TBS953 Spring 2012 Lectures Chapter 3 Slides
TBS953 Spring 2012 Lectures Chapter 3 Slides
TBS953 Spring 2012 Lectures Chapter 3 Slides
McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Learning Objectives
Formulate a strategic service vision Discuss the competitive environment of services Describe how a service competes using the three generic service strategies Explain what is meant by qualifiers, service winners, and service losers Discuss the competitive role of information in services Explain the concept of the virtual value chain and its role in service innovation Identify potential limits in the use of information as a competitive strategy Categorize a service firm according to its stage of 3-2 competitiveness.
What are common characteristics of important market segments? What dimensions can be used to segment the market, demographic, psychographic? How important are various segments? What needs does each have? How well are these needs being served, in what manner, by whom?.
3-4
What are important elements of the service to be provided, stated in terms of results produced for customers? How are these elements supposed to be perceived by the target market segment, by the market in general, by employees, by others? How do customers perceive the service concept? What efforts does this suggest in terms of the manner in which the service is designed, delivered, marketed?
3-5
What are important elements of the strategy: operations, financing, marketing, organization, human resources, control? On which will the most effort be concentrated? Where will investments be made? How will quality and cost be controlled: measures, incentives, rewards? What results will be expected versus competition in terms of, quality of service, cost profile, productivity, morale/loyalty of servers?
3-6
What are important features of the service delivery system including: role of people, technology, equipment, layout, procedures? What capacity does it provide, normally, at peak levels? To what extent does it, help insure quality standards, differentiate the service from competition, provide barriers to entry by competitors?
3-7
Fun cabin atmosphere to differentiate service Use only Boeing 737 aircraft to control maintenance and operating costs Hire cabin crew based on attitude
Quick turnaround at gate results in high utilization of aircraft No assigned seating rewards punctuality and promotes on-time performance
Short flights with frequent departures Serve peanuts and soft drinks only Use of inner-city or low traffic airports avoids congestion
State of Texas residents Business traveler who drives because of inadequate service Inexpensive family travel on weekends
Carry-on luggage
3-8
Relatively Low Overall Entry Barriers Economies of Scale Limited High Transportation Costs Erratic Sales Fluctuations No Power Dealing with Buyers or Suppliers Product Substitutions for Service High Customer Loyalty Exit Barriers.
3-9
Seeking out Low-cost Customers (e.g., USAA) Standardizing a Custom Service (e.g., H&R Block) Reducing the Personal Element in Service Delivery (promote self-service) (e.g., Alaska Airlines) Reducing Network Costs (hub and spoke) (e.g., FedEx) Taking Service Operations Offline (e.g., Taco Bell).
3-11
Differentiation
Making the Intangible Tangible (memorable) (e.g., Disney Theme Parks) Customizing the Standard Product (e.g., Ritz Carlton) Reducing Perceived Risk (e.g., FedEx) Giving Attention to Personnel Training (e.g., McDonalds Hamburger University) Controlling Quality (e.g., Shouldice Hospital)
Note: Differentiation in service means being unique in brand image, technology use, features, or reputation for customer service.
3-12
Focus
Buyer Group: (e.g. USAA insurance and military officers) Service Offered: (e.g. Shouldice Hospital and hernia patients) Geographic Region: (e.g. Austin Cable Vision and TV watchers).
3-13
Bargaining Power of Suppliers - Presence of substitute inputs - Threat of forward integration - Uniqueness of inputs
Competitive Rivalry within Industry - Number of competitors - Rate of industry growth - Industry capacity
Bargaining Power of Customers - Buyers price sensitivity - Customer volume - Information asymmetry
Threat of Substitutes - Buyer propensity to substitute - Buyer switching costs - Product substitution for service
3-14
SWOT Analysis
Strengths What are your companys advantages? What do you do better than anyone else? What unique resources do you have? What do people in your market see as your strengths? Weaknesses What could you improve? What should you avoid? What factors lose sales? What are people in your market likely to see as a weakness? Opportunities What are your competitors vulnerabilities? What are the current market trends? Does technology offer new service options? Are there niches in the market your organization can fill? Threats What obstacles do you face? What are your competitors doing? Is changing technology threatening your position? Do you have cash-flow problems?
