This chapter discusses customer expectations of service. It defines customer expectations as reference points against which service performance is judged. It outlines that customers hold two main types of expectations - desired service, which is the level of service hoped for, and adequate service, which is the minimum acceptable level. It also discusses the zone of tolerance, which is the range of service that customers will accept before their satisfaction is undermined. The chapter examines factors that influence customer expectations, including personal needs, experiences, and word-of-mouth, as well as how expectations can vary between customers and service dimensions.
This document discusses the impact of physical evidence and servicescapes on customer perceptions. It defines servicescapes as the environment where a service is delivered and customers interact with employees. Servicescapes can include facility exteriors and interiors, signage, equipment, and other tangible elements. The document explores how servicescape design influences customer and employee behaviors and different types of servicescapes for various services. Physical evidence and ambient conditions like temperature, lighting, and music can communicate a firm's image and affect customer moods and evaluations.
This document discusses service focus and encounters. It defines four types of service focuses: 1) service focused, 2) market focused, 3) service and market focused, and 4) unfocused. It also discusses how unfocused service operations can achieve benefits of focus through business focus and operational focus. Service encounters are defined as moments of truth where customers interact with the service. Characteristics, types, and variables complicating encounters are described. Four elements of service encounters - customer, service provider, delivery system, and physical evidence - are outlined. Scripts are discussed as outlines for expected customer experiences. Functions and problems of scripting are also summarized.
This document discusses customer lifetime value (CLV) and how to optimize marketing strategies around it. It covers:
1. Choosing the right key performance indicators (KPIs) to focus on like CPA, ROAS, profit, or CLV.
2. An overview of customer centricity and how CLV is the "Holy Grail" metric for understanding customer strategies and analytics.
3. How to take action and put the chosen KPI into practice through campaign reporting, optimization, and ensuring the right data integration and technology platforms.
4. A short introduction to marketing experiments for proving the effectiveness and value of marketing efforts through controlled experimentation.
This document discusses the critical role of service employees in delivering quality service. It makes three key points:
1. Service employees are the face of the organization and directly interact with customers, so developing a strong service culture where customer service is a priority is important. This involves training employees on service and rewarding good customer service.
2. Service employees play a boundary spanning role between the organization and customers and must be able to handle customer needs, conflicts, and provide quality service.
3. There are various strategies for delivering quality service through employees, such as hiring the right people, training and empowering employees, promoting teamwork, and providing support systems to allow employees to serve customers effectively.
The document discusses strategies for effective service recovery after a service failure. It explains that while service failures are inevitable, recovery actions are important for keeping customers loyal. It identifies different types of customer complainers and presents two main recovery strategies: fixing the customer through responsive communication, fair treatment and compensation; and fixing the underlying service problems. The document also discusses the benefits and characteristics of service guarantees as a particular recovery tool, noting guarantees help manage customer risk but are not always appropriate.
Customer expectations are beliefs about the level and quality of service that will be provided, which act as standards against which customer satisfaction is judged. These expectations are influenced by word of mouth, personal needs, past experiences, and advertising. Customer expectations fall along a zone of tolerance, with adequate service being the minimum accepted, desired service being the goal, and anything exceeding expectations delighting the customer.
Customer expectations are beliefs about a service that act as standards against which performance is judged. There are different types of expectations including ideal, normative, experience-based, and minimum tolerance levels. Marketers should be aware of factors that influence expectations like perceived alternatives, word-of-mouth, and past experiences. To manage expectations, companies should understand what customers will accept as adequate service and aim to meet or exceed expectations through consistent, high-quality performance.
This document discusses the impact of physical evidence and servicescapes on customer perceptions. It defines servicescapes as the environment where a service is delivered and customers interact with employees. Servicescapes can include facility exteriors and interiors, signage, equipment, and other tangible elements. The document explores how servicescape design influences customer and employee behaviors and different types of servicescapes for various services. Physical evidence and ambient conditions like temperature, lighting, and music can communicate a firm's image and affect customer moods and evaluations.
This document discusses service focus and encounters. It defines four types of service focuses: 1) service focused, 2) market focused, 3) service and market focused, and 4) unfocused. It also discusses how unfocused service operations can achieve benefits of focus through business focus and operational focus. Service encounters are defined as moments of truth where customers interact with the service. Characteristics, types, and variables complicating encounters are described. Four elements of service encounters - customer, service provider, delivery system, and physical evidence - are outlined. Scripts are discussed as outlines for expected customer experiences. Functions and problems of scripting are also summarized.
This document discusses customer lifetime value (CLV) and how to optimize marketing strategies around it. It covers:
1. Choosing the right key performance indicators (KPIs) to focus on like CPA, ROAS, profit, or CLV.
2. An overview of customer centricity and how CLV is the "Holy Grail" metric for understanding customer strategies and analytics.
3. How to take action and put the chosen KPI into practice through campaign reporting, optimization, and ensuring the right data integration and technology platforms.
4. A short introduction to marketing experiments for proving the effectiveness and value of marketing efforts through controlled experimentation.
This document discusses the critical role of service employees in delivering quality service. It makes three key points:
1. Service employees are the face of the organization and directly interact with customers, so developing a strong service culture where customer service is a priority is important. This involves training employees on service and rewarding good customer service.
2. Service employees play a boundary spanning role between the organization and customers and must be able to handle customer needs, conflicts, and provide quality service.
3. There are various strategies for delivering quality service through employees, such as hiring the right people, training and empowering employees, promoting teamwork, and providing support systems to allow employees to serve customers effectively.
The document discusses strategies for effective service recovery after a service failure. It explains that while service failures are inevitable, recovery actions are important for keeping customers loyal. It identifies different types of customer complainers and presents two main recovery strategies: fixing the customer through responsive communication, fair treatment and compensation; and fixing the underlying service problems. The document also discusses the benefits and characteristics of service guarantees as a particular recovery tool, noting guarantees help manage customer risk but are not always appropriate.
Customer expectations are beliefs about the level and quality of service that will be provided, which act as standards against which customer satisfaction is judged. These expectations are influenced by word of mouth, personal needs, past experiences, and advertising. Customer expectations fall along a zone of tolerance, with adequate service being the minimum accepted, desired service being the goal, and anything exceeding expectations delighting the customer.
Customer expectations are beliefs about a service that act as standards against which performance is judged. There are different types of expectations including ideal, normative, experience-based, and minimum tolerance levels. Marketers should be aware of factors that influence expectations like perceived alternatives, word-of-mouth, and past experiences. To manage expectations, companies should understand what customers will accept as adequate service and aim to meet or exceed expectations through consistent, high-quality performance.
This document discusses managing demand and capacity in the service industry. It describes the nature of services and how demand fluctuates while capacity is usually constant. This can lead to four scenarios: excess demand, demand exceeding optimum capacity, balanced demand and capacity, and excess capacity. The document outlines various strategies for matching demand and capacity, such as shifting demand patterns, adjusting capacity levels, using yield management, and establishing waiting line strategies.
The document discusses several ethical issues related to marketing, including targeting vulnerable groups, excluding potential customers, price fixing, predatory pricing, deceptive advertising, and promoting unhealthy or unsafe products. It provides statistics on public opinions regarding regulation of content in television advertising. Key ethical considerations for marketing revolve around the four P's of marketing: product, price, placement, and promotion.
The document discusses various aspects of customer relationship management (CRM) and service quality. It describes CRM as a process of building and maintaining customer relationships through strategies like data collection and analysis, sales force automation, and customer retention. The document also discusses topics like service recovery strategies, building customer loyalty through rewards programs, and the importance of physical evidence and managing the service environment known as the "servicescape".
The document discusses building customer loyalty through segmentation, service quality, and relationship depth. It recommends segmenting customers based on their value, spending habits, and maintenance costs. The goal is to focus on high-value customers that spend more over time while limiting interactions with low-value customers. Building loyalty requires deepening relationships through rewards and higher engagement levels. Reducing churn also involves identifying and addressing its key drivers, like complaints, through improved service recovery and increased switching costs.
This document discusses various perspectives on defining and measuring service quality. It begins by outlining four common definitions of quality: product-based, user-based, manufacturing-based, and value-based. It then describes two categories of service quality - internal and external quality. Several frameworks for measuring dimensions of service quality are presented, including the eight dimensions identified by David Garvin and the SERVQUAL model developed by Parasuraman, Zeithmal and Berry. The document also discusses tools for collecting customer feedback and analyzing service quality problems.
This document discusses new service development and process design. It begins by outlining the learning objectives, which include discussing the new service development process, classifying service operations, and comparing approaches to service system design. It then covers the new service development cycle and levels of service innovation from incremental to radical. Various topics are explored such as using technology to drive innovation, adopting new technologies in services, and using blueprints and taxonomies to strategically position services based on complexity and divergence. Generic approaches to service design like production line, customer participation, and information empowerment are also compared. The document provides examples and discussion questions to illustrate key concepts around new service design.
This document discusses waiting line management and queuing systems. It covers topics like how the average person spends their time waiting, laws of service, components of queuing systems like arrivals, queues, servers and exits. It also discusses customer populations, service patterns, queue disciplines, line structures and performance measures. The key aspects are controlling customer demand through reservations, segmenting populations based on factors like urgency and designing well-organized reservation systems.
The document discusses the traditional and extended marketing mix used for services. The traditional mix includes product, price, place, and promotion. The extended mix adds people, process, and physical evidence. It then provides examples and details for each element of the marketing mix as applied to services.
1st Module of Services Marketing
Reasons for the growth of the services sector and its contribution; the difference in goods and service marketing; characteristics of services; the concept of service marketing triangle; service marketing mix; GAP models of service quality.
Consumer behavior in services: Search, Experience and Credence property, consumer expectation of services, two levels of expectation, Zone of tolerance, Factors influencing customer expectation of services.
Customer perception of services-Factors influencing customer perception of service, Service encounters, Customer satisfaction, Strategies for influencing customer perception.
The document discusses different frameworks for classifying services and how they can be useful for managers. It provides examples of services that fall under each classification: people processing, possession processing, and mental stimulus processing. The document then asks the reader to list services they have used in the past month and categorize them. Finally, it discusses strategies marketers can use to help consumers evaluate services high in search, experience, and credence attributes to reduce perceived risk.
This document discusses achieving service recovery and obtaining customer feedback. It outlines components of an effective service recovery system such as doing the job right the first time, effective complaint handling, and learning from recoveries. It also discusses customer complaining behaviors, service guarantees, and dealing with abusive customer behaviors. Key points covered include understanding why and how customers complain, designing service guarantees, discouraging customer fraud, and creating institutionalized learning from customer feedback.
The document discusses service management and describes Village Volvo, an auto repair shop. It analyzes Village Volvo's service package, which includes supporting facilities, facilitating goods, information provided to customers, explicit services like experienced mechanics, and implicit services like encouraging customers to inspect replaced parts. It also examines Village Volvo's service characteristics, such as how customers participate in the service process by bringing their cars for scheduled repairs and interacting with mechanics, and how Village Volvo addresses the perishability of services by scheduling appointments and drop-in times.
Customer's expectation & perception of customersRajThakuri
Customers have both expectations and perceptions of the level of service they will receive. Their expectations are influenced by personal needs, past experiences, and promises made by the service provider. Perceptions are formed through service encounters and compared to expectations. If perceptions meet or exceed expectations, the customer will be satisfied. Key aspects of service quality that influence perceptions are reliability, responsiveness, assurance, empathy, and tangibles. Higher customer value relative to costs also leads to greater satisfaction. Satisfied customers are more loyal and help the business grow through positive word-of-mouth.
The document discusses three key learning objectives:
1) It defines what a service product is, noting it consists of a core product and supplementary services that augment the core product.
2) It describes how to design a service concept by looking at the core product, supplementary services, and delivery processes holistically.
