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Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School [email protected]

Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School [email protected]

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Page 1: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

Service Qualityand Design

David Ward-PerkinsSKEMA Business School

[email protected]

Page 2: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

Seminar objectives

To understand:

• the particular nature of services, and what this implies

• why service quality is a critical business objective

• how it is possible to design good service.

Page 3: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

1. The nature of services

Page 4: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

Categories of service

• Temporary rights over goods• Access to a defined space or to a shared physical

environment• Usage of systems & networks• Obtaining labour & expertise

Page 5: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

What is a service ?

“A service is any act or performance one party can offer to another that is essentially intangible and does not result in the ownership of anything.”

(Kotler & Keller 2009)

Page 6: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

2. How does this change the way you work?

Page 7: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

Important characteristics of services

• There is no implication of ownership• Intangible elements dominate value creation (eg feeling secure,

getting to destination on time).

• Time is a central component (start, end, duration)• Unused capacity is wasted• Maximising the usage is therefore essential.

• For these reasons, the relationship between provider and receiver is essential to service quality

Page 8: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

The need for a close relationship

• Services can be intangible, difficult to visualise & conceptualise (e.g. insurance). There must be clarity and understanding

• All services require involvement and engagement by the customers (co-production)

• Both sides need to manage time. • Wastage through misunderstanding,

poor cooperation & inefficient time-management = lost money.

Page 9: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

3. The most basic component of service design: process design

Page 10: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

What is the purpose of process design?

• Reduce wastage

• Save time

• Increase capacity

• Reduce frustration

• Improve customer experience

• Improve competitiveness

• Protect/increase margin

Page 11: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

Pre-booked

Non-booked

Recept.staff

Dining area

Callrestaurant

Note booking

Organise tables

Go to location

Select restaurant

Enterpremises

Waiting area

Go to table

See menu

Greetcustomers

Show to table

Bringmenus

Exterior design

Blueprinting: restaurant example

Page 12: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

Pre-booked

Non-booked

Recept.staff

Dining area

Callrestaurant

Note booking

Organise tables

Go to location

Select restaurant

Enterpremises

Waiting area

Go to table

See menu

Greetcustomers

Show to table

Bringmenus

Exterior design

Identifying fail-points

Fail-points:

Walk-bys; waiting to be seated; menus & drinks; expensive for mediocre service

Page 13: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

Benefits of process design

• Reduce wastage

• Save time

• Increase capacity

• Reduce frustration

• Improve customer experience

• Improve competitiveness

• Protect/increase margin

Page 14: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

An example case

The chain, ‘Hair Craft’, positions itself as offering quality and value to the middle of the market.

Page 15: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

Critical business info

• A typical outlet has a staff of 6 to 8, most of them directly providing hairdressing or beauty services

• A hair/beauty executive can service a maximum of 3 persons an hour x 6 = 20 per day at the most. The average is closer to 12

• Average billing is €30 per appointment, i.e. a maximum of €12,000 a month per executive.

• As a whole, the chain is currently running at 60% capacity.

• Under €20k revenues per month, a salon is not viable.

Page 16: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

Benefits of process design

• Reduce wastage

• Save time

• Increase capacity

• Reduce frustration

• Improve customer experience

• Improve competitiveness

• Protect/increase margin

Page 17: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

4. Revenue management

(or yield management)

Page 18: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

The principle

Optimise revenue streams for time-based services in limited supply (or perishable goods)

• Past the operative date, the value of the service is zero, for both partners

• For the customer approaching the cut-off date, the value may rise or fall, depending on ease of substitution

• Airlines, hotels, concerts, theatres, …

Page 19: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

Example: airline seats

• Limited supply on a specific plane

• Empty seats have zero value

• Last minute seats may have high value for the customer (point-to-point model)

• Or may be important for the airline to offload, depending on the circumstances (‘last minute’ model)

Page 20: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

4. CRM & loyalty management

Page 21: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

Risks for a service company

• Barriers to market entry may be low, and new entrants may have an advantage. The service may be easily replaceable. In other words, customers may easily switch.

• It may be difficult to prove superior benefits as compared to the competition. The service may be perceived as a commodity

Page 22: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

Reducing the risk

Address the customer experience:• Consistency of service quality. Consistent value for

money. And …• Establish and maintain a strong and personal relationship

i.e. work on the touchpoints. Reinforce them though personal contact.

Page 23: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

The pillars of CRM

• Improve processes that affect the customer (cf. blueprinting)

• Recognize the customer. Personalise the offer.• Reward loyalty.

Recognition & personalisation can be facilitated by technology

Page 24: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

Recognize the customer

Page 25: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

Reward loyalty

Three main functions•Recognition of the customer•Accumulation of reward•Immediate benefit

Page 26: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

The technology of loyalty

A question of intelligence.

Four main levels:•Anonymous (e.g. store coupons)•Visual (I see your name on a card or badge)•Small memory, data cannot be modified (e.g. magnetic stripe, bar code). Intelligence is not on the card.•Intelligent card (chip technology). Can store data.

•(+ Reprogrammable chips).

Page 27: Service Quality and Design David Ward-Perkins SKEMA Business School david.wardperkins@skema.edu

New keys to success

The trends•Servicisation•Mobility•Collaborative delivery of service

The new techniques•Pop-up•Home …•Simulators (& virtual reality); •Online expertise.