3-15
(24 hour ATM) (Site location) (On-time performance) (Know customers name) (Quality surrogate) (Perceptions important) (Word-of-mouth) (Customer well-being) (Avoid excessive waiting).
3-16
must be attained on the competitive dimension, as defined by other market players. Examples are cleanliness for a fast food restaurant or safe aircraft for an airline. Service Winner: The competitive dimension used to make the final choice among competitors. Example is price. Service Loser: Failure to deliver at or above the expected level for a competitive dimension. Examples are failure to repair auto (dependability), rude treatment (personalization) or late delivery of package (speed).
3-17
Revenue generation:
Internal (Operations) Yield management Point of sale Expert systems
Productivity enhancement:
Inventory status Data envelopment analysis (DEA)
3-18
Apply the generic valueadding steps of the information world: - Gather - Organize - Select - Synthesize - Distribute to each physical activity to create virtual value.
3-19
Marketplace vs Marketspace Creating New Markets Using Information (Gather, Organize, Select, Synthesize, and Distribute) Four Stage Evolution 1st Stage (New Processes): See physical operations more effectively with information (USAA paperless operation) 2nd Stage (New Knowledge): Substitute virtual activities for physical (USAA automate underwriting) 3rd Stage (New Products): Use information to deliver value to customers in new ways (USAA event oriented service) 4th Stage (New Relationships): Seek customer collaboration in co-creation of value (USAA financial planning service).
3-20
Anti-competitive (e.g. Barrier to entry) Fairness (e.g. Yield management) Invasion of Privacy (e.g. Micromarketing) Data Security (e.g. Medical records) Reliability (e.g. Credit report).
3-21
Coding grades customers on how profitable their business is Routing is used by call centers to place customers in different queues based on customer code Targeting allows choice customers to have fees waived and get other hidden discounts Sharing data about your transaction history with other firms is a source of revenue.
3-22
2. Journeyman
Customers neither seek out nor avoid the firm.
3. Distinctive competence
Customers seek out the firm on the basis of its sustained reputation for meeting customer expectations.
Operations continually excels, reinforced by personnel management and systems that support an intense customer focus. Exceeds customer expectations; consistent on multiple dimensions.
2. Journeyman
3. Distinctive competence
CUSTOMER Unspecified, to be satisfied at minimum cost. When necessary for survival, under duress. WORKFORCE Negative constraint. FRONT-LINE MANAGEMENT Controls workers. Controls the process. Listens to customers; coaches and facilitates workers. Is listened to by top management as a source of new ideas. Mentors work to enhance their career. 3-24 Efficient resource; disciplined; follows procedure. Permitted to select among alternative procedures. Innovative; creates procedures. A collection of individuals whose variation in needs is understood. When promises to enhance service. A source of stimulation, ideas, and opportunity. Source of first-mover advantages, creating ability to do things your competitors cant do.