3) It introduces the "Flower of Service" model which categorizes supplementary services as either facilitating (needed for delivery or use of core product) or enhancing (adding extra value). Facilitating services include information, order-taking, billing, and payment.
The document discusses key aspects of consumer behavior including the meaning of consumer behavior, types of consumers, factors that influence consumer behavior from various disciplines like psychology, sociology, economics, and applications of consumer behavior knowledge in marketing. It defines consumer behavior as how individuals select, purchase, use, and dispose of products and services. It also outlines the consumer decision making process and different types of consumer buying behaviors.
This document discusses service encounters from a lecture presented by Dr. Niraj Chaudhari. It defines a service encounter as the initial interaction between a customer and service provider. More than half of multinational corporations are involved in providing services, making the study of service encounters increasingly important. The document goes on to discuss the triad of a service encounter, its characteristics, types, elements, and the role of technology. It also examines self-service, customer-dominated encounters, contact personnel-dominated encounters, and service organization-dominated encounters. Finally, it briefly mentions the functions, models, control, and design of service organizations.
Chapter 8 Products, Services, and Brands -Building Customer Value.pptxBishoyRomani
This document discusses different types of products and services. It defines a product as anything offered for attention, acquisition, use or consumption that might satisfy a want or need, and a service as an intangible activity or benefit offered for sale. Products and services exist at three levels - the core benefit, the actual product, and augmented services. Consumer products are classified as convenience products, shopping products, specialty products, and unsought products based on how and when consumers purchase them. Industrial products include materials and parts, capital items, and supplies and services.
This document outlines key concepts in communication and consumer behavior including:
- The basic communication model involves a message initiator, sender, receiver, medium, message, target audience, and feedback.
- Source credibility is important, and comes from informal sources like word of mouth, formal sources like companies, and spokespeople/endorsers.
- When designing persuasive communications, marketers must consider objectives, target audiences through segmentation, and message strategies involving framing, comparisons, and order effects.
- Different media like magazines and television each have strengths and limitations for delivering marketing messages. Emotional appeals and humor can also impact message effectiveness depending on the audience and product.
Integrated service marketing communicationAbhishek Dutta
This document discusses integrated service marketing communications. It outlines the role of marketing communications in services and challenges in communicating intangible services. It discusses planning marketing communications using the 5Ws model and targeting audiences. The marketing communications mix includes advertising, public relations, direct marketing, sales promotion, personal selling, trade shows, websites, and service delivery channels. It also discusses the role of word-of-mouth, blogs, media coverage, and ethical issues. Finally, it discusses the role of corporate design and integrating marketing communications.
Customer expectations are beliefs about the level of service that will be provided. These expectations act as standards that customers use to evaluate service quality. There are two main types of expectations: desired service, which is the ideal level hoped for, and adequate service, which is the minimum tolerable level. Understanding customer expectations is critical for service providers because if performance does not meet or exceed expectations, customers will be dissatisfied. The key is delivering a level of service that falls within customers' "zone of tolerance" between adequate and desired service.
Customer expectations are beliefs about the level of service that will be provided. There are two types of expectations: desired service, which is the optimal level hoped for, and adequate service, which is the minimum tolerable level. Factors like personal needs, past experiences, available alternatives, and situational factors influence expectations. Gaps can occur when customer expectations do not align with a provider's understanding of them, service design, delivery of service, or communications about the service. Measuring perceptions against expectations on reliability, responsiveness, assurance, empathy, and tangibles can identify service quality issues using the SERVQUAL model. Addressing gaps within the organization is important to improve customer satisfaction.
This document discusses managing demand and capacity in the service industry. It describes the nature of services and how demand fluctuates while capacity is usually constant. This can lead to four scenarios: excess demand, demand exceeding optimum capacity, balanced demand and capacity, and excess capacity. The document outlines various strategies for matching demand and capacity, such as shifting demand patterns, adjusting capacity levels, using yield management, and establishing waiting line strategies.
The document discusses several ethical issues related to marketing, including targeting vulnerable groups, excluding potential customers, price fixing, predatory pricing, deceptive advertising, and promoting unhealthy or unsafe products. It provides statistics on public opinions regarding regulation of content in television advertising. Key ethical considerations for marketing revolve around the four P's of marketing: product, price, placement, and promotion.
The document discusses various aspects of customer relationship management (CRM) and service quality. It describes CRM as a process of building and maintaining customer relationships through strategies like data collection and analysis, sales force automation, and customer retention. The document also discusses topics like service recovery strategies, building customer loyalty through rewards programs, and the importance of physical evidence and managing the service environment known as the "servicescape".
The document discusses building customer loyalty through segmentation, service quality, and relationship depth. It recommends segmenting customers based on their value, spending habits, and maintenance costs. The goal is to focus on high-value customers that spend more over time while limiting interactions with low-value customers. Building loyalty requires deepening relationships through rewards and higher engagement levels. Reducing churn also involves identifying and addressing its key drivers, like complaints, through improved service recovery and increased switching costs.
This document discusses various perspectives on defining and measuring service quality. It begins by outlining four common definitions of quality: product-based, user-based, manufacturing-based, and value-based. It then describes two categories of service quality - internal and external quality. Several frameworks for measuring dimensions of service quality are presented, including the eight dimensions identified by David Garvin and the SERVQUAL model developed by Parasuraman, Zeithmal and Berry. The document also discusses tools for collecting customer feedback and analyzing service quality problems.
This document discusses new service development and process design. It begins by outlining the learning objectives, which include discussing the new service development process, classifying service operations, and comparing approaches to service system design. It then covers the new service development cycle and levels of service innovation from incremental to radical. Various topics are explored such as using technology to drive innovation, adopting new technologies in services, and using blueprints and taxonomies to strategically position services based on complexity and divergence. Generic approaches to service design like production line, customer participation, and information empowerment are also compared. The document provides examples and discussion questions to illustrate key concepts around new service design.
This document discusses waiting line management and queuing systems. It covers topics like how the average person spends their time waiting, laws of service, components of queuing systems like arrivals, queues, servers and exits. It also discusses customer populations, service patterns, queue disciplines, line structures and performance measures. The key aspects are controlling customer demand through reservations, segmenting populations based on factors like urgency and designing well-organized reservation systems.
The document discusses the traditional and extended marketing mix used for services. The traditional mix includes product, price, place, and promotion. The extended mix adds people, process, and physical evidence. It then provides examples and details for each element of the marketing mix as applied to services.
1st Module of Services Marketing
Reasons for the growth of the services sector and its contribution; the difference in goods and service marketing; characteristics of services; the concept of service marketing triangle; service marketing mix; GAP models of service quality.
Consumer behavior in services: Search, Experience and Credence property, consumer expectation of services, two levels of expectation, Zone of tolerance, Factors influencing customer expectation of services.
Customer perception of services-Factors influencing customer perception of service, Service encounters, Customer satisfaction, Strategies for influencing customer perception.
The document discusses different frameworks for classifying services and how they can be useful for managers. It provides examples of services that fall under each classification: people processing, possession processing, and mental stimulus processing. The document then asks the reader to list services they have used in the past month and categorize them. Finally, it discusses strategies marketers can use to help consumers evaluate services high in search, experience, and credence attributes to reduce perceived risk.
This document discusses achieving service recovery and obtaining customer feedback. It outlines components of an effective service recovery system such as doing the job right the first time, effective complaint handling, and learning from recoveries. It also discusses customer complaining behaviors, service guarantees, and dealing with abusive customer behaviors. Key points covered include understanding why and how customers complain, designing service guarantees, discouraging customer fraud, and creating institutionalized learning from customer feedback.
The document discusses service management and describes Village Volvo, an auto repair shop. It analyzes Village Volvo's service package, which includes supporting facilities, facilitating goods, information provided to customers, explicit services like experienced mechanics, and implicit services like encouraging customers to inspect replaced parts. It also examines Village Volvo's service characteristics, such as how customers participate in the service process by bringing their cars for scheduled repairs and interacting with mechanics, and how Village Volvo addresses the perishability of services by scheduling appointments and drop-in times.
Customer's expectation & perception of customersRajThakuri
Customers have both expectations and perceptions of the level of service they will receive. Their expectations are influenced by personal needs, past experiences, and promises made by the service provider. Perceptions are formed through service encounters and compared to expectations. If perceptions meet or exceed expectations, the customer will be satisfied. Key aspects of service quality that influence perceptions are reliability, responsiveness, assurance, empathy, and tangibles. Higher customer value relative to costs also leads to greater satisfaction. Satisfied customers are more loyal and help the business grow through positive word-of-mouth.
The document discusses three key learning objectives:
1) It defines what a service product is, noting it consists of a core product and supplementary services that augment the core product.
2) It describes how to design a service concept by looking at the core product, supplementary services, and delivery processes holistically.
3) It introduces the "Flower of Service" model which categorizes supplementary services as either facilitating (needed for delivery or use of core product) or enhancing (adding extra value). Facilitating services include information, order-taking, billing, and payment.
The document discusses key aspects of consumer behavior including the meaning of consumer behavior, types of consumers, factors that influence consumer behavior from various disciplines like psychology, sociology, economics, and applications of consumer behavior knowledge in marketing. It defines consumer behavior as how individuals select, purchase, use, and dispose of products and services. It also outlines the consumer decision making process and different types of consumer buying behaviors.
This document discusses service encounters from a lecture presented by Dr. Niraj Chaudhari. It defines a service encounter as the initial interaction between a customer and service provider. More than half of multinational corporations are involved in providing services, making the study of service encounters increasingly important. The document goes on to discuss the triad of a service encounter, its characteristics, types, elements, and the role of technology. It also examines self-service, customer-dominated encounters, contact personnel-dominated encounters, and service organization-dominated encounters. Finally, it briefly mentions the functions, models, control, and design of service organizations.
Chapter 8 Products, Services, and Brands -Building Customer Value.pptxBishoyRomani
This document discusses different types of products and services. It defines a product as anything offered for attention, acquisition, use or consumption that might satisfy a want or need, and a service as an intangible activity or benefit offered for sale. Products and services exist at three levels - the core benefit, the actual product, and augmented services. Consumer products are classified as convenience products, shopping products, specialty products, and unsought products based on how and when consumers purchase them. Industrial products include materials and parts, capital items, and supplies and services.
This document outlines key concepts in communication and consumer behavior including:
- The basic communication model involves a message initiator, sender, receiver, medium, message, target audience, and feedback.
- Source credibility is important, and comes from informal sources like word of mouth, formal sources like companies, and spokespeople/endorsers.
- When designing persuasive communications, marketers must consider objectives, target audiences through segmentation, and message strategies involving framing, comparisons, and order effects.
- Different media like magazines and television each have strengths and limitations for delivering marketing messages. Emotional appeals and humor can also impact message effectiveness depending on the audience and product.
Integrated service marketing communicationAbhishek Dutta
This document discusses integrated service marketing communications. It outlines the role of marketing communications in services and challenges in communicating intangible services. It discusses planning marketing communications using the 5Ws model and targeting audiences. The marketing communications mix includes advertising, public relations, direct marketing, sales promotion, personal selling, trade shows, websites, and service delivery channels. It also discusses the role of word-of-mouth, blogs, media coverage, and ethical issues. Finally, it discusses the role of corporate design and integrating marketing communications.
Customer expectations are beliefs about the level of service that will be provided. These expectations act as standards that customers use to evaluate service quality. There are two main types of expectations: desired service, which is the ideal level hoped for, and adequate service, which is the minimum tolerable level. Understanding customer expectations is critical for service providers because if performance does not meet or exceed expectations, customers will be dissatisfied. The key is delivering a level of service that falls within customers' "zone of tolerance" between adequate and desired service.
