Chapter 11 Managing service processes Understand the importance of effective management of service...
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Transcript of Chapter 11 Managing service processes Understand the importance of effective management of service...
Chapter 11
Managing service processes
Lecture objectives Understand the importance of effective management of
service processes to hospitality marketing
Evaluate dimensions of service quality in a hospitality context
Identify the principal reasons for service failure
Use service blueprinting to map a hospitality service process
Understand why, when and how customers complain about their hospitality experiences
Explain service recovery strategies for hospitality companies
Introduction Managing service production and delivery processes is the
responsibility of operations management
Marketing managers need to understand the principles of service operations management to ensure customers are satisfied
Managing demand is easier when the service process delivers what customers expect
When the service fails to deliver, marketing the hospitality brand is difficult
Hospitality businesses must deliver consistent service quality despite the constraints of intangibility, inseparability, seasonality and variability
Types of service process Vertical processes are located within one department –
food production operations Horizontal processes are cross-functional –
conference/events involve sales, reservations, operations, front desk, housekeeping and general management
Front-office processes interact with customers – check-in/check-out and food/beverage operations
Back-office processes hidden from customers – procurement processes
Some processes involve both front- and back-offices – front desk provides corporate customers with the bill and back office invoices the company
Five dimensions of service quality(SERVQUAL)
Reliability
Ability to perform the promised service dependably and accurately Empathy
Caring, individual attention given to the customer Tangibles
Appearance of physical facilities, equipment, employees and communication materials
Responsiveness
Willingness to help customers and provide prompt service Assurance
The knowledge and courtesy of employees, and their ability to convey confidence and inspire trust Source: Parasuraman, et al. (1985), reproduced with permission of the American Marketing Association
Gaps model of service qualityGap 1: management not knowing what customers expectGap 2: service quality standards do not match customer expectationsGap 3: service-performance gapGap 4: delivering the service promise
Closing the gaps:When Gaps 1–4 are close, the company will be promising and producing service experiences that meet customer expectations
When there are significant gaps (1, 2, 3, or 4) between what the company promises and delivers, then customer expectations are not met and customers will be dissatisfiedParasuraman, Zeithaml and Berry (1992)
Service blueprinting A service blueprint is a map that specifies how a service should be delivered From the moment customers arrive to the moment they leave, all the actions
that the customer and/or employees carry out are mapped on a diagram (see Figure 11.1)
The service blueprint has three horizontal lines:
Line of interaction – separates customers from front-of-house employees
When a vertical line crosses the line of interaction (e.g. when the customer is greeted), service encounters between customers and employees takes place
Line of visibility – separates front-of-house employee activities that the customer can see from those that cannot be seen
When the restaurant order taker is out of the customer’s sight in the kitchen Line of internal interaction – internal service encounters take place which
customers cannot see
By mapping service processes from a customer’s perspective, management can set service standards, develop service production and delivery processes that meet customers’ expectations
Figure 11.1 Mapping a restaurant service, customerservice encounter (x = internal service encounter)
Complexity and divergence in hospitality services
Service processes can be defined by complexity and diversity
The level of service complexity is the number of steps needed to perform the service:
fewer steps = lower complexity; more steps = greater complexity
The level of divergence refers to the degree of tolerance allowed in performing the service process:
some service processes are highly standardized and have a low degree of diversity; some operations allow employees more autonomy in delivering the service and have greater diversity
See Figure 11.2 for some examples
Sandwich shopCustomized event
catering
Street vendor Gourmet restaurant
Leve
l of d
iver
genc
eLo
wer
Hig
her
Level of complexityLower Higher
Figure 11.2 Complexity and divergence in hospitality services
Service process strategies1. Complexity reduction strategy Reduces complexity in service process by reducing the number of steps to
produce service (restricting menu) Reducing complexity improves consistency and reduces costs Could risk alienating existing customers
2. Increased complexity strategy Increasing complexity means adding more activities to the existing service
(more items on menu) Increased complexity can create service quality problems and increase costs
