Unit 2
Unit 2
CONSUMER PROBLEM
TIME DEFICIENCY REASONS: dual career couples, single parent families IT LEADS TO: demand for different services
Customer expectations are the beliefs about service delivery that serve as standards or reference points against which performance is judged.
LEVELS OF EXPECTATION
Adequate Service
Zone of Tolerance
Adequate Service
Zone of Tolerance
Adequate Service
Adequate Service
Reliability
Tangibles
Desired Service
Personal Needs
Lasting Service Intensifiers are individual, stable factors that lead the customer to a heightened sensitivity to service.
Desired Service
Perceived Service Alternatives
Zone of Tolerance
Predicted Service
Adequate Service
Situational Factors
Desired Service
Word-of-Mouth
Past Experience
Predicted Service
Customers perceive services in terms of quality of service & how satisfied they are overall with their experiences.
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
It is a judgment that a product or service feature or the product or service itself provides a pleasurable level of consumption related fulfillment. It is the customers evaluation of a product or service in terms of whether it has met the customers needs & expectations. Its failure leads to dissatisfaction.
PRODUCT & SERVICE FEATURES CUSTOMER EMOTIONS- your mood ATTRIBUTION FOR SERVICE SUCCESS OR FAILURE: how much the customer blames or credits the failure or success of a service on the service provider PERCEPTION OF EQUITY OR FAIRNESS: have I been treated fairly compared to other customers? PERCEPTION OF FAMILY MEMBERS, FRIENDS, PEERS ETC
Source: James L. Heskett, W. Earl Sasser, Jr., and Leonard A. Schlesinger, The Service Profit Chain, (New York, NY: The Free Press, 1997), p. 83.
Adaptability:
employee response to customer needs and requests
Coping:
employee response to problem customers
Spontaneity:
unprompted and unsolicited employee actions and attitudes
Expected Service
(Customer Gap)
GAP 1
Perceived Service
COMPANY
Company Perceptions of Consumer Expectations
Company
To identify dissatisfied customers To discover customer requirements or expectations To monitor and track service performance To assess overall company performance compared to competition To assess gaps between customer expectations and perceptions To gauge effectiveness of changes in service To appraise performance of individuals/teams for rewards To determine expectations for a new service To monitor changing expectations in an industry To forecast future expectations
Includes both qualitative and quantitative research Includes both expectations and perceptions of customers Balances the cost of the research and the value of the information Includes statistical validity when necessary Measures priorities or importance of attributes Occurs with appropriate frequency Includes measures of loyalty, behavioral intentions, or actual behavior
Stage 1 : Define Problem Stage 2 : Develop Measurement Strategy Stage 3 : Implement Research Program Stage 4 : Collect and Tabulate Data Stage 5 : Interpret and Analyze Findings Stage 6 : Report Findings
Type of Research
Customer Complaint Solicitation
Relationship Surveys Post-Transaction Surveys