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A service business is one where the perceived value of the offering to the buyer is
determined more by the service rendered than the product offered.
The definition and scope of the service concept is wide and can mean any or all of the
following:
Furthermore many services are public services or charities and in such cases there may
be no direct price.
The promotion dimension of the marketing mix is very closely related to the product
features. Given that there is no physical product to promote, marketers and managers
rely heavily on promoting an image. And because service products cannot be stored the
promotion message needs to focus on spreading as well as creating demand.
The place or distribution aspect of the marketing mix is, in some ways, a virtual
concept. There is no physical distribution system. However because services are
performed they need to have a suitable environment for that performance. Therefore the
location of premises is vital. If the service has multiple outlets or is delivered in more
than one geographical region then the effective management of agents is important. This
is always difficult and even more so when the product is intangible.
The core characteristics are now widely recognized as intangibility, inseparability,
perishability, and heterogeneity.
Intangibility: Even though many services include tangible aspects such as an airline
seat, a classroom, a restaurant table and food the service performance leading to a
customers experience is intangible. The benefits of buying a product are based on its
physical characteristics whereas the benefits of buying a service are from the nature of
the performance. In comparison to physical goods, services cannot be stored or readily
displayed. They are difficult to communicate, cannot be protected through patents and
prices are difficult to set. The intangible nature of services often means that customers
have difficulty in evaluating and comparing services. As a result they may use price as a
basis for assessing quality and they may place greater emphasis on personal
information sources. This all leads to consumers having higher levels of perceived risk.
The intangibility of services makes them very different from the traditional product mix
that is frequently analyzed in terms of tangible design properties. Similarly, physical
distribution management may not be an important element of the place mix decisions
because there is no tangible product.
Inseparability: For most services both the buyer and the seller need to be at the same
place at the same time for the service to occur.
Perishability: Given the intangible nature of services, they cannot be inventoried,
stored, warehoused or re-used. A lawyer cannot store parts of his or her knowledge for
others to use while the lawyer is in court or on holiday. Thus the availability of enough
opportunities for service delivery at relevant times is important for service managers.
Heterogeneity: The intangible nature of services means that standardization and
quality are difficult to control. Given that people are involved in providing the actual
services in most sectors and that people are unlikely to operate as reliably and
constantly as machines it is often difficult to measure and control quality. Also
evaluations often depend largely on attitude, opinions and expectations of customers
and potential customers.
Conceptual models and frameworks are very useful aids for visualizing
service dimensions and helping to illustrate, describe and explain
interrelationships, interactions and influences upon service dimensions. Some
of the conceptual models or frameworks used in services were originally
created to help researchers and practitioners to mentally grasp, understand,
develop and explain the complexity of the service situation. The earlier work
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of classifying and defining services has provided the groundwork and basis
for the development of conceptual models. These models have been
developed and Underpinning Concepts 17 further refined by focusing on
aspects of service delivery, quality, customer satisfaction, and managerial
focus and through exploration of services in different contexts.
SERVQUAL was created to measure service quality and is based on the view that the
customer's assessment of service quality is paramount. It is operationalized in terms of the
relationship between expectations and outcomes. That is, SERVQUAL is based on measuring
customer satisfaction in terms of the relationship between expectations (E) and outcomes (O). If
the outcome (O) matches expectations (E), then the customer is satisfied. If expectations (E)
exceeds the outcome (O), then customer dissatisfaction is indicated. If the outcome (O)
exceeds expectations (E), then customer 'delight' may be the result.
Service quality is considered as a multi-dimensional construct and in the early phase of
development Parasuraman et al. (1985) identified ten service dimensions. In a further
refinement these ten were reduced to five dimensions: tangibles, reliability, responsibility,
assurance and empathy (Parasuraman et al., 1988). These formed the core of the SERVQUAL
measuring instrument. The five dimensions are measured with an Instrument using 22 items.
and many researchers argue that four or five items cannot capture the variability within each
service quality dimension. Some of the issues that have been debated and critiqued by
various researchers in service contexts arc listed below.
1. The gaps model some researchers say that there is little evidence that customers
assess service quality in terms of performance and expectation gaps.
2. Process orientation SERVQUAL focuses on the process of service delivery and not
on the outcomes of the service encounter, therefore this limits the value of the
mechanism.
3. Dimensionality SERVQUAL's five dimensions are not universal. The number of
dimensions comprising SERVQUAL arc contextualized and there is a high degree of
inter correlation between the five dimensions.
4. Expectations some researchers argue that measuring expectations is unnecessary. If
they are to be measured, expectations and perceptions should be measured on a single
scale.
5. Item composition four or five items cannot capture the variability within each
SERVQUAL dimension.
3. Can you describe at least two other approaches that could be used to measure service quality?
1. The critical incidents technique has also been widely used in service marketing research.
The technique was originally developed by Flanagan (1954) to identify critical job requirements.
However it has been adapted for use in services situations. In services marketing it is often
used to elicit verbatim stories from customers about various service encounters. These can be
stories of cither good or poor service experiences. The advantage of this technique is that it
allows respondents to tell of their experiences in their own words, how they feel about the
encounters and any other aspects of the service delivery and management of interest to the
researcher.
They can be used as an effective alternative to complaint gathering as they are a useful means
of identifying dissatisfied customers and any common service failure Issues. Equally they
provide an effective means of encouraging customers to describe 'best practice' in any aspect of
service delivery or management they may have experienced elsewhere. Detailed descriptions of
experiments elsewhere will provide information on customer requirements in different situations
and behavioral and attitudinal criteria in relation to service delivery and policies. A critical
incidents study should reveal rich data in relation to desirable and undesirable aspects of how
service companies deliver various service dimensions in different contexts. This kind of
information is very useful to illustrate to employees what customers do and do not like and
therefore indicate how to modify aspects of their service delivery behavior.
3. Observation studies. They are useful for gathering information on how service staff and
customers behave. They go beyond what customers and staff may say they do and any
opinions they have of service aspects. Instead observation studies will gather
information about what customers and staff actually do. This provides information
relating to customers actual responses to marketing activity and the participation and
involvement of staff in the service process.
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4. What research approach would be most appropriate for gathering detailed information
from service marketing managers and why? Depending on the research information
needed, Im a fan of observation study methods because they are useful for gathering
information on how service staff and customers behave. They go beyond what
customers and staff may say they do and any opinions they have of service aspects.
Instead observation studies will gather information about what customers and staff
actually do. This provides information relating to customers actual responses to
marketing activity and the participation and involvement of staff in the service process.