Customer expectations are beliefs about the level of service that will be provided. There are two types of expectations: desired service, which is the optimal level hoped for, and adequate service, which is the minimum tolerable level. Factors like personal needs, past experiences, available alternatives, and situational factors influence expectations. Gaps can occur when customer expectations do not align with a provider's understanding of them, service design, delivery of service, or communications about the service. Measuring perceptions against expectations on reliability, responsiveness, assurance, empathy, and tangibles can identify service quality issues using the SERVQUAL model. Addressing gaps within the organization is important to improve customer satisfaction.
This document provides an overview of services marketing and key concepts related to customer expectations and measuring service quality. It discusses four categories of services: service industries and companies, services as products, customer service, and derived service. Several factors that influence customer expectations are outlined, including personal needs, lasting service intensifiers, and perceived service alternatives. Customer expectations, satisfaction, and delight are defined. The importance of service quality in marketing is discussed and various dimensions of service quality like performance, reliability and aesthetics are explained. Challenges faced in services industries due to the intangible nature of services are also summarized.
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Bimtech sm4a consumer expectations of serviceprateek sharma
The document discusses customer expectations of service and how to manage those expectations. There are three main types of customer expectations - minimum tolerable, acceptable, and desired/ideal. Acceptable expectations represent an adequate level of service while desired expectations are the customer's wishes. Customer expectations are influenced by personal needs, alternatives, past experiences, and situational factors. A company must understand customer expectations and the "zone of tolerance" around acceptable service levels to consistently meet and hopefully exceed expectations through reliable service and customer relationship management. Exceeding expectations can create loyal customers but also raises expectations over time.
The document discusses customer expectations of service, noting that customers hold different types of expectations and that their expectations are influenced by various factors both within and outside a company's control. It also examines issues regarding customer expectations, such as whether companies should try to exceed expectations through delighting customers or simply meet basic expectations. Overall, the document provides a framework for understanding customer expectations of service quality.
1) The document discusses service quality metrics and customer satisfaction scores (SALT scores) used by the Hilton Hotels Corporation and the Hampton Inn & Suites hotel in Burlington, North Carolina specifically.
2) Customer satisfaction is measured using comment cards and the LODGSERV scale to evaluate performance on key service quality dimensions.
3) SALT scores collected via email surveys sent to guests are used to determine the overall performance of the Hampton Inn & Suites property and ensure guests have positive experiences.
This document discusses surrogate cues used by service organizations to differentiate themselves. It provides examples of core and augmented services across various industries like restaurants, hotels, healthcare, education, banking, and couriers. Core services satisfy basic needs while augmented services enhance the customer experience. Surrogate cues refer to tangible aspects like appearance, environment and décor that provide clues about intangible service quality. Effective surrogate cues help organizations attract customers and compete against others by exceeding expectations. The document also notes that individuals can apply surrogate cues to themselves through their appearance and presentation to make favorable impressions on others.
This document discusses a purchase model for services and factors that influence customer expectations. It outlines three phases of service purchase: pre-purchase, service encounter, and post-purchase. In the pre-purchase phase, internal factors like needs/wants, external factors like alternatives, and perceived risk influence decision making. During the service encounter, factors like role theory and service personnel impact quality. In post-purchase, customers evaluate quality, satisfaction, and future behavior. The document also discusses how customer expectations are bounded by a desired level and adequate level, with a zone of tolerance in between. Personal needs, service intensifiers, alternatives, and situational factors shape these expectation levels.
Services marketing has several unique characteristics compared to goods marketing. [1] Services are intangible, cannot be owned, and are inseparable from their production and delivery. [2] They also perish if not consumed when produced and may vary in quality between providers and over time. [3] A key framework for services marketing is the 7 Ps - product, price, place, promotion, people, process, and physical evidence. Physical evidence helps make intangible services more tangible for customers. Moments of truth and magic/misery refer to positive and negative customer interactions that shape perceptions.
This document discusses customer satisfaction and its importance. It defines customer satisfaction as meeting or exceeding customer expectations. Maintaining high levels of customer satisfaction is important for businesses as satisfied customers are more loyal, purchase more, and provide favorable word of mouth advertising. The document outlines factors that influence customer satisfaction like product quality, value, service, and responsiveness to issues. It also discusses methods for measuring customer satisfaction, including surveys, to understand customer expectations and priorities for improvement. The goal is to continually enhance customer service based on feedback.
The document outlines the syllabus for a course on marketing of services. It discusses key concepts in service marketing including segmentation, targeting, positioning, customer expectations, service quality, and applications in various industries. The course aims to help students understand service marketing concepts and applications, the role of people and processes in service delivery, skills needed for service communication, service quality models and gaps, and elements of the service marketing mix used in different industries.
The document discusses assessing and benchmarking customer service quality. It outlines 13 main criteria for measuring customer service quality including reliability, consistency, health and safety, accessibility, and more. It also discusses getting customer feedback and using mystery customers to assess the actual customer service provided compared to documented policies and criteria. Benchmarking involves comparing a company's performance to other similar organizations.
This document provides an overview of understanding customer service in the travel and tourism industry. It discusses the importance of customer service to the survival of organizations and the need to meet the needs of different types of customers. Customer service skills are essential for those working in travel and tourism. Good customer service can lead to satisfied customers, repeat business, and attracting new customers, while poor customer service can result in loss of income, high staff turnover, and loss of customers. The document also covers the principles of customer service, assessing customer service quality, and understanding the needs of different types of customers such as considering age, ethnicity, and leisure interests to provide personalized service.
The document provides a literature review on customer satisfaction in the hospitality industry. It discusses how a hotel's geographical location impacts its operations, profitability, target market, and tendency to adopt information and communication technologies. Global distribution systems and technologies in the hospitality, entertainment, transport, and management sectors are also examined. The literature highlights how information and communication technologies have impacted the tourism and hospitality sector through online reservations systems.
The document provides an overview of the Indian cement industry. It discusses the history and growth of the industry from its beginnings in 1904 with a capacity of 30 tons per day up to the present where India is the 5th largest cement producer globally. While production and capacity have increased significantly, consumption in India remains one of the lowest in the world, pointing to significant growth potential. Key factors driving future demand are expected to be infrastructure development projects and increasing per capita income and consumption. The industry has progressed through various phases of government control and deregulation.
Services have five key characteristics: (1) lack of ownership, (2) intangibility, (3) inseparability of production and consumption, (4) perishability, and (5) heterogeneity. The marketing of services also involves analyzing the 7Ps of the marketing mix - product, price, place, promotion, people, physical evidence, and process. Managing services is more complicated than managing products because services are harder to standardize due to the many input factors involved, including people, physical environment, and operational processes.
Services have five key characteristics: (1) lack of ownership, (2) intangibility, (3) inseparability of production and consumption, (4) perishability, and (5) heterogeneity. The service marketing mix, also called the extended marketing mix, involves analyzing seven factors - product, price, place, promotion, people, physical evidence, and process. Managing services is more complicated than managing products because services are harder to standardize due to the many input factors involved, including people, physical environment, and operational processes.
This document discusses key concepts in services marketing, including the 7 Ps of services marketing versus the traditional 4 Ps of product marketing. It also discusses differences between goods and services, and provides examples of how concepts like the 7 Ps apply to banking services. Benchmarking and gap analysis are introduced as tools to compare actual performance to potential performance or industry best practices. The goal of these tools is to identify areas for improvement.
This document discusses benchmarking logistics processes. It defines competitive benchmarking as measuring products, services, processes, and practices against industry leaders. Benchmarking the logistics process involves mapping out the supply chain as a series of steps, identifying critical points where issues could disrupt the entire process, and using benchmarking to improve these points. Key aspects to benchmark include suppliers, distributors, interfaces, and setting logistics performance indicators to continuously monitor critical measures of success.
This document discusses benchmarking logistics processes. It defines competitive benchmarking as measuring products, services, processes, and practices against industry leaders. Benchmarking the logistics process involves mapping out the supply chain as a pipeline and identifying critical points where issues could disrupt the entire process. These points should be benchmarked against best practices from other industries. Key performance indicators should also be identified to continuously monitor critical aspects that contribute most to success or failure, such as those in a balanced scorecard linking measures to strategic goals.
Wal-Mart has an efficient supply chain management system that allows it to replenish stores within two days on average. It has over 40 distribution centers across the US that have high inventory turnover rates. Wal-Mart owns over 3,500 trucks that deliver goods from distribution centers to stores within two days, replenishing stores once a week. It works directly with manufacturers to reduce costs and ensure transparency, preferring local and regional suppliers. Wal-Mart's supply chain practices result in increased efficiency, lower costs that are passed onto customers, and strong competitive advantage.
1. Amazon was founded in 1994 by Jeff Bezos and launched online in 1995 originally as an online bookstore. It has since expanded into many other product categories.
2. Supply chain management is the coordination of activities from product development through logistics to maximize customer value. For Amazon, this involves coordinating physical flows through warehouses and information flows to coordinate planning and operations.
3. Amazon uses a network of warehouses and partnerships to fulfill customer orders through efficient sorting and shipping via carriers like UPS. It aims to deliver orders within a few days using strategies like anticipatory shipping.
1. 7-Eleven is an international convenience store chain with over 50,000 stores across 16 countries. It focuses on providing customers everyday products like snacks, drinks, and more.
2. 7-Eleven uses effective supply chain management practices like inventory management and strategic supplier partnerships to increase productivity and market share. It collects sales data from its stores to analyze trends and improve product offerings.
3. The company relies on technology like centralized logistics management and electronic payments to streamline operations and enhance the customer experience. This allows 7-Eleven to meet customer needs and compete globally.
Andersen Windows submitted a case study report to Bijesh Shrestha detailing their operations and sustainability efforts. Andersen is a 110-year old company that manufactures windows using up to 40% reclaimed wood fiber. They discuss their methodology of using secondary data sources. Andersen focuses on reducing waste and emissions in manufacturing and converting their fleet to more efficient vehicles. They conclude that Andersen is socially responsible, quality-focused, and encourages employee participation and motivation.
1. The document discusses supply chain management concepts, including defining a supply chain as all parties involved in fulfilling customer requests.
2. It explains the objective of a supply chain is to maximize overall value, and describes supply chain management as managing flows between stages to maximize total profitability.
3. The document contrasts vertical and horizontal organizational structures, noting that a horizontal structure organized around processes can better integrate functions and create customer value.
Unit 5 strategic issues in logistics lscm (32 pages)logistics management Suzana Vaidya
This document discusses logistics pipeline management and time-based competition. It defines logistics pipeline management as linking manufacturing and procurement lead times to meet market needs, while increasing response speed. The goals of logistics pipeline management are listed as lower costs, higher quality, more flexibility, and faster response times. Drivers requiring logistics pipeline management include time-based competition, globalization, increasing shareholder value, and customers taking more control. Specific goals of logistics pipeline management are also outlined, such as reducing costs by minimizing inventory levels, delivery times, and the overall order-to-collection cycle.
Unit 4 logistics performance lscm (13 pages)Suzana Vaidya
This document discusses benchmarking logistics performance. It defines benchmarking as measuring performance against best practices to facilitate improvement. There are three types: internal benchmarking within a company; external benchmarking against other companies; and competitive benchmarking against industry peers. The document provides examples of logistics performance metrics that can be benchmarked, such as capacity, utilization, productivity, reliability, and costs. Benchmarking involves gathering performance assessments to develop improvement plans.
Unit 3 logistics costs lscm (18 pages)logistics management Suzana Vaidya
- The document discusses logistics costs and the principles of logistics costing. It notes that traditional accounting systems do not fully capture customer costs or the impacts of logistics decisions across functions.
- It advocates for total cost analysis and identifying the incremental costs of logistics activities and missions to understand true costs. This involves analyzing costs across the order to collection cycle and identifying which costs are avoidable for specific customers or segments.
- Mission costing is presented as a useful concept, with missions cutting across functions to achieve customer service goals. This allows determining the total system cost of meeting mission objectives.
