Services Marketing: 16MBA MM303
Services Marketing: 16MBA MM303
16MBA MM303
To acquaint the students with the characteristics of
services and their marketing implications.
Internal Marketing
Marketing issues include adequate training on the services to be
delivered and customer satisfaction service techniques.
Internal marketing requires you to be involved with your
employees and let them know the goals and even problems
facing the business.
Internal marketing also can include a performance rewards
system for employees who deliver the highest level of customer
service
Points of the Triangle
External Marketing
External marketing goes from your business organization out to
customers and prospective customers.
This is the traditional form of business marketing, showing
customers how the services provided by your business benefit
them.
External marketing includes advertising, your website and your
company's social media efforts.
The purpose of external marketing is to fill the business pipeline
with future business.
Points of the Triangle
Interactive Marketing
This form of marketing revolves around how your employees
deliver the services your company provides.
The goal is to have highly satisfied customers who become long-
term, repeat customers.
The effectiveness of the interactive marketing relates back to
the internal marketing efforts of your business.
Interactive marketing is also how your employees keep the
promises made by your external marketing efforts.
Specific Service
Overall Strategic Assessment
Implementation
Word-of-mouth communication
Personal and non-personal statements made by parties other
than the organization convey to customers what the service will
be like and influence both predicted and desired service.
Perceived as unbiased.
Tends to be very important in services that are difficult to
evaluate before purchase and before direct experience of them.
Experts (including consumer reports, friends and family) are also
word-of-mouth sources
Sources of both desired and predicted service
expectations
Past experience
Customers previous exposure to
service that is relevant to the focal
service
E.g.: You probably compare each stay
in a particular hotel with all previous
stays in that hotel.
Customer
Perception
of Services
Customer
Perceptions are Quality and
Perception of always considered satisfaction is based
Services relative to on customers
expectations perception of service
Satisfaction vs
Service Quality
Reliability: ability to perform the promised service
dependably and accurately
Responsiveness: willingness to help customers and
provide prompt service
Service Quality Assurance: employees knowledge and courtesy
Dimensions and their ability to inspire trust and confidence
Empathy: caring, individualised attention given to
customers
Tangibles: appearance of physical facilities,
equipment, personnel and written materials.
Satisfaction is generally
Based on this view,
viewed as a broader
perceived service quality is a
concept, whereas service
component of customer
quality focuses specifically
satisfaction
on dimensions of service
Service Exactly what did the employee (or firm member) say or
do?
Encounters What resulted that made you feel the interaction was
satisfying (or dissatisfying)?
What could or should have been done differently?
Service Employee response to service delivery system
recovery failures
Sources of
customer Adaptability
Employee response to customer needs and
satisfaction/ requests
dissatisfaction in
memorable Spontaneity Unprompted and unsolicited employee actions
service
encounters
Coping Employee response to problem customers
Service Encounter Themes
Service Encounter Themes
Service Encounter Themes
Service Encounter Themes
Customer Satisfaction
Satisfaction is the consumers fulfilment
response.
It is a judgment that a product or service
feature, or the product or service itself, provides
a pleasurable level of consumption-related
fulfilment.
Satisfaction is the customers evaluation of a
product or service in terms of whether that
product or service has met the customers needs
and expectations
Product and Service Features
Satisfaction with a product or service is influenced
significantly by the customers evaluation of
product or service features.
What E.g.: A service such as a resort hotel, important
features might include the pool area, access to golf
Determines facilities, restaurants, room comfort and privacy,
Customer helpfulness and courtesy of staff, room price, and
so on.
Satisfaction?
Consumer Emotions
Affect their perceptions of satisfaction with
products and services.
Emotions can be stable, pre-existing emotions
Attributions for Service Success or Failure
Attributions the perceived causes of events
influence perceptions of satisfaction as well.
What When they have been surprised by an outcome (the
Determines service is either much better or much worse than
expected), consumers tend to look for the reasons,
Customer and their assessments of the reasons can influence
Satisfaction? their satisfaction.
E.g.: if a customer of a weight-loss organisation
fails to lose weight as hoped for, he or she will likely
search for the causes
Perceptions of Equity or Fairness
Notions of fairness are central to customers
perceptions of satisfaction with products and
services, particularly in service recovery situations
What Customers ask themselves:
Determines Have I been treated fairly compared with other
Customer customers?
Did other customers get better treatment, better
Satisfaction? prices, or better quality service?
Did I pay a fair price for the service?
Was I treated well in exchange for what I paid and
the effort I expended?
What Determines
Customer Satisfaction?
Other consumers, family
members and co-workers
Ones own individual feelings and
beliefs, consumer satisfaction is
often influenced by other people
E.g.: Satisfaction with a family
holiday is a dynamic phenomenon,
influenced by the reactions and
expressions of individual family
members over the duration of the
holiday
End of Module 1