Service Marketing Module 1
Service Marketing Module 1
DR. PREETHI T M
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
DCMS
UNIVERSITY OF CALICUT
Evolution of Services
Adam Smith; Late eighteenth centuries
Value Contributors
Process of value generation
Change in consumer focus on consumption from physical goods to
services
No upper limits in consumption of services
Goods and service continuum
Tangible goods
Tangible goods with some services
Goods and services in near equal measure
Services with minor goods
Pure services
Service Economy
-One third in 1951, more than half in 1990s and now its 53.3% of GDP
-The sector contributed 55.39% to India's Gross Value Added at current price
in FY20*. ...
-According to RBI data, in April 2020, service exports stood at Rs 1,254.09
billion (US$ 17.06 billion) while imports stood at Rs 709.07 billion (US$ 9.65
billion).
Providing Employment-
17.3 % in 1951; Now its 25%
No universal definition.
• Philip Kortler - “an act or performance that one party can offer to another that is
essentially tangible and does not result in the ownership of anything. Its production
may or may not tie to a physical product”.
• Quinn, Baruch, & Paquette, 1987 - All economic activities whose output is not a physical
product or constructions are generally consumed at the time it is produced and provides
added values in forms such as convenience, amusement, timeliness, comfort, or health that
are essentially intangible concerns of its first purchaser.
• Rao – “Human efforts, which provide succour to the needy. It may be food to a hungry
person, water to a thirsty person, medical service to an ailing person, education to a
student, loan to a farmer, transport to a consumer, communication to two persons who
want to share a thought, pleasure or pain.
• Saser, Olson and Wyekoffs - “Establishments primarily engaged to provide various
services to individuals, government establishments, and organisations, establishments
providing personal services, educational institutions, membership organisations and
other miscellaneous services are included”.
• Govind Apte, 2004 - Services are economic activities that bring about a desired
change for the recipient thereby creating value and providing benefits for the
customers. In Service, emphasis is given to the personal reception of these benefits.
• Experience of a service is the totality of the effects of all the elements present at the
time so it is difficult to provide it as a sample. It is not possible to duplicate the
totality as a sample.
Characteristics of services
a. Intangibility
b. Heterogeneity
d. Perishability
e. Lack of ownership
Types/ Classification of services
a)Repairs
b)Advertisement
c)Maintenance and
d)Transportation of goods
Business services
a) Banking, g) lawyers,
b) insurance, h) Advocates,
c) advertising, i) credit cards,
d) accountancy, j) software,
e) finance, k) business centres, call centres, and
f) market research, l) information processing.
Consumer/personal services
7. Education,
1. Travel,
8. coaching classes,
2. leisure,
9. medical, Health care,
3. beauty,
10. Hotels,
4. entertainment,
11. Gymnasium,
5. information,
12. Swimming pools.
6. Investments,
Infrastructural services
1. Communication
2. transportation like Roads, Railways and
3. Motor transport
4. power, oil.
Public Services
Marketing and operations are more closely linked than in a manufacturing business
Condemnation of service is troubling when, at some level, service has never been
better
Effective service marketing is a complex which involves many different strategies,
skills and tasks
Service organisations have to address the issues like how to overcome problems
related to absence of services for optimising demand and supply, how to initiate
awareness in consumers about the quality of services and how to involve them in the
process
1) Product
2) Price
3) place
4) promotion
5) people,
6) physical evidence
7) process
Product
what the service provider offers.
Not a physical entity
A kind of promise
Experienced only after purchase
Made up of a number of intangible elements
Not enough to pay attention to the tangibles
Every combination of elements makes a different product
The options are many. No great effort is needed to modify the features of a product at any
time
The customer knows about the service after the service is bought, performed and experienced
When the service is provided, it does not matter at what level it is provided
Service that comes automatically is more satisfying.
Price
In high risk situations customer will look to price as a surrogate for quality
Through advertisement, publicity, public relation, personal selling and sales promotion
Many service businesses do not spend adequately for promotion ; rely on word of
mouth
Human elements like employees, the customer, and other customers in the
service environment
Service employees are critical when the degree of direct personal contact is
high and it is again critical when services involve repeated contacts
When consumers have little knowledge to judge the actual quality of service they will
rely on theses cues provided by the people and the service process
Not limited to buildings but to the appearance of people, stationery, bills sent to
customers, visiting cards and any tangible evidence may result in an impression being
formed about the service brand
Can attract customers, induce positive feelings in them, enhance credibility perceptions
and generally increase satisfaction with the service experiences
Includes actual procedures, mechanisms, and flow of activities by which the services are delivered
Complicated and extensive series of actions to complete the process- Highly bureaucratized
services
The logic of the steps involved often escapes the customer. None of the characteristics of the
service is inherently better or worse than another.
ex: In the case of hospital services customers interact with multiple, interconnected organisations.
Some of the steps involve customers interacting with providers (patients interacting with their
physician), some steps carried out by customer themselves (following the doctor’s orders). The
combination of these steps along with many, constitute a process, a service experience that is
evaluated by the consumers.