Unit 2 logistics environment lscm (11 pages)Suzana Vaidya
1) The document discusses logistics and customer service. It emphasizes that customer service should be the central focus of logistics management as satisfying customers is the ultimate goal.
2) Customer expectations are continually increasing while markets are becoming more commodity-based, so customer service can provide a competitive advantage where product differences are small.
3) The success of any business depends on the customer value it provides through quality, service, cost and time - all areas logistics can impact. Customer retention is also crucial to profitability.
Unit 1 introduction lscm (10 pages) logistics management Suzana Vaidya
1. The document discusses logistics and supply chain management. Logistics involves managing materials flow within an organization, while supply chain management coordinates materials flow across multiple organizations.
2. Gaining competitive advantage is a key goal. This can be achieved through lower costs via effective logistics/supply chain management, or higher value to customers. Cost leadership involves achieving scale economies, while value leadership differentiates products.
3. Effective logistics and supply chain management can provide a competitive advantage by reducing costs across the entire supply chain, not just within individual organizations. This allows companies to move from undifferentiated commodity status towards cost or value leadership.
This document defines a project, lists its key characteristics such as having objectives and being unique, and provides examples of different types of projects. It distinguishes between projects and programs, noting that projects are one-time events to create a product or service while programs are sets of similar projects to achieve overall objectives. The document also compares project management to traditional management, highlighting that project management is focused on the project, temporary, and must adjust to a changing environment, unlike traditional management.
Time management in projects involves defining activities, sequencing them, estimating durations, developing a schedule, and schedule control. It also requires setting clear goals, creating a work plan that allocates tasks to members, and determining durations for each activity. Conflicts in projects can arise from differing goals, unclear relationships, limited resources, and other issues and should be managed through approaches like negotiation, mediation, or restructuring to reduce conflicts.
This document outlines several barriers to effective project team development including divergent priorities, unclear objectives, poor leadership structures, and lack of commitment. It also discusses the importance of project leadership and managing both the internal project environment as well as external stakeholders and forces. Finally, it details the key steps involved in project implementation such as establishing project resources, defining responsibilities, contracting civil works, procurement, supervision, budgeting, monitoring, and time management.
This document discusses different techniques for calculating shadow prices used in cost-benefit analysis for projects and policies. Shadow pricing is important for conducting social cost-benefit analysis and accounts for market distortions. The techniques discussed are UNIDO's 5 stage approach, the OECD (Little and Mirrless) approach, and the World Bank model. All three approaches involve classifying project inputs and outputs as traded, non-traded, or labor and calculating shadow prices based on international prices, marginal prices, or wage rates.
The document discusses three types of project organization structures: functional, pure project, and matrix. The functional structure has project tasks performed within functional departments, allowing flexibility but potentially lack of project focus and decision delays. A pure project structure separates the project team from functional departments, allowing focus on objectives but requiring separate staffing and less job security. A matrix structure combines functional and project aspects, focusing on objectives while allowing coordination and development, but can also cause dual reporting problems, duplication, and power struggles.
This document outlines different types of projects based on sponsorship, nature, orientation, speed of product, size, and technology. It also lists the skills required for a project manager, including technical, managerial, human, and conceptual skills. Finally, it details the key responsibilities of a project manager such as project definition, team selection, planning, implementation, control, and termination.
The document outlines the process for project formulation, which includes identifying project ideas through situation surveys, internal sources, and external sources. It also involves defining objectives and constraints like time, cost, and quality. There is also a preliminary analysis of ideas that assesses risks and selects promising ideas to take through further formulation. The formulation process then develops statements of work, prefeasibility studies, preliminary designs, proposals, project plans, and feasibility analyses to fully define the project before implementation.
Project control involves project monitoring and evaluation. Monitoring collects timely information during implementation to review progress. Evaluation objectively and systematically measures relevance, efficiency, effectiveness, and impact. The objectives of evaluation are to verify progress, take corrective measures, ensure costs are within budget, and quality standards are met. Evaluation types include ongoing, mid-term, terminal, and ex post. Participatory monitoring and evaluation involves stakeholders collaboratively analyzing progress, problems, and prospects. Nepal developed a project monitoring and evaluation system in 1993 to weigh indicators and review priority and non-priority projects.
Did you know that while 50% of content on the internet is in English, English only makes up 26% of the world’s spoken language? And yet 87% of customers won’t buy from an English only website.
Uncover the immense potential of communicating with customers in their own language and learn how translation holds the key to unlocking global growth. Join Smartling CEO, Bryan Murphy, as he reveals how translation software can streamline the translation process and seamlessly integrate into your martech stack for optimal efficiency. And that's not all – he’ll also share some inspiring success stories and practical tips that will turbocharge your multilingual marketing efforts!
Key takeaways:
1. The growth potential of reaching customers in their native language
2. Tips to streamline translation with software and integrations to your tech stack
3. Success stories from companies that have increased lead generation, doubled revenue, and more with translation
Build marketing products across the customer journey to grow your business and build a relationship with your customer. For example you can build graders, calculators, quizzes, recommendations, chatbots or AR apps. Things like Hubspot's free marketing grader, Moz's site analyzer, VenturePact's mobile app cost calculator, new york times's dialect quiz, Ikea's AR app, L'Oreal's AR app and Nike's fitness apps. All of these examples are free tools that help drive engagement with your brand, build an audience and generate leads for your core business by adding value to a customer during a micro-moment.
Key Takeaways:
Learn how to use specific GPTs to help you Learn how to build your own marketing tools
Generate marketing ideas for your business How to think through and use AI in marketing
How AI changes the marketing game
Yes, It's Your Fault Book Launch WebinarDemandbase
From Blame to Gain: Achieving Sales and Marketing Alignment to Drive B2B Growth.
Tired of the perpetual tug-of-war between your sales and marketing teams? Come hear Demandbase Chief Marketing Officer, Kelly Hopping and Chief Sales Officer, John Eitel discuss key insights from their new book, “Yes, It’s Your Fault! From Blame to Gain: Achieving Sales and Marketing Alignment to Drive B2B Growth.”
They’ll share their no-nonsense approach to bridging the sales and marketing divide to drive true collaboration — once and for all.
In this webinar, you’ll discover:
The underlying dynamics fueling sales and marketing misalignment
How to implement practical solutions without disrupting day-to-day operations
How to cultivate a culture of collaboration and unity for long-term success
How to align on metrics that matter
Why it’s essential to break down technology and data silos
How ABM can be a powerful unifier
Are you struggling to differentiate yourself in a saturated market? Do you find it challenging to attract and retain buyers? Learn how to effectively communicate your expertise using a Free Book Funnel designed to address these challenges and attract premium clients. This session will explore how a well-crafted book can be your most effective marketing tool, enhancing your credibility while significantly increasing your leads and sales while decreasing overall lead cost. Unpacking practical steps to create a magnetic book funnel that not only draws in your ideal customers, but also keeps them engaged. Break through the noise in the marketing world and leave with a blueprint that will transform your sales strategy.
Mastering Local SEO for Service Businesses in the AI Era"" is tailored specifically for local service providers like plumbers, dentists, and others seeking to dominate their local search landscape. This session delves into leveraging AI advancements to enhance your online visibility and search rankings through the Content Factory model, designed for creating high-impact, SEO-driven content. Discover the Dollar-a-Day advertising strategy, a cost-effective approach to boost your local SEO efforts and attract more customers with minimal investment. Gain practical insights on optimizing your online presence to meet the specific needs of local service seekers, ensuring your business not only appears but stands out in local searches. This concise, action-oriented workshop is your roadmap to navigating the complexities of digital marketing in the AI age, driving more leads, conversions, and ultimately, success for your local service business.
Key Takeaways:
Embrace AI for Local SEO: Learn to harness the power of AI technologies to optimize your website and content for local search. Understand the pivotal role AI plays in analyzing search trends and consumer behavior, enabling you to tailor your SEO strategies to meet the specific demands of your target local audience. Leverage the Content Factory Model: Discover the step-by-step process of creating SEO-optimized content at scale. This approach ensures a steady stream of high-quality content that engages local customers and boosts your search rankings. Get an action guide on implementing this model, complete with templates and scheduling strategies to maintain a consistent online presence. Maximize ROI with Dollar-a-Day Advertising: Dive into the cost-effective Dollar-a-Day advertising strategy that amplifies your visibility in local searches without breaking the bank. Learn how to strategically allocate your budget across platforms to target potential local customers effectively. The session includes an action guide on setting up, monitoring, and optimizing your ad campaigns to ensure maximum impact with minimal investment.
Mastering Local SEO for Service Businesses in the AI Era is tailored specifically for local service providers like plumbers, dentists, and others seeking to dominate their local search landscape. This session delves into leveraging AI advancements to enhance your online visibility and search rankings through the Content Factory model, designed for creating high-impact, SEO-driven content. Discover the Dollar-a-Day advertising strategy, a cost-effective approach to boost your local SEO efforts and attract more customers with minimal investment. Gain practical insights on optimizing your online presence to meet the specific needs of local service seekers, ensuring your business not only appears but stands out in local searches. This concise, action-oriented workshop is your roadmap to navigating the complexities of digital marketing in the AI age, driving more leads, conversions, and ultimately, success for your local service business.
Key Takeaways:
Embrace AI for Local SEO: Learn to harness the power of AI technologies to optimize your website and content for local search. Understand the pivotal role AI plays in analyzing search trends and consumer behavior, enabling you to tailor your SEO strategies to meet the specific demands of your target local audience. Leverage the Content Factory Model: Discover the step-by-step process of creating SEO-optimized content at scale. This approach ensures a steady stream of high-quality content that engages local customers and boosts your search rankings. Get an action guide on implementing this model, complete with templates and scheduling strategies to maintain a consistent online presence. Maximize ROI with Dollar-a-Day Advertising: Dive into the cost-effective Dollar-a-Day advertising strategy that amplifies your visibility in local searches without breaking the bank. Learn how to strategically allocate your budget across platforms to target potential local customers effectively. The session includes an action guide on setting up, monitoring, and optimizing your ad campaigns to ensure maximum impact with minimal investment.
Dive deep into the cutting-edge strategies we're employing to revolutionize our web presence in the age of AI-driven search. As Gen Z reshapes the digital realm, discover how we can bridge the generational divide. Unlock the synergistic power of PPC, social media, and SEO, driving unparalleled revenues for our projects.
In the face of the news of Google beginning to remove cookies from Chrome (30m users at the time of writing), there’s no longer time for marketers to throw their hands up and say “I didn’t know” or “They won’t go through with it”. Reality check - it has already begun - the time to take action is now. The good news is that there are solutions available and ready for adoption… but for many the race to catch up to the modern internet risks being a messy, confusing scramble to get back to "normal"
In this dynamic session titled "Future-Proof Like Beyoncé: Syncing Email and Social Media for Iconic Brand Longevity," Carlos Gil, U.S. Brand Evangelist for GetResponse, unveils how to safeguard and elevate your digital marketing strategy. Explore how integrating email marketing with social media can not only increase your brand's reach but also secure its future in the ever-changing digital landscape. Carlos will share invaluable insights on developing a robust email list, leveraging data integration for targeted campaigns, and implementing AI tools to enhance cross-platform engagement. Attendees will learn how to maintain a consistent brand voice across all channels and adapt to platform changes proactively. This session is essential for marketers aiming to diversify their online presence and minimize dependence on any single platform. Join Carlos to discover how to turn social media followers into loyal email subscribers and ultimately, drive sustainable growth and revenue for your brand. By harnessing the best practices and innovative strategies discussed, you will be equipped to navigate the challenges of the digital age, ensuring your brand remains relevant and resonant with your audience, no matter the platform. Don’t miss this opportunity to transform your approach and achieve iconic brand longevity akin to Beyoncé's enduring influence in the entertainment industry.
