time to market for new
services
Remember that not all new services are created in response to a clear and
articulated customer need. While this is usually the case, especially for services that are
similar to (but presumably better than) their predecessors, more radical innovations are
often brought about by the innovation itself creating demand.
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customers don't usually know that they need something radical. For example, in the late
1970s people were not asking for microprocessors, they did not even know what they
were.
Because service die; because services must be weeded out and replaced; because
firms generate most of their revenue and profit from new services, service selection,
definition, and design take place on a continuing basis. Knowing how to successfully find
and develop new service is a requirement.
Despite constant efforts to introduce viable new services, many new services do
not succeed. Service selection, definition, and design occur frequently, perhaps
hundreds of times for each financial successful service. Operations managers and their
organizations must be able to accept risk and tolerate failure. They must accommodate a
high volume of new service ideas while maintaining the activities to which they are
already committed.
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The biggest risk in research lies in the high mortality rate of research projects.
Yet, since everyone knows that research payoffs are hazardous and few projects pay off,
one might ask why almost all companies of any size carry on research. Aside from
having to research in order to compete, it is still true that some of the successes pay for
themselves several times over. In general, and in total, research pays off.
Furthermore, if a company does not do research, then income taxes will take
nearly 50% of its profit dollars, so tax savings pay for almost 50% or more of research
costs. The question is not, “Is research worth its costs?” but “Is research worth half of its
cost?”
SERVICE DEVELOPMENT
Sources of ideas
Marketing people see the need for something their customers want.
Production people see opportunities to improve methods and processes
Everyone in an organization is a potential source of ideas.
o Quality circles, to stimulate ideas
Outside the company, as from its customers, or the public, or from sources
within the firm not directly responsible for new service ideas like its
employees.
In spite of what has just been said, however, a great deal of innovation comes from
researchers.
Initiation of an idea.
Gathering of necessary data on the marketability of the service
Screening of the gathered data by the preliminary service review
committee consisting of specialists from the sales, administration,
production, and design departments.
Determination of the immediate and ultimate marketing objectives of the
service after thorough scrutiny
Development of the service with the combined efforts of the market
research, service development, and service design.
Checking of the service development results and pre-testing for
marketability.
Organizing the initiation of the service
Field test of the service on its marketability.
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Review of the design based on test results and from the point of view of
economic considerations. This work has to be done by the service design
and development departments in complete collaboration with the other
departments
Standardization of the service criteria and the method of providing the
service.
The distinct advantage of this approach is that fixed duties and responsibilities
exist. The distinct disadvantage is lack of forward thinking: How will downstream
departments in process deal with the concept, ideas, and design presented to them, and
ultimately wh will the customer think of the service?
C. Use of teams. This is perhaps the best used in Us. Such teams are variously
known as service development teams, and value engineering teams. These teams
are charged with the responsibility of moving from market requirements for a
service to achieving a service success. Such teams often include representatives
from marketing, manufacturing, purchasing, equality assurance, and field service
personnel. Many teams also include representatives from vendors. The objective
of a service development team is to make the service a success. This includes
marketability, and serviceability. Use of such teams is also called concurrent
engineering.
D. Japanese approach. They bypass the team issue by not subdividing into
organizations into research and development, engineering, production, and so
forth. Consistent with the Japanese style of group effort and teamwork, these
activities are all in one organization. Japanese culture and management style are
more collegial (power or authority vested equally in each of a number of
colleagues) and the organization less structured than in most Western countries.
Therefore, the Japanese find it unnecessary to have "teams" provide the
necessary communications and coordination. However, the typical Western style
and the conventional wisdom, is to use teams.
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These activities are concerned with improvement of design and specifications at the
research, development, design, and different stages of service development. In addition
to immediate, obvious cost reduction, design for serviceability and value engineering
may produce other benefits including:
Reduced complexity of the service.
Additional standardization of components
Improvement of functional aspects of the service.
Improved job design and job safety.
Improved maintainability (serviceability) of the service.
Robust design
Value Engineering
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SERVICE DESIGN
However, like goods, a large part of the cost and quality of service is defined at
the design stage. Also as with goods, a number of techniques can both reduce costs and
enhance the product.
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The documentation for a service will often take the form of explicít job
instructions that specify what is to happen at the moment of truth.
CONCEPT SCREENING (Operations Management, 5th Edition by Nigel Slack, Stuart Chambers and
Robert Johnston, 2007, pp.126-127.)
Design Criteria
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Sustainability
Managers may find it helpful to think in terms of the four R's as they address
sustainability. These are:
1. the resources used in the production process;
2. the recycling of production materials and product ‘service components;
3. the regulations that apply; and
4. the firm's reputation. All four areas provide impetus for managers to
perform well as they develop and refine service processes.
Resources. Operations is often the primary user of the firm's resources. This
puts special pressure on using human, financial, and material resources in a
sustainable way.
Recycle. As managers seek sustainability, they should realize that there are only
three things can be done with waste: burn it, bury it, or reuse it.
Regulation. Laws and regulations are affecting transportation, waste and noise
are proliferating and can be as much of a challenge as reducing resource use.
PERFORMANCE TASKS
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PART I: MODIFIED TRUE OR FALSE: Write T if the statement is True and write F if it is
false.
__________1. A service strategy may focus on differentiation, low cost, or rapid response.
__________2. The objective of the service decision is to develop and implement a service
strategy that meets the demands of the marketplace with a competitive advantage.
__________3. Political/legal change and economic change are both factors influencing
market opportunities for new services.
__________5. Two issues-viewing a product in terms of its impact on the entire economy
and considering the life cycle of a product-combine to increase the likelihood of ethical
decisions by managers.
__________6. Rapidly developing services and moving them to the market is part of time-
based competition.
__________8. The customer may participate in the design of, and in the delivery of services.
__________9. The moment-of-truth is the crucial moment between the service provider
and the customer that exemplifies, enhances, or detracts from the customer's
expectation.
___________13. Optical checkout scanners and ATMs are examples of technology's impact
on services
PART I: MULTIPLE CHOICE: Read each statement carefully and encircle you answer.
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Direction: Search for a case study about the customer participation in the design and
production of services or customer role in service delivery. Present your video recorded
analysis.
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