Case Studies
Case 3.1 United Commercial Bank and El Banco Case 3.2 The Alamo Drafthouse
3-26
$6.32 billion in assets $484.0 million in capital 2 branches in New York Representative offices in Taiwan and China, and a branch in Hong Kong
All of us at UCB share your values of dedication to hard work, savings, and education. We are committed to providing highly personalized service, and a wide range of consumer and commercial banking products and services to help you, your family, and your business achieve your American Dream. 3-27
Promotions involve tea sets and involvement with local Pacific Heritage Museum Most employees speak Cantonese as first language
3-28
UCBs reliance on savings and CDs places it above the 95% percentile among banks overall Chinese-Americans tend to use banks to save, instead of brokerage firms or other investments
UCBH: Deposit A nalysis (A s of Dec 31, 2004) Total de posits Transaction accounts Mo ney ma rke t accounts Savings accounts Total MMA and savings Time de posits under $100k Time de posits over $100k Total tim e deposits Deposits in fore ign offices United Commercial A mount Percent 5,222,672 133,083 1,288,595 946,165 2,234,760 916,077 1,610,270 2,526,347 328,572 100.0% 2.5% 24.7% 18.1% 42.8% 17.5% 30.8% 48.4% 6.3% A ll Banks* Percent 100.0% 14.6% 34.3% 15.2% 49.5% 16.8% 17.4% 34.2% 1.7%
3-29
Many United Commercial customers operate import-export businesses related to China UCBs trade finance offering facilitates letters of credit and management of trading operations
3-30
Lending to the Chinese and Korean communities has resulted in lower loan losses and fewer charge-offs Asian-American banks are far more efficient and more profitable than community banks as a whole
3-31
Hispanic retail banking concept based in Atlanta, Georgia Franchised bank offering designed by individuals from check-cashing business Originally part of smaller local bank in Atlanta; now a subsidiary of Suntrust Products include deposit accounts, fee-based check cashing, mortgages, and international funds transfers (i.e. to Mexico) 6 branches in Atlanta Rapid growth from first branch in January 2002: Jan. 2002 Deal signed by El Banco and Flag Bank Jun. 2002 1 Branch Dec. 2002 2 Branches, 1st Branch cash flow positive Jun. 2003 2nd Branch cash flow positive, NCB buys El Banco Dec. 2003 4 Branches, 50 employees, SunTrust buys NCB Jun. 2004 6 Branches, 125 employees Atlanta is 6.5% Hispanic (268,851 according to 2000 census)
3-32
Check cashing alone is 1/3 of revenues Fee income is over half of total bank income Fee income as a percentage of total revenue for community banks overall averages 24.8%
Interest rates range from 8.0-9.5%, versus 4.86% on average for Georgia High rates partly explained by fact that many of El Banco customers are undocumented
3-33
No motor banking (no commercial customers) Small branches located in strip centers already frequented by Latinos Branches are informal (i.e. you dont feel foolish wearing work clothes)
3-34
Western Union is one of the most recognized names in financial services for Latinos Many Hispanics have successfully sent money to relatives with Western Union
3-35
Customers use retail financial services (i.e. check cashing) provided by non-banks
Change point exists as customers grow in affluence (open bank, brokerage accounts) Acquiring customers early and offering many services, El Banco avoids change points
Customer lifetime value is high if El Banco meets their needs as they grow in affluence
Depth of Relationship
QUESTIONS
1.
2.
3.
Compare and contrast the strategic service vision of El Banco and United Commercial Bank Identify the service winners, qualifiers, and service losers for El Banco and United Commercial Bank What are the differentiating features of banks that target ethnic communities
3-37
El Banco
Operating Strategy
Service Concept
3-38
What are the differentiating features of banks that target ethnic communities?
3-39
Summary
United Commercial Highly profitable and growing bank for entrepreneurial Chinese-American community Asian-American banks show the opportunity for other ethnic banks El Banco Fast growing retail bank designed specifically for Latino community Orientation towards customers on the border between banking and nonbank financial services Ethnic banking Well-articulated cultural focus on target communities (language, look-andfeel) Products that match unique customer needs (trade finance, check cashing) Favorable financial metrics (profitability, growth, asset quality) If the community has a distinct identity and distinct product needs, then banks have an opportunity to capitalize on those distinctions 3-40
MOVIE SELECTION
Few Many
Poor
3-41
Target market segments Service concept Operating strategy Service delivery system
3-42
Make recommendations for Tim and Carrie that would increase profitability.
3-43
Discussion Topics
1.
2. 3.
4. 5.
Give examples of service firms that use both the strategy of focus and differentiation and the strategy of focus and overall cost leadership. What ethical issues are associated with micromarketing? For each of the three generic strategies (i.e., cost leadership, differentiation, and focus) which of the four competitive uses of information is most powerful? Give an example of a firm that begin as world-class and has remained in that category. Could firms in the world-class service delivery stage of competitiveness be described as learning organizations?
3-44