Key Takeaways:
Integration of Email and Social Media: Understanding how to seamlessly integrate email marketing with social media efforts to expand reach and reinforce brand presence. Building a Robust Email List: Strategies for developing a strong email list that provides a direct line of communication to your audience, independent of social media algorithms. Data Integration for Targeted Campaigns: Leveraging combined data from email and social media to create personalized, targeted marketing campaigns that resonate with the audience. Utilization of AI Tools: Implementing AI and automation tools to enhance efficiency and effectiveness across marketing channels. Consistent Brand Voice Across Platforms: Maintaining a unified brand voice and message across all digital platforms to strengthen brand identity and user trust. Proactive Adaptation to Platform Changes: Staying ahead of social media platform changes and algorithm updates to keep engagement high and interactions meaningful. Conversion of Social Followers to Email Subscribers: Techniques to encourage social media followers to subscribe to email, ensuring a direct and consistent connection. Sustainable Growth and Minimized Platform Dependence: Strategies to diversify digital presence and reduce reliance on any single social media platform, thereby mitigating risks associated with platform volatility.
In this humorous and data-heavy Master Class, join us in a joyous celebration of life honoring the long list of SEO tactics and concepts we lost this year. Remember fondly the beautiful time you shared with defunct ideas like link building, keyword cannibalization, search volume as a value indicator, and even our most cherished of friends: the funnel. Make peace with their loss as you embrace a new paradigm for organic content: Pillar-Based Marketing. Along the way, discover that the results that old SEO and all its trappings brought you weren’t really very good at all, actually.
In this respectful and life-affirming service—erm, session—join Ryan Brock (Chief Solution Officer at DemandJump and author of Pillar-Based Marketing: A Data-Driven Methodology for SEO and Content that Actually Works) and leave with:
• Clear and compelling evidence that most legacy SEO metrics and tactics have slim to no impact on SEO outcomes
• A major mindset shift that eliminates most of the metrics and tactics associated with SEO in favor of a single metric that defines and drives organic ranking success
• Practical, step-by-step methodology for choosing SEO pillar topics and publishing content quickly that ranks fast
In this humorous and data-heavy session, join us in a joyous celebration of life honoring the long list of SEO tactics and concepts we lost this year. Remember fondly the beautiful time you shared with defunct ideas like link building, keyword cannibalization, search volume as a value indicator, and even our most cherished of friends: the funnel. Make peace with their loss as you embrace a new paradigm for organic content: Pillar-Based Marketing. Along the way, discover that the results that old SEO and all its trappings brought you weren’t really very good at all, actually.
In this respectful and life-affirming service—erm, session—join Ryan Brock (Chief Solution Officer at DemandJump and author of Pillar-Based Marketing: A Data-Driven Methodology for SEO and Content that Actually Works) and leave with:
• Clear and compelling evidence that most legacy SEO metrics and tactics have slim to no impact on SEO outcomes
• A major mindset shift that eliminates most of the metrics and tactics associated with SEO in favor of a single metric that defines and drives organic ranking success
• Practical, step-by-step methodology for choosing SEO pillar topics and publishing content quickly that ranks fast
We will explore the transformative journey of American Bath Group as they transitioned from a traditional monolithic CMS to a dynamic, composable martech framework using Kontent.ai. Discover the strategic decisions, challenges, and key benefits realized through adopting a headless CMS approach. Learn how composable business models empower marketers with flexibility, speed, and integration capabilities, ultimately enhancing digital experiences and operational efficiency. This session is essential for marketers looking to understand the practical impacts and advantages of composable technology in today's digital landscape. Join us to gain valuable insights and actionable takeaways from a real-world implementation that redefines the boundaries of marketing technology.
Can you kickstart content marketing when you have a small team or even a team of one? Why yes, you can! Dennis Shiao, founder of marketing agency Attention Retention will detail how to draw insights from subject matter experts (SMEs) and turn them into articles, bylines, blog posts, social media posts and more. He’ll also share tips on content licensing and how to establish a webinar program. Attend this session to learn how to make an impact with content marketing even when you have a small team and limited resources.
Key Takeaways:
- You don't need a large team to start a content marketing program
- A webinar program yields a "one-to-many" approach to content creation
- Use partnerships and licensing to create new content assets
Conferences like DigiMarCon provide ample opportunities to improve our own marketing programs by learning from others. But just because everyone is jumping on board with the latest idea/tool/metric doesn’t mean it works – or does it? This session will examine the value of today’s hottest digital marketing topics – including AI, paid ads, and social metrics – and the truth about what these shiny objects might be distracting you from.
Key Takeaways:
- How NOT to shoot your digital program in the foot by using flashy but ineffective resources
- The best ways to think about AI in connection with digital marketing
- How to cut through self-serving marketing advice and engage in channels that truly grow your business
What’s “In” and “Out” for ABM in 2024: Plays That Help You Grow and Ones to L...Demandbase
Delve into essential ABM ‘plays' that propel success while identifying and leaving behind tactics that no longer yield results. Led by ABM Experts, Jon Barcellos, Head of Solutions at Postal and Tom Keefe, Principal GTM Expert at Demandbase.
The Secret to Engaging Modern Consumers: Journey Mapping and Personalization
In today's digital landscape, understanding the customer's journey and delivering personalized experiences are paramount. This masterclass delves into the art of consumer journey mapping, a powerful technique that visualizes the entire customer experience across touchpoints. Attendees will learn how to create detailed journey maps, identify pain points, and uncover opportunities for optimization. The presentation also explores personalization strategies that leverage data and technology to tailor content, products, and experiences to individual customers. From real-time personalization to predictive analytics, attendees will gain insights into cutting-edge approaches that drive engagement and loyalty.
Key Takeaways:
Current consumer landscape; Steps to mapping an effective consumer journey; Understanding the value of personalization; Integrating mapping and personalization for success; Brands that are getting It right!; Best Practices; Future Trends
Consumer Journey Mapping & Personalization Master Class - Sabrina Killgo
Consumer expectation of services
1. 54
This chapter’s objectives are to:
1 Recognize that customers hold
different types of expectations for
service performance.
2 Discuss the sources of customer
expectations of service, including
those that are controllable and
uncontrollable by marketers.
3 Acknowledge that the types and
sources of expectations are similar for
end consumers and business
customers, for pure service and
product-related service, for
experienced customers and
inexperienced customers.
4 Delineate the most important current
issues surrounding customer
expectations.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Customer expectations of
service
C H A P T E R 0 3
2. Importance of customer expectations
Customer expectations are beliefs about service delivery that serve as standards or reference
points against which performance is judged. Because customers compare their perceptions
of performance with these reference points when evaluating service quality, thorough knowledge
about customer expectations is critical to services marketers. Knowing what the customer
expects is the first and possibly most critical step in delivering good quality service. Being wrong
about what customers want can mean losing a customer’s business when another company hits
the target exactly. Being wrong can also mean expending money, time and other resources on
things that do not count to the customer. Being wrong can even mean not surviving in a fiercely
competitive market.
Among the aspects of expectations that need to be explored and understood for successful
services marketing are the following: what types of expectation standards do customers hold
about services? What factors most influence the formation of these expectations? What role do
these factors play in changing expectations? How can a service company meet or exceed cus-
tomer expectations?
In this chapter we provide a framework for thinking about customer expectations.1 The
chapter is divided into three main sections: (1) the meaning and types of expected service, (2)
factors that influence customer expectations of service, and (3) current issues involving customer
service expectations.
Importance of customer expectations 55
Virgin Trains is a brand that has had the major chal-
lenge of bringing the UK rail industry into the
twentieth century. The company is responsible for
linking towns and cities across the length and breadth
of the country with over 35 million passenger journeys
each year. It has therefore undertaken a significant level
of marketing research to identify what people expect
from train travel. Many passengers have now had the
experience of travelling on airlines or on overseas rail-
ways and as a result their expectations from
long-distance train travel have increased. The research has highlighted the significant and
highly diverse expectations that customers have of train travel. No longer is a seat and access
to toilets and basic refreshments acceptable; passengers now expect – demand even – a choice
of on-board meals, health-conscious snacks, reading material and entertainment. Business, and
increasingly leisure, travellers also want access to the Internet and emails through on-board
wireless Internet and the opportunity to use and charge their laptop and mobile. This clearly
demonstrates that customer expectations of service performance do not remain constant.
Organizations need to be aware of how these expectations are changing and adapt their service
offering accordingly.
Source: adapted from Knight, T. and Deas, S., ‘Across the tracks’, Research (February 2006)
CASE STUDY: CUSTOMER EXPECTATIONS OF VIRGIN TRAINS
3. Meaning and types of service expectations
To say that expectations are reference points against which service delivery is compared is
only a beginning. The level of expectation can vary widely depending on the reference point
the customer holds. Although most everyone has an intuitive sense of what expectations are,
service marketers need a far more thorough and clear definition of expectations in order to com-
prehend, measure and manage them.
Let us imagine that you are planning to go to a restaurant. Figure 3.1 shows a continuum
along which different possible types of service expectations can be arrayed from low to high. On
the left of the continuum are different types or levels of expectations, ranging from high (top) to
low (bottom). At each point we give a name to the type of expectation and illustrate what it might
mean in terms of a restaurant you are considering. Note how important the expectation you held
will be to your eventual assessment of the restaurant’s performance. Suppose you went into the
restaurant for which you held the minimum tolerable expectation, paid very little money and
were served immediately with good food. Next suppose that you went to the restaurant for which
Chapter 3 Customer expectations of service56
FIGURE 3.1 Possible levels of customer expectations
Source: R.K. Teas, ’Expectations, performance evaluation and consumers’ perceptions of quality’, Journal of Marketing (October 1993), pp. 18–34.
Reprinted by permission of the American Marketing Association
High
Low
‘Everyone says this restaurant
is as good as one in France
and I want to go somewhere very
special for my anniversary.’
‘As expensive as this
restaurant is, it ought to have
excellent food service.’
‘Most times this restaurant
is very good, but when it gets
busy the service is slow.’
‘I expect this restaurant
to serve me in an
adequate manner.’
‘I expect terrible service
from this restaurant but come
because the price is low.’
Ideal
expectations
or desires
Normative
‘should’
expectations
Experience-
based
norms
Acceptable
expectations
Minimum
tolerable
expectations
4. you had the highest (ideal) expectations, paid a lot of money and were served good (but not fan-
tastic) food. Which restaurant experience would you judge to be best? The answer is likely to
depend a great deal on the reference point that you brought to the experience.
Because the idea of customer expectations is so critical to evaluation of service, we start this
chapter by talking about the levels of expectations.
Expected service: levels of expectations
As we showed in Figure 3.1, customers hold different types of expectations about service. For
purposes of our discussion in the rest of this chapter, we focus on two types. The highest can be
termed desired service: the level of service the customer hopes to receive – the ‘wished for’ level
of performance. Desired service is a blend of what the customer believes ‘can be’ and ‘should
be’. For example, consumers who sign up for a computer dating service expect to find compat-
ible, attractive, interesting people to date and perhaps even someone to marry. The expectation
reflects the hopes and wishes of these consumers; without these hopes and wishes and the belief
that they may be fulfilled, consumers would probably not purchase the dating service. In a
similar way, you may use an online travel-planning and flight-booking site such as Expedia to
book a short holiday to Venice at Easter. What are your expectations of the service? In all likeli-
hood you want Expedia to find you a flight exactly when you want to travel and a hotel close to
the key sights in Piazza San Marco at a price you can afford – because that is what you hope
and wish for.
However, you probably also see that demand at Easter may constrain the availability of airline
seats and hotel rooms. And not all airlines or hotels you may be interested in may have a relation-
ship with Expedia. In this situation and in general, customers hope to achieve their service
desires but recognize that this is not always possible. We call the threshold level of acceptable
service adequate service – the level of service the customer will accept.2
So the customer may
put up with a flight at a less than ideal time and stay at a hotel further away from the keyVenetian
sites, if he or she really wants to travel at Easter. Adequate service represents the ‘minimum tol-
erable expectation’,3
the bottom level of performance acceptable to the customer.
