Basics of Services Marketing
Basics of Services Marketing
Chapter Objectives
What are services?
Why services marketing?
Service and Technology
Characteristics of Services Compared to Goods
Services Marketing Mix
Staying Focused on the Customer
“There are no such thing as service
industries. There are only industries
whose service components are greater or
less than those of other industries.
Everybody is in service.”
-Theodore Levitt-
• Explain what services are and identify trends in services.
•
• Explain the need for special services marketing concepts and
practices and why the need has developed and is accelerating.
•
• Explore the profound impact of technology on service.
•
• Outline the basic differences between goods and services and
the resulting challenges and opportunities for service
businesses.
•
• Introduce the expanded marketing mix for services and the
philosophy of customer focus, as powerful frameworks and
themes that are fundamental to the rest of the text.
What are Services?
• Ownership v/s non-ownership
• Non-ownership = Rental?
What are Services?
• Non-ownership categories
▫ Rented goods & services
Boats, marriage-wear
▫ Defined space and place rentals
Hotel room, travel, restaurant, warehousing
▫ Labor and expertise rentals
Maid, car service, doctors
▫ Shared physical environments
Museums, golf clubs, Zoo, Water Sports
▫ Systems and networks
Telecommunications, internet
Defining Services
• Economic activities offered by one party to
another
• Most commonly employing time-based
performances
• To bring about desired results in
• Recipients themselves or in objects or other
assets
• For which the purchasers have responsibility
Defining Services
• Includes all economic activities
• Whose output is not a physical product,
• Is generally consumed at the time it is produced,
• And provides added value
Why Study Services?
• Most new jobs are generated by services
▫ Fastest growth expected in knowledge-based
industries
▫ Significant training and educational qualifications
required, but employees will be more highly
compensated
▫ Will service jobs be lost to lower-cost countries?
Yes, some service jobs can be exported
Estimated Size of Service Sector in Selected Countries
(Source: World Factbook 2008)
India (48%)
China (40%)
Government
Globalization
Policies
New markets and product categories
Increase in demand for services
More intense competition
Government
Globalization
Policies
Changes in regulations
Privatization
Government
Globalization
Policies
Government
Globalization
Policies
Growth of franchising
Government
Globalization
Policies
Greater bandwidth
Wireless networking
Government
Globalization
Policies
▫ Tasks
Smooth demand to match capacity through
promotions, reservations, pricing strategies
Challenges of marketing services
• Intangible elements dominate value creation
Tangibility Spectrum
Salt
Soft Drinks
Detergents
Automobiles
Cosmetics
Fast-food
Outlets
Intangible
Dominant
Tangible
Dominant Fast-food
Outlets
Advertising
Agencies
Airlines
Investment
Management
Consulting
Teaching
Challenges of marketing services
• Intangible elements dominate value creation
▫ Processes, expertise, attitudes
▫ Difficult to assess what one cant see, touch, smell
▫ Tasks
Tangibilizing the intangibles
Challenges of marketing services
• Often difficult to visualize and understand
▫ Difficult to anticipate what will happen
▫ Difficult to understand what is happening
▫ Perceived risk is higher
▫ Tasks
Educate customers to make good choices
Document performance
Reduce anxiety
Challenges of marketing services
• Customers may be involved in co-production
▫ Customers are partial employees
▫ SSTs
▫ Tasks
User-friendly equipment and processes
Challenges of marketing services
• People may be part of the service experience
▫ Employees make the difference
▫ Selecting, training & motivating
▫ Behavior of other customers
• Tasks
▫ Manage employees
▫ Manage customer behavior
Challenges of marketing services
• Operational inputs and outputs vary
▫ Services produced and consumed simultaneously
▫ Difficult to shield customers from service failures
• Tasks
▫ Manage employees
▫ Use technology
8Ps of Services Marketing
• Product Elements
• Place and Time
• Price
• Promotion and Education
• Process
• Physical Environment
• People
• Productivity and Quality
A Framework For Developing Effective Service
Marketing Strategies: Overview
Understanding Customer Needs, Decision Making, and
Behavior in Service Encounters
Chapter 2
• Process (Chapter 8)
Post-Encounter Stage:
Evaluation against
expectations, future
intentions
Framework for Developing Effective Service Marketing Strategies: Part II