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Slides for Chapter 11

Slides for Chapter 11 . Contribution of Services Industries to Global GDP. The concept of service . Grönroos (2001: 7) defines the service concept as:

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Slides for Chapter 11

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  1. Slides for Chapter 11

  2. Contribution of Services Industries to Global GDP

  3. The concept of service Grönroos (2001: 7) defines the service concept as: “.. an activity or series of activities of a more or less intangible nature that normally, but not necessarily, take place in the interaction between the customer and service”

  4. A very insightful definition of a service comes from Fitzsimmons and Fitzsimmons (2007: 5) “A Service is a Time-perishable, Intangible Experience Performed for a Customer Acting in the Role of a Co-producer”.

  5. The Scope of Service Grönroos claims that “every business is a service business” (Grönroos, 2000) and that “the product … becomes just one element in the total, ongoing service offering” (Grönroos, ibid).

  6. Service Experience As Pullman and Gross (2004, p. 553) explain: An experience occurs when a customer has any sensation or knowledge acquisition resulting from some level of interaction with different elements of a context created by a service provider. Successful experiences are those that the customer finds unique, memorable and sustainable overtime, would want to repeat and build upon, and enthusiastically promotes via word of mouth.

  7. Service Dominant Logic In S-D logic, service is defined as the application of specialized competences (operant resources—knowledge and skills), through deeds, processes, and performances for the benefit of another entity or the entity itself. It is important to note that S-D logic uses the singular term, “service,” which reflects the process of doing something beneficial for and in conjunction with some entity (Vargo and Lusch: 2008, 26)

  8. Service Dominant Logic “The emergent “service-dominant” logic challenges the view of buyers as passive consumers and includes buyers in the value creation process by asserting that the customer is always a co-creator of value ........... In this perspective, goods are merely “intermediate products that are used by other operant resources (customers) as appliances in value creation processes” (Vargo and Lusch 2004: 7). And: “Consumers act as resource integrators ......when they use their competence, tools, raw materials, and sometimes professional services to produce maintenance services, entertainment, meals, etc. for themselves”. (Xie et al 2008:109)

  9. The “Moment of Truth” in Services Once customers and suppliers engage in a transaction – both in consumer and business (B2B) settings - organizations must ensure that resources go into producing the services so that “The Moment of Truth” (Normann 1991) that takes place in this contact, is very positive. See: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xmpDSBAh6RY When it doesn't go too well!

  10. Service Experience As Voss and Zomerdijk (2007, p6) rightly point out: “Every touch point a customer has with an organisation is an experience, no matter how mundane the product or service being delivered”

  11. Failed Differentiation at Silverjet • SUPER SERVICE No carts clog the aisles. All food and drink Is delivered by hand--a first for the industry. Silverjet hired its attendants primarily from hotels and restaurants. • BOYS, KEEP OUT Airplane lavatories are usually unisex, but Silverjet added a dedicated women's bathroom, an idea the CEO got from an outspoken female passenger at Heathrow. • BENDING DOWN A standard Boeing 767 has more than 200 seats. Silverjet has 100, which recline into 6-foot 3-inch beds. Cost: $2,200 for a round trip. • ECO-AWARE AIR With a fee of roughly $20 on every ticket, Silverjet is the first airline to completely offset the 124 tons of carbon dioxide released by each transatlantic flight. • TIME SAVINGS At London's Luton airport, passengers arrive at a private Silverjet terminal as little as 30 minutes before takeoff. The company has its own dedicated security process. Source: Fortune 15th October 2007

  12. Service Dominant Terminology

  13. The Service Strategy Concept

  14. Perceived Difference between Manufacturing and Services • The product is intangible. • Services cannot be kept in stock. • Services vary and cannot be mass produced. • There is high customer contact. • Customers participate in the service. • Facilities are located near to customers. • Services are labour intensive. • Quality is difficult to measure. • Quality depends largely on the server

  15. Classifications of physical service environments Source: Wilson, A., Zeithaml, V., Bitner, M. and Gremler, D. (2008)

  16. Normann’s Service System

  17. The Iceberg Principle in Service operations

  18. Key Points • The percentage of workers in the service sector has grown considerably since the 1960s and the contribution of services industries to global GDP is also vitally important across nations

  19. Key Points • The need to focus is vitally important in managing services in order to move away from notions of ‘a service is a service’. Services need specific approaches and infrastructure for particular segments and industries.

  20. Key Points • Old models of manufacturing versus services in operations management make little sense in an era where customers buy ‘an offer’ which includes experiences

  21. Key Points • The input-output model has been challenged by service dominant logic that sees the customer as an input whereby operations works with and not just for the customer

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