Figure 3.2 shows these two expectation standards as the upper and lower boundaries for cus-
tomer expectations. This figure portrays the idea that customers assess service performance on
the basis of two standard boundaries: what they desire and what they deem acceptable.
Among the intriguing questions about service expectations is whether customers hold the
same or different expectation levels for service firms in the same industry. For example, are
desired service expectations the same for all restaurants? Or just for all fast-food restaurants? Do
the levels of adequate service expectations vary across restaurants? Consider the following quo-
tation:
“
Levels of expectation are why two
organizations in the same business can
offer far different levels of service and still
keep customers happy. It is why
McDonald’s can extend excellent
industrialized service with few employees
per customer and why an expensive
restaurant with many tuxedoed waiters
may be unable to do as well from the
customer’s point of view.4
”
Meaning and types of service expectations 57
Adequate service
Desired service
FIGURE 3.2 Dual customer expectation levels
5. Customers typically hold similar desired expectations across categories of service, but these
categories are not as broad as whole industries. Among subcategories of restaurants are
expensive restaurants, ethnic restaurants, fast-food restaurants and airport restaurants. A cus-
tomer’s desired service expectation for fast-food restaurants is quick, convenient, tasty food in a
clean setting. The desired service expectation for an expensive restaurant, on the other hand,
usually involves elegant surroundings, gracious employees, candlelight and fine food. In
essence, desired service expectations seem to be the same for service providers within industry
categories or subcategories that are viewed as similar by customers.
The adequate service expectation level, on the other hand, may vary for different firms within
a category or subcategory. Within fast-food restaurants, a customer may hold a higher expecta-
tion for McDonald’s than for Burger King, having experienced consistent service at McDonald’s
over time and somewhat inconsistent service at Burger King. It is possible, therefore, that a cus-
tomer can be more disappointed with service from McDonald’s than from Burger King even
though the actual level of service at McDonald’s may be higher than the level at Burger King.
The zone of tolerance
As we discussed in earlier chapters of this textbook,
services are heterogeneous in that performance may
vary across providers, across employees from the
same provider, and even with the same service
employee. The extent to which customers recognize
and are willing to accept this variation is called the
zone of tolerance and is shown in Figure 3.3. If
service drops below adequate service – the
minimum level considered acceptable – customers
will be frustrated and their satisfaction with the
company will be undermined. If service perform-
ance is higher than the zone of tolerance at the top
end – where performance exceeds desired service –
customers will be very pleased and probably quite surprised as well. You might consider the
zone of tolerance as the range or window in which customers do not particularly notice service
performance. When it falls outside the range (either very low or very high), the service gets the
customer’s attention in either a positive or negative way. As an example, consider the service at
a checkout queue in a grocery store. Most customers hold a range of acceptable times for this
service encounter – probably somewhere between five and 10 minutes. If service consumes that
period of time, customers probably do not pay much attention to the wait. If a customer enters
the line and finds sufficient checkout personnel to serve him or her in the first two or three
minutes, he or she may notice the service and judge it as excellent. On the other hand, if a cus-
tomer has to wait in line for 15 minutes, he or she may begin to grumble and look at his or her
watch. The longer the wait is below the zone of tolerance, the more frustrated the customer
becomes.
Customers’ service expectations are characterized by a range of levels (like those shown in
Figure 3.2), bounded by desired and adequate service, rather than a single level. This tolerance
zone, representing the difference between desired service and the level of service considered
adequate, can expand and contract within a customer. An airline customer’s zone of tolerance
will narrow when he or she is running late and is concerned about making it in time for his or
her plane. A minute seems much longer, and the customer’s adequate service level increases. On
the other hand, a customer who arrives at the airport early may have a larger tolerance zone,
Chapter 3 Customer expectations of service58
Adequate service
Desired service
Zone of
tolerance
FIGURE 3.3 The zone of tolerance
6. making the wait in line far less noticeable than when he or she is pressed for time. This example
shows that the marketer must understand not just the size and boundary levels for the zone of
tolerance but also when and how the tolerance zone fluctuates with a given customer.
Different customers possess different zones of tolerance
Another aspect of variability in the range of reasonable services is that different customers
possess different tolerance zones. Some customers have narrow zones of tolerance, requiring a
tighter range of service from providers, whereas other customers allow a greater range of service.
For example, very busy customers would likely always be pressed for time, desire short wait
times in general and hold a constrained range for the length of acceptable wait times. When it
comes to meeting plumbers or repair personnel at their home for problems with domestic appli-
ance, customers who work outside the home have a more restricted window of acceptable time
duration for that appointment than do customers who work in their homes or do not work at all.
An individual customer’s zone of tolerance increases or decreases depending on a number
of factors, including company-controlled factors such as price. When prices increase, customers
tend to be less tolerant of poor service. In this case, the zone of tolerance decreases because the
adequate service level shifts upward. Later in this chapter we will describe many different
factors, some company controlled and others customer controlled, that lead to the narrowing or
widening of the tolerance zone.
Zones of tolerance vary for service dimensions
Customers’ tolerance zones also vary for different service attributes or dimensions. The more
important the factor, the narrower the zone of tolerance is likely to be. In general, customers are
likely to be less tolerant about unreliable service (broken promises or service errors) than other
service deficiencies, which means that they have higher expectations for this factor. In addition
Meaning and types of service expectations 59
FIGURE 3.4 Zones of tolerance for different service dimensions
Source : L.L. Berry, A. Parasuraman and V.A. Zeithaml, ‘Ten lessons for improving service quality’, Marketing Science Institute, Report No. 93-104
(May 1993)
Level of
expectation
Reliability Tangibles
Adequate service
Desired service
Zone of
tolerance
Adequate service
Desired service
Zone of
tolerance
7. to higher expectations for the most important service dimensions and attributes, customers are
likely to be less willing to relax these expectations than those for less important factors, making
the zone of tolerance for the most important service dimension smaller and the desired and
adequate service levels higher.5 Figure 3.4 portrays the likely difference in tolerance zones for
the most important and the least important factors.6
The fluctuation in the individual customer’s zone of tolerance is more a function of changes
in the adequate service level, which moves readily up and down because of situational circum-
stances, than in the desired service level, which tends to move upward incrementally because of
accumulated experiences. Desired service is relatively idiosyncratic and stable compared with
adequate service, which moves up and down and in response to competition and other factors.
Fluctuation in the zone of tolerance can be likened to an accordion’s movement, but with most
of the movement coming from one side (the adequate service level) rather than the other (the
desired service level).
In summary, we can express the boundaries of customer expectations of service with two dif-
ferent levels of expectations: desired service and adequate service. The desired service level is
less subject to change than the adequate service level. A zone of tolerance separates these two
levels. This zone of tolerance varies across customers and expands or contracts with the same
customer.
Factors that influence customer expectations of service
Because expectations play such a critical role in customer evaluation of services, marketers
need and want to understand the factors that shape them. Marketers would also like to have
control over these factors as well, but many of the forces that influence customer expectations
are uncontrollable. In this section of the chapter we try to separate the many influences on cus-
tomer expectations.
Sources of desired service expectations
As shown in Figure 3.5, the two largest influences on desired service level are personal needs
and philosophies about service. Personal needs, those states or conditions essential to the
physical or psychological well-being
of the customer, are pivotal factors
that shape what customers desire in
service. Personal needs can fall into
many categories, including physical,
social, psychological and functional.
A cinema-goer who regularly goes to
see films straight from work, and is
therefore thirsty and hungry, hopes
and desires that the food and drink
counters at the cinema will have short
queues and attentive staff, whereas a
cinema-goer who regularly has
dinner elsewhere has a low or zero
level of desired service from the food
and drink counters. A customer with
high social and dependency needs
Chapter 3 Customer expectations of service60
Adequate service
Desired service
Zone of
tolerance
Personal needs
Lasting service
intensifiers
FIGURE 3.5 Factors that influence desired service
8. may have relatively high expectations for a hotel’s ancillary services, hoping, for example, that
the hotel has a bar with live music and dancing.
Some customers are more demanding than others, having greater sensitivity to, and higher
expectations of, service. Lasting service intensifiers are individual, stable factors that lead the
customer to a heightened sensitivity to service. One of the most important of these factors can
be called derived service expectations, which occur when customer expectations are driven by
another person or group of people. A niece from a big family who is planning a ninetieth
birthday party for a favourite aunt is representing the entire family in selecting a restaurant for a
successful celebration. Her needs are driven in part by the derived expectations from the other
family members. A parent choosing a vacation for the family, a spouse selecting a home-cleaning
service, an employee choosing an office for the firm – all these customers’ individual expecta-
tions are intensified because they represent and must answer to other parties who will receive
the service. In the context of business-to-business service, customer expectations are driven by
the expectations of their own customers. The head of an information technology department in
an insurance company, who is the business customer of a large computer company, has expec-
tations based on those of the insurance customers he or she serves: when the computer
equipment is down, his or her customers complain. The need to keep the system up and running
is not just his or her own expectation but is derived from the pressure of customers.
Business-to-business customers may also derive their expectations from their managers and
supervisors. Employees of a marketing research department may speed up project cycles
(increase their expectations for speed of delivery) when pressured by their management to
deliver the study results. Purchasing agents may increase demands for faster delivery at lower
costs when company management is emphasizing cost reduction in the company.
Another lasting service intensifier is personal service philosophy – the customer’s underlying
generic attitude about the meaning of service and the proper conduct of service providers. If you
have ever been employed as a member of waiting staff in a restaurant, you are likely to have stan-
dards for restaurant service that were shaped by your training and experience in that role. You
might, for example, believe that waiters should not keep customers waiting longer than 15
minutes to take their orders. Knowing the way a kitchen operates, you may be less tolerant of
lukewarm food or errors in the order than customers who have not held the role of waiter or wait-
ress. In general, customers who are themselves in service businesses or have worked for them in
the past seem to have especially strong service philosophies.
To the extent that customers have personal philosophies about service provision, their expec-
tations of service providers will be intensified. Personal service philosophies and derived service
expectations elevate the level of desired service.
Sources of adequate service expectations
A different set of determinants affects adequate service, the level of service the customer finds
acceptable. In general, these influences are short term and tend to fluctuate more than the factors
that influence desired service. In this section we explain the five factors shown in Figure 3.6 that
influence adequate service: (1) temporary service intensifiers, (2) perceived service alternatives,
(3) customer self-perceived service role, (4) situational factors, and (5) predicted service.
The first set of elements, temporary service intensifiers, consists of short-term, individual
factors that make a customer more aware of the need for service. Personal emergency situations
in which service is urgently needed (such as an accident and the need for car insurance or a
breakdown in office equipment during a busy period) raise the level of adequate service expec-
tation, particularly the level of responsiveness required and considered acceptable. A mail-order
company that depends on freephone numbers for receiving all customer orders will tend to be
Factors that influence customer expectations of service 61
9. more demanding of the telephone service during peak periods of the week, month and year. Any
system breakdown or lack of clarity on the lines will be tolerated less during these intense
periods than at other times.
Problems with the initial service can also lead to heightened expectations. Performing a
service right the first time is very important because customers value service reliability above all
other dimensions. If the service fails in the recovery phase, putting it right the second time (that
is, being reliable in service recovery) is even more critical than it was the first time. Car repair
service provides a case in point. If a problem with your car’s brakes sends you to a car repair
provider, you expect the company to fix the brakes. If you experience further problems with the
brakes after the repair (a not uncommon situation with car repairs), your adequate service level
will increase. In these and other situations where temporary service intensifiers are present, the
level of adequate service will increase and the zone of tolerance will narrow.
