Introduction To Services Marketing: Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 1
Introduction To Services Marketing: Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 1
Introduction To Services Marketing: Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 1
Marketing
Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 1
Module – I Overview
• Importance of Service sector.
• Why study service marketing.
• “Service”.
• Nature of Services.
• Characteristics of services
• Goods vs Services
• Service Mix
• Classification of services
• Service marketing framework
• Challenges in Service
Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 2
The Service Management Decision Framework
W h a t B u sin e ss A r e W e In ?
W h a t S e r v ice P r o ce sse s C a n B e U s e d in W h o A r e O u r C u s to m e r s a n d H o w S h o u ld
O u r O p e r a ti o n ? W e R e l a t e to T h e m ?
W h a t S h o u l d b e th e C o r e a n d S u p p l e m e n ta r y
E l e m e n t s o f O u r S e r v i c e P r o d u c t?
W h a t P r ice S h o u ld W e C h a r g e H o w S h o u ld W e C o m m u n ic a te W h a t
fo r O u r S e r v ic e s ? O u r S e r v i c e H a s to O ff e r ?
W h a t A r e th e O p tio n s fo r D e liv e r in g H o w C a n W e B a l a n c e P r o d u c ti v i t y
O u r S e r v ice ? a n d Q u a lity ?
H o w S h o u l d W e M a t c h D e m a n d a n d P r o d u c ti v e C a p a c i t y ?
W h a t A r e A p p r o p r ia te R o le s fo r P e o p le a n d Te c h n o lo g y ?
H o w C a n O u r F ir m A ch ie v e S e r v ice L e a d e r s h ip ?
Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 3
How Important is the Service Sector in
Our Economy?
Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 4
Why Study Services Marketing?
Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 5
Evolving of Services
• Changing pattern of government regulations.
• Privatization of some public/ nonprofit service
• Technological innovations.
• Internationalization & Globalization.
• Expansion of leasing & rental business.
• Manufacturers as service providers.
• Hiring of employees.
Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 6
What is a Product?
Anything that can be offered to a market for
attention, acquisition, use, or consumption
and that might satisfy a want or need.
Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 7
What is a Service?
• An act or performance offered by one party to another
(performances are intangible, but may involve use of
physical products)
Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 8
Government Sector
Courts
Employment. Exchanges Services
Hospitals
Municipal Services
Post Office
Schools, Colleges etc
Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 9
Business Sector
Airlines
Banks Services
Insurance
Management
Consultants
Lawyer's
Doctors
Motion Pictures
Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 10
Manufacturers
Computers Operators
Legal Staff Services
Accountants
Administrative Staff
Supportive Staff
Security Staff
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 11
“ Something that can be bought and
sold but which cannot be dropped on
your foot !”
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 12
Examples of Service Industries
• Health Care
– hospital, medical practice, dentistry, eye care
• Professional Services
– accounting, legal, architectural
• Financial Services
– banking, investment advising, insurance
• Hospitality
– restaurant, hotel/motel, bed & breakfast,
– ski resort, rafting
• Travel
– airlines, travel agencies, theme park
• Others:
– hair styling, pest control, plumbing, lawn maintenance, counseling
services, health club
Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 13
Internal Services
Senior Citizen
Home
Wheel Chair
Dental Care
Dental Chair
Dental Equipments
Photography
Camera
Films
Printing
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 15
Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 16
The Nature of A Service
“ The service product is
essentially a bundle of
activities, consisting of
the core product - which
in Federal Express’ case
consists of transporting
packages overnight and
delivering them next
morning to the
addressee, plus a cluster
Fed Ex Example of supplementary
services.”
Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 17
The Nature of A Service
Advice and
Communication
Bill Statements
Order Taking
Overnight
Transportation Problem Solving
Supplies and Delivery of
Packages
Tracking
Pick-up
Documentation
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 18
Characteristics of Services
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 19
INVEN
TORY
INSEPARABILITY
INCONSISTENCY
INTANGIBILITY
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 20
Intangibility
No physical attributes
Nobody cares
As much ..Taj
Impossible to
taste
feel
I’ve got a piece
hear Of rock…
smell before buying Prudential
Visualization
Association
Physical Representation
Documentation
People Involvement
Place Advantage
Promotion
Branding
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 22
Tangibilising the Intangibles
Visualization
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 23
Tangibilising the Intangibles
Association
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 24
Tangibilising the Intangibles
Physical Representation
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 25
Tangibilising the Intangibles
Documentation
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 26
Tangibilising the Intangibles
People Involvement
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 27
Tangibilising the Intangibles
Place Advantage
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 28
Tangibilising the Intangibles
Promotion
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 29
Tangibilising the Intangibles
Branding
The family Restaurant
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 30
Tangibility of goods and services
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 31
Product qualities affect ease of evaluation
Easy to Difficult to
evaluate evaluate
Clothing
Furniture
Vacation
Motor vehicle
Medical surgery
Lawn Fertiliser
Legal services
Computer repair
Consultancy project
Restaurant meals
Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 33
Inconsistency
Different services
Performance of an Artist
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 34
Implications of Strategies for
Inconsistency Inconsistency
• customer surveys and feedback
Service delivery and
customer satisfaction • training in interpersonal and
depend on employee technical skills
actions • provide product knowledge
Service quality depends • ensure back-stage systems
on many uncontrollable support front line staff
factors • use standardisation strategies
There is no sure – franchising, scripts
knowledge that the • build quality into all processes
service delivered
matches what was
planned and promoted Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 35
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 36
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 37
Inseparability
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 38
Implications of Strategies for
Simultaneous Production inseparability
and Consumption
• manage the service encounter
Customers participate – scripts and roles
in and affect the – front-line staff need both
transaction technical and interpersonal
skills (recruit & train)
Customers affect
– educate the customer
each other
(provider –marketer)
Employees affect the • manage customer interactions
service outcome
• manage the physical evidence
Decentralization may • develop customer service
be essential policies and service recovery
procedures
Mass production is
difficult
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 39
Services are typically produced
And consumed simultaneously
oCo-production.. dentist/patient
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 40
Inventory
•Services cannot be stored
•Need to manage supply
Empty seats at 10 am
and demand flight to Bombay does
not mean Seats may be
available in the next
flight
Empty seats in a
stadium for a
Cricket game can not
be carried
To the next game
Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 41
Strategies for Dealing With Inventory (Perishability)
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 42
Goods Vs Services
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 43
Basic Differences between
Goods and Services
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 44
Services Marketing Mix
Traditional Marketing Mix
Product
People (service)
Process
Place,
Place &
cyber- Customers Price
Price
Time
space & Customers
Customers
time
Promotion
Physical evidence
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 46
People
– All human actors who play a part in service
delivery and thus influence the perceptions: namely
the firm’s personnel, the customer, and other
customers in the service environment.
customer
service employees
other customers
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 47
Physical Evidence
– The environment in which the service is delivered
and where the firm and customer interact, and any
tangible components that facilitate performance or
communication of the service.
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 49
Expanded Marketing Mix for Services
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 50
Classification of Services
Based on Degree Of Cust. Involvement
( Lovelock)
3. People Processing
4. Possession Processing
5. Mental Stimulus Processing
6. Information Processing
Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 51
Some other classification includes-
• The degree of tangibility.
• Whether customer directed/possessions.
• Time and place of delivery.
• Level of Customization/Standardization.
• Relationship with customer.
• Demand supply fluctuation.
• Interaction with people.
Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 52
Four Categories of Services
Employing Different Underlying Processes
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Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 54
The Services Marketing Triangle
Company
(Management)
Internal External
Marketing Marketing
“enabling the “setting the
promise” promise”
Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 56
Marketing Framework
3 C’s
Customers Competitors Company
Market Intelligence
S T P
(Segment) (Target) (Position)
Product Promotion
4 P’s
Price Place Module I
Faculty: J.Rai, IIPM-School of Management, Kansbahal 57
Challenges for Services
• Setting prices