3. Divergence reduction strategy Reducing the level of divergence in the service implies more standardization Higher level of standardization should increase productivity and reduce costs This service process strategy is linked to volume sales and mass-marketing
4. Increased divergence strategy Increasing divergence gives greater customization of the service This might be niche positioning, e.g. human resource empowerment strategy,
encouraging employees to respond to customers’ individual needs
Reasons for service failure
Service failures occur when service does not match customer’s expectations
Typical hospitality service failures include the following: facilities/services promoted by marketing are not available physical environment is disappointing (damaged furniture, tired décor, poor hygiene
standards, atmosphere not welcoming) service is slower than expected standard of cooking is poor (overcooked/undercooked food, too much/too little
seasoning, food served at the wrong temperature) employees who lack product knowledge, do not care or, even worse, are rude to
customers
Some service failures are relatively minor for the customer; others very importantDissatisfied customers with complaints can complain, create negative word-of-mouth and even litigate against a hospitality company
When and how customers complainConcurrently Customer complains at the same time as the service failure occurs, allows
employees to respond and solve the problem. From both the company’s and the customer’s perspective, this is best time to complain
Subsequently Customers telephone, email, text or write letters of complaint. Over time
customers can feel more strongly about the service failure and incidents can be magnified. Since customer contacted company, complaint can still be managed
Third-party complaints Unhappy customers complain to organizations (consumer bodies,
governments, tourist boards, motoring organizations) hotel and restaurant guide books. Organization responds to customer complaints and agree action to resolve complaint with company
Online complaints Unhappy customers complain online through travel sites (TripAdvisor).
Some hotels respond effectively to online complaints – many do notNegative word-of-mouth Some unhappy customers do not complain to the company, but tell their
family and friends about the ‘poor’ service and generate negative word-of-mouth publicity; this can be compounded when the negative W-o-M is online
Service recovery strategiesZero defects strategy Borrowed from manufacturing and Total Quality
Management (TQM) Key idea to design out every potential problem before it can
occur The special characteristics of services make the adoption of
a zero defects strategy difficult to implement but working to reduce operational service failures can reduce complaints
Encourage complaints!!! Companies can improve customer service by learning from
complaints Encouraging customers to complain can help to improve
service qualityTreat customers fairly when they complain Customers have a sense of ‘fairness’ Outcome fairness refers to the tangible result the
customer expects to receive after a complaint Customers expect fair compensation relative to the
complaint Procedural fairness refers to the company’s policy for
handling complaints. When a problem arises, customers want the first employee to sort out the problem quickly and efficiently or find someone who can
Interactional fairness refers to customers expecting employees and management to treat them politely and honestly. Customers want companies to genuinely care about their problem
Conclusion Processes can be categorized as vertical or horizontal; or front
office or back-office Managing service processes helps to deliver customer satisfaction Five dimensions of service quality are: reliability, empathy,
tangibles, responsiveness and assurance The gaps model of service quality helps to explain the gap
between customer expectations and perceptions of service quality You can map a hospitality service using blueprinting Complexity and divergence service process strategies can improve
service quality and profitability The reasons for service failure in a hospitality context When and how customers complain The important role of service recovery strategies
References and further reading Gummesson, E. and Kingman-Brundage, J. (1991). ‘Service design and
quality: applying service blueprinting and service mapping to railroad services’. In P. Kunst and J. Lemmink (eds) Quality Management in Services. Van Gorcu.
Parasuraman, A., Zeithaml, V. and Berry, L. L. (1985). ‘A conceptual model of service quality and its implications for future research’. Journal of Marketing, 49, pp. 41–50.
Parasuraman, A., Zeithaml, V. and Berry, L. L. (1992). ‘Achieving service quality through gap analysis and a basic statistical approach’. Journal of Services Marketing, 6 (1), pp. 5–14.
Shostack, L. (1981). ‘Service positioning through structural change’. Journal of Marketing, 51, pp. 34–43.
Singh, J. (1990). ‘A typology of consumer dissatisfaction response styles’. Journal of Retailing, 66 (1), pp. 57–99.
Tax, S. S. and Brown, S. W. (1998). ‘Recovering and learning from service failure’. Sloan Management Review, 40, pp. 61–75.
Zeithaml, V. A. and Bitner, M. J. (2009). Services Marketing. McGraw-Hill.