Perceived service alternatives are other providers from whom the customer can obtain
service. If customers have multiple service providers to choose from, or if they can provide the
service for themselves (such as lawn care or personal grooming), their levels of adequate service
are higher than those of customers who believe it is not possible to get better service elsewhere.
An airline customer who lives in a provincial town with a small airport, for example, has a
reduced set of options in airline travel. This customer will be more tolerant of the service per-
formance of the carriers in the town because few alternatives exist. He or she will accept the
scheduling and lower levels of service more than will the customer in a big city who has myriad
flights and airlines to choose from. The customer’s perception that service alternatives exist raises
the level of adequate service and narrows the zone of tolerance.
It is important that service marketers fully understand the complete set of options that cus-
tomers view as perceived alternatives. In the provincial town, small airport example just
Chapter 3 Customer expectations of service62
FIGURE 3.6 Factors that influence adequate service
Adequate service
Desired service
Zone of
tolerance
Temporary service
intensifiers
Perceived service
intensifiers
Self-perceived
service role
Situational
factors
Personal needs
Lasting service
intensifiers
Predicted
service
10. discussed, the set of alternatives from the customer’s point of view is likely to include more than
just other airlines: taxi service to a nearby large city, rail service or driving. In general, service
marketers must discover the alternatives that the customer views as comparable rather than those
in the company’s competitive set.
A third factor affecting the level of adequate service is the customer’s self-perceived service
role. We define this as customer perceptions of the degree to which customers exert an influence
on the level of service they receive. In other words, customers’ expectations are partly shaped
by how well they believe they are performing their own roles in service delivery.7 One role of
the customer is to specify the level of service expected. A customer who is very explicit with a
waiter about how rare he or she wants his or her steak cooked in a restaurant will probably be
more dissatisfied if the meat comes to the table overcooked than a customer who does not artic-
ulate the degree of cooking expected. The customer’s active participation in the service also
affects this factor. A customer who does not get his or her car serviced regularly is likely to be
more lenient on the car manufacturer when he or she experiences problems than one who con-
scientiously follows the manufacturers service schedules.
A final way the customer defines his or her role is in assuming the responsibility for com-
plaining when service is poor. A dissatisfied customer who complains will be less tolerant than
one who does not voice his or her concerns. A car insurance customer acknowledged responsi-
bility in service provision this way: ‘You can’t blame it all on the insurance broker. You need to
be responsible too and let the broker know what exactly you want.’
Customers’ zones of tolerance seem to expand when they sense they are not fulfilling their
roles. When, on the other hand, customers believe they are doing their part in delivery, their
expectations of adequate service are heightened and the zone of tolerance contracts. The
comment of a car repair customer illustrates this: ‘Service staff don’t listen when you tell them
what is wrong. I now prepare a written list of problems in advance, take it to the car dealership,
and tell them to fix these.’ This customer will expect more than one who did not prepare so well.
Levels of adequate service are also influenced by situational factors, defined as service per-
formance conditions that customers view as beyond the control of the service provider. For
example, where personal emergencies such as serious car accidents would likely intensify cus-
tomer service expectations of insurance companies (because they are temporary service
intensifiers), catastrophes that affect a large number of people at one time (floods or storms) may
lower service expectations because customers recognize that insurers are inundated with
demands for their services. Customers who recognize that situational factors are not the fault of
the service company may accept lower levels of adequate service given the context. In general,
situational factors temporarily lower the level of adequate service, widening the zone of toler-
ance.
The final factor that influences adequate service is predicted service (Figure 3.7), the level of
service that customers believe they are likely to get. This type of service expectation can be
viewed as predictions made by customers about what is likely to happen during an impending
transaction or exchange. Predicted service performance implies some objective calculation of
the probability of performance or estimate of anticipated service performance level. If customers
predict good service, their levels of adequate service are likely to be higher than if they predict
poor service. For example, travellers may expect poorer service from some of the no-frills airlines
such as Ryanair or easyJet in comparison to some of the full-cost airlines (British Airways, KLM,
Air France). This prediction will mean that higher standards for adequate service will exist in the
full-cost airlines. On the other hand, customers of mobile phone companies may know that the
companies’ call centre operations will provide poor service around Christmas time when myriad
people are setting up the mobiles that they have received as gifts. In this case, levels of adequate
service decrease and zones of tolerance widen.
Factors that influence customer expectations of service 63
11. Predicted service is typically an estimate or calculation of the service that a customer will
receive in an individual transaction rather than in the overall relationship with a service provider.
Whereas desired and adequate service expectations are global assessments comprising many
individual service transactions, predicted service is almost always an estimate of what will
happen in the next service encounter or transaction that the customer experiences. For this
reason, predicted service is viewed in this model as an influencer of adequate service.
Because predictions are about individual service encounters, they are likely to be more con-
crete and specific than the types of expectation levels customers hold for adequate service or
desired service. For example, your predicted service expectations about the length of time you
will spend in the waiting room the next time you visit your doctor will likely be expressed in
terms of the number of minutes or hours you have spent in the waiting room on your last visit.
Service encounter expectations versus overall service expectations
In Chapter 4 we discuss the difference between overall service quality and service encounter
quality, viewing the service encounter as a discrete event occurring over a definable period of
time (such as a particular hotel stay or a particular check-in experience at the hotel). Customers
hold expectations of the quality of each service encounter, just as they hold expectations about
the overall service quality of a firm. When the expectations are about individual service encoun-
ters, they are likely to be more specific and concrete (such as the number of minutes one must
wait for a receptionist) than the expectations about overall service quality (like speedy service).
Chapter 3 Customer expectations of service64
FIGURE 3.7 Factors that influence desired and predicted service
Adequate service
Desired service
Zone of
tolerance
Temporary service
intensifiers
Perceived service
intensifiers
Self-perceived
service role
Situational
factors
Personal needs
Lasting service
intensifiers
Predicted
service
Explicit service
promises
Implicit service
promises
Word-of-mouth
Past experience
12. The Ibis hotel chain
promises to solve any
problem you have with
your room or hotel in
15 minutes otherwise
they will not charge
you for your stay.
Read their Quality
Commitment on line at
www.ibishotels.com.
Service spotlight
Sources of both desired and predicted service expectations
When consumers are interested in purchasing services, they are likely to seek or take in infor-
mation from several different sources. For example, they may call a store, ask a friend or
deliberately track newspaper advertisements to find the needed service at the lowest price. They
may also receive service information by watching television or hearing an unsolicited comment
from a colleague about a service that was performed well. In addition to these active and passive
types of external search for information, consumers may conduct an internal search by reviewing
the information held in their memory about the service. This section discusses one internal and
three external factors that influence both desired service and predicted service expectations: (1)
explicit service promises, (2) implicit service promises, (3) word-of-mouth communications and
(4) past experience.
Explicit service promises are personal and non-personal statements about the service made
by the organization to customers. The statements are personal when they are communicated by
salespeople or service or repair personnel; they are non-personal when they come from adver-
tising, brochures and other written publications. Explicit service promises are one of the few
influences on expectations that are completely in the control of the service provider.
Promising exactly what will ultimately be delivered would seem a logical and appropriate
way to manage customer expectations and ensure that reality fits the promises. However,
companies and the personnel who represent them often deliberately over-promise to obtain busi-
ness or inadvertently over-promise by stating their best estimates about delivery of a service in
the future. In addition to over-promising, company representatives simply do not always know
the appropriate promises to make because services are often customized and therefore not easily
defined and repeated; the representative may not know when or in what final form the service
will be delivered.
All types of explicit service promises have a direct effect on desired service expectation. If
the sales visit portrays a banking service that is available 24 hours a day, the customer’s desires
for that service (as well as the service of competitors) will be shaped by this promise.
Factors that influence customer expectations of service 65
13. Explicit service promises influence the levels of both desired service and predicted service.
They shape what customers desire in general as well as what they predict will happen in the next
service encounter from a particular service provider or in a certain service encounter.
Implicit service promises are service-related cues other than explicit promises that lead to
inferences about what the service should and will be like. These quality cues are dominated by
price and the tangibles associated with the service. In general, the higher the price and the more
impressive the tangibles, the more a customer will expect from the service. Consider a customer
who shops for insurance, finding two firms charging radically different prices. He or she may
infer that the firm with the higher price should and will provide higher-quality service and better
coverage. Similarly, a customer who stays at a five-star hotel is likely to desire and predict a
higher standard of service than from a hotel with less impressive facilities.
The importance of word-of-mouth communication in shaping expectations of service is well
documented.8 These personal and sometimes non-personal statements made by parties other
than the organization convey to customers what the service will be like and influence both pre-
dicted and desired service. Word-of-mouth communication carries particular weight as an
information source because it is perceived as unbiased. Word of mouth tends to be very
important in services that are difficult to evaluate before purchase and before direct experience
of them. Experts (including consumer reports, friends and family) are also word-of-mouth sources
that can affect the levels of desired and predicted service.
Past experience, the customer’s previous exposure to service that is relevant to the focal
service, is another force in shaping predictions and desires. The service relevant for prediction
can be previous exposure to the focal firm’s service. For example, you probably compare each
stay in a particular hotel with all previous stays in that hotel. But past experience with the focal
hotel is likely to be a very limited view of your past experience. You may also compare each stay
with your experiences in other hotels and hotel chains. Customers also compare across indus-
tries: hospital patients, for example, compare hospital stays against the standard of hotel visits.
In a general sense, past experience may incorporate previous experience with the focal brand,
typical performance of a favorite brand, experience with the brand last purchased or the top-
selling brand, and the average performance a customer believes represents a group of similar
brands.9
How might a manager of a service organization use the information we have developed in
this chapter to create, improve, or market services? First, managers need to know the pertinent
expectation sources and their relative importance for a customer population, a customer
segment and, perhaps, even a particular customer. They need to know, for instance, the relative
weight of word of mouth, explicit service promises and implicit service promises in shaping
desired service and predicted service. Some of these sources are more stable and permanent in
their influence (such as lasting service intensifiers and personal needs) than the others, which
fluctuate considerably over time (like perceived service alternatives and situational factors).
The different sources vary in terms of their credibility as well as their potential to be influ-
enced by the marketer. Table 3.1 shows the breakdown of various factors and how services
marketers can influence them. Chapter 16 details these and other strategies that services mar-
keters can use to match delivery to promises and thereby manage expectations.
Chapter 3 Customer expectations of service66
14. Factors that influence customer expectations of service 67
Factor Possible influence strategies
Explicit service promises Make realistic and accurate promises that reflect the service actually
delivered rather than an idealized version of the service.
Ask contact people for feedback on the accuracy of promises made in
advertising and personal selling.
Avoid engaging in price or advertising wars with competitors because they
take the focus off customers and escalate promises beyond the level at which
they can be met.
Formalize service promises through a service guarantee that focuses
company employees on the promise and that provides feedback on the
number of times promises are not fulfilled.
Implicit service promises Ensure that service tangibles accurately reflect the type and level of service
provided.
Ensure that price premiums can be justified by higher levels of performance
by the company on important customer attributes.
Lasting service intensifiers Use market research to determine sources of derived service expectations
and their requirements. Focus advertising and marketing strategy on ways the
service allows the focal customer to satisfy the requirements of the
influencing customer.
Use market research to profile personal service philosophies of customers
and use this information in designing and delivering services.
Personal needs Educate customers on ways the service addresses their needs.
Temporary service intensifiers Increase service delivery during peak periods or in emergencies.
Perceived service alternatives Be fully aware of competitive offerings, and where possible and appropriate,
match them.
Self-perceived service role Educate customers to understand their roles and perform them better.
Word-of-mouth communications Simulate word of mouth in advertising by using testimonials and opinion
leaders.
Identify influencers and opinion leaders for the service and concentrate
marketing efforts on them.
Use incentives with existing customers to encourage them to say positive
things about the service.
Past experience Use marketing research to profile customers’ previous experience with similar
services.
Situational factors Use service guarantees to assure customers about service recovery
regardless of the situational factors that occur.
Predicted service Tell customers when service provision is higher than what can normally be
expected so that predictions of future service encounters will not be inflated.
TABLE 3.1 How services marketers can influence factors
15. Issues involving customer service expectations
The following issues represent current topics of particular interest to service marketers about
customer expectations. In this section we discuss five of the most frequently asked questions
about customer expectations:
1 What does a service marketer do if customer expectations are ‘unrealistic’?
2 Should a company try to delight the customer?
3 How does a company exceed customer service expectations?
4 Do customer service expectations continually escalate?
5 How does a service company stay ahead of competition in meeting customer expecta-
tions?
What does a services marketer do if customer expectations are
‘unrealistic’?
One inhibitor to learning about customer expectations is management’s and employees’ fear of
asking. This apprehension often stems from the belief that customer expectations will be extrav-
agant and unrealistic and that by asking about them a company will set itself up for even loftier
expectation levels (that is, ‘unrealistic’ levels). Compelling evidence, shown in Table 3.2, sug-
gests that customers’ main expectations of service are quite simple and basic: ‘Simply put,
customers expect service companies to do what they are supposed to do. They expect fundamen-
tals, not fanciness; performance, not empty promises.’10 Customers want service to be delivered
as promised. They want planes to take off on time, hotel rooms to be clean, food to be hot and
service providers to show up when scheduled. Unfortunately, many service customers are disap-
pointed and let down by companies’ inability to meet these basic service expectations.
Asking customers about their expectations does not so much raise the levels of the expecta-
tions themselves but rather heightens the belief that the company will do something with the
information that surfaces. Arguably the worst thing a company can do is show a strong interest
in understanding what customers expect and then never act on the information. At a minimum,
a company should acknowledge to customers that it has received and heard their input and that
it will expend effort trying to address their issues. The company may not be able to – and indeed
does not always have to – deliver to expressed expectations. An alternative and appropriate
response would be to let customers know the reasons that desired service is not being provided
at the present time and describe the efforts planned to address them. Another approach could be
a campaign to educate customers about ways to use and improve the service they currently
receive. Giving customers progress updates as service is improved to address their needs and
desires is sensible because it allows the company to get credit for incremental efforts to improve
service.
Some observers recommend deliberately under-promising the service to increase the likeli-
hood of meeting or exceeding customer expectations.11 While under-promising makes service
expectations more realistic, thereby narrowing the gap between expectations and perceptions, it
also may reduce the competitive appeal of the offer. Some research has indicated that under-
promising may also have the inadvertent effect of lowering customer perceptions of service,
particularly in situations in which customers have little experience with a service.12 In these situ-
ations customer expectations may be self-fulfilling; that is, if the customer goes into the service
experience expecting good service, he or she will focus on the aspects of service provision that
are positive, but if he or she expects low service she may focus on the negative. Thus a sales-
Chapter 3 Customer expectations of service68
17. person who sells to a customer with a realistic promise may lose the sale to another who inflates
the offering. In Chapter 16 we describe various techniques for controlling a firm’s promises, but
for now consider two options. First, if the salesperson knows that no competitor can meet an
inflated sales promise in an industry, he or she could point that fact out to the customer, thereby
refuting the promise made by competitive salespeople.
The second option is for the provider to follow a sale with a ‘reality check’ about service
delivery. I bought a new house from a builder. Typical sales promises were made about the
quality of the home, some less than accurate, in order to make the sale. Before being given the
keys to the new house, the builder and I conducted a final check on everything. At the front door,
the builder turned to me and pointed out that each new home has between 3000 and 5000 indi-
vidual elements and that in his experience the typical new home had 100 to 150 defects. Armed
with this reality check, I thought the 32 defects found in my house seemed minor. Consider my
response in the absence of that reality check.
Should a company try to delight the customer?
Some management consultants urge service companies to ‘delight’ customers to gain a competi-
tive edge. The delight that they refer to is a profoundly positive emotional state that results from
having one’s expectations exceeded to a surprising degree.13
One author describes the type of
service that results in delight as ‘positively outrageous service’ – that which is unexpected,
random, extraordinary and disproportionately positive.14
A way that managers can conceive of delight is to consider product and service features in
terms of concentric rings.15
The innermost bull’s-eye refers to attributes that are central to the
basic function of the product or service, called musts. Their provision is not particularly notice-
able, but their absence would be. Around the musts is a ring called satisfiers: features that have
the potential to further satisfaction beyond the basic function of the product. At the next and final
outer level are delights, or product features that are unexpected and surprisingly enjoyable.
These features are things that consumers would not expect to find and they are therefore highly
surprised and sometimes excited when they receive them. For example, a student may consider
the musts to consist of lecturers, rooms, class outlines and lectures/seminars. Satisfiers might
include lecturers who are entertaining or friendly, interesting lectures and good audiovisual aids.
A delight might include a free textbook for students signing up for the course.
Delighting customers may seem like a good idea, but this level of service provision comes
with extra effort and cost to the firm. Therefore, the benefits of providing delight must be
weighed. Among the considerations are the staying power and competitive implications of
delight.
Staying power involves the question of how long a company can expect an experience of
delight to maintain the consumer’s attention. If it is fleeting and the customer forgets it immedi-
ately, it may not be worth the cost. Alternatively, if the customer remembers the delight and
adjusts his or her level of expectation upward accordingly, it will cost the company more just to
satisfy, effectively raising the bar for the future. Recent research indicates that delighting cus-
tomers does in fact raise expectations and make it more difficult for a company to satisfy
customers in the future.16
The competitive implication of delight relates to its impact on expectations of other firms in
the same industry. If a competitor in the same industry is unable to copy the delight strategy, it
will be disadvantaged by the consumer’s increased expectations. If students were offered that
free textbook in one of their classes, they might then expect to receive one in each of their
classes. Those classes not offering the free textbook might not have high enrolment levels com-
pared with the delighting class. If a competitor can easily copy the delight strategy, however,
Chapter 3 Customer expectations of service70
18. easyJet produces a timetable that suggests that flights will be longer than they actually are,
allowing them to give the impression that their timekeeping is good as most flights will
arrive early or on time. However, over time regular customers may come to expect an early
arrival and be disappointed when this does not happen.
Service spotlight
neither firm benefits (although the consumer does!), and all firms may be hurt because their costs
increase and profits erode. The implication is that if companies choose to delight, they should
do so in areas that cannot be copied by other firms.
How does a company exceed customer service expectations?
Many companies today talk about exceeding customer expectations – delighting and surprising
them by giving more than they expect. This philosophy raises the question, Should a service
provider try simply to meet customer expectations or to exceed them?
First, it is essential to recognize that exceeding customer expectations of the basics is virtually
impossible. Honouring promises – having the reserved room available, meeting deadlines,
showing up for meetings, delivering the core service – is what the company is supposed to do.
Companies are supposed to be accurate and dependable and provide the service they promised
to provide.17
As you examine the examples of basic expectations of customers in Figure 3.9, ask
yourself if a provider doing any of these things would delight you. The conclusion you should
reach is that it is very difficult to surprise or delight customers consistently by delivering reliable
service.
How, then, does a company delight its customers and exceed their expectations? In virtually
any service, developing a customer relationship is one approach for exceeding service expecta-
tions. Ritz-Carlton Hotels provides highly personalized attention to its customers. In each hotel
within the chain, a special organization exists called guest recognition. This special function uses
the CLASS database to remember over 800 000 guests and generate information for all appro-
priate staff. It stores: likes/dislikes; previous difficulties; family interests; personal interests;
preferred credit card; recency/frequency of use of the hotel; lifetime usage/amount of purchase.
In this way staff are able to understand what is ‘new or different’ about an individual customer.18
Another way to exceed expectations is to deliberately under-promise the service to increase
the likelihood of exceeding customer expectations. The strategy is to under-promise and over-
deliver. If every service promise is less than what will eventually happen, customers can be
delighted frequently. Although this reasoning sounds logical, a firm should weigh two potential
problems before using this strategy.
First, customers with whom a company interacts regularly are likely to notice the under-
promising and adjust their expectations accordingly, negating the desired benefit of delight.
Customers will recognize the pattern of under-promising when time after time a firm promises
one delivery time (we cannot get that to you before 5 p.m. tomorrow) yet constantly exceeds it
(by delivering at noon).
Issues involving customer service expectations 71
Second, under-promising in a sales situation potentially reduces the competitive appeal of an
offering and must be tempered by what competition is offering. When competitive pressures are
high, presenting a cohesive and honest portrayal of the service both explicitly (through adver-
tising and personal selling) and implicitly (such as through the appearance of service facilities
19. and the price of the service) may be wiser. Controlling the firm’s promises, making them consis-
tent with the deliverable service, may be a better approach.
A final way to exceed expectations without raising them in the future is to position unusual
service as unique rather than the standard. Emphasizing that because of special circumstances
or a special situation, the service will be altered from the norm. For example, a restaurant may
offer customers a free dessert by claimimg that the chef is trying out some new recipes/creations.
Do customer service expectations continually escalate?
As we illustrated in the beginning of this chapter, customer service expectations are dynamic. In
the credit card industry, as in many competitive service industries, battling companies seek to
outdo each other and thereby raise the level of service above that of competing companies.
Service expectations – in this case adequate service expectations – rise as quickly as service
delivery or promises rise. In a highly competitive and rapidly changing industry, expectations can
thus rise quickly. For this reason companies need continually to monitor adequate service expec-
tations – the more turbulent the industry, the more frequent the monitoring needed.
Desired service expectations, on the other hand, are far more stable. Because they are driven
by more enduring factors, such as personal needs and lasting service intensifiers, they tend to be
high to begin with and remain high.
How does a service company stay ahead of competition in meeting customer
expectations?
All else being equal, a company’s goal is to meet customer expectations better than its competi-
tors can. Given the fact that adequate service expectations change rapidly in a turbulent
environment, how can a company ensure that it stays ahead of competition?
The adequate service level reflects the minimum performance level expected by customers
after they consider a variety of personal and external factors (Figure 3.6), including the avail-
ability of service options from other providers. Companies whose service performance falls short
of this level are clearly at a competitive disadvantage, with the disadvantage escalating as the
gap widens. These companies’ customers may well be ‘reluctant’ customers, ready to take their
business elsewhere the moment they perceive an alternative.
If they are to use service quality for competitive advantage, companies must perform above
the adequate service level. This level, however, may signal only a temporary advantage.
Customers’ adequate service levels, which are less stable than desired service levels, will rise
rapidly when competitors promise and deliver a higher level of service. If a company’s level of
service is barely above the adequate service level to begin with, a competitor can quickly erode
that advantage. Companies currently performing in the region of competitive advantage must
stay alert to the need for service increases to meet or beat competition.
To develop a true customer franchise – immutable customer loyalty – companies must not
only consistently exceed the adequate service level but also reach the desired service level.
Exceptional service can intensify customers’ loyalty to a point at which they are impervious to
competitive options.
Chapter 3 Customer expectations of service72
20. Further reading 73
Summary
Using a conceptual framework of the nature and determinants of customer expectations of
service, we showed in this chapter that customers hold different types of service expecta-
tions: (1) desired service, which reflects what customers want; (2) adequate service, or what
customers are willing to accept; and (3) predicted service, or what customers believe they are
likely to get. These different levels of service are reflected within the customer’s zone of toler-
ance which establishes the variability in the service delivery that the customer is willing to
accept.
Customer expectations and tolerance levels are influenced by a variety of factors. The types
and sources of these are the same for end consumers and business customers, for pure service
and product-related service, and for experienced customers and inexperienced customers.
Key concepts
Exceeding customer expectations 68
Expectations 55
Explicit and implicit service promises 65
Self-perceived service role 61
Temporary and lasting service intensifiers 61
Zone of tolerance 58
Further reading
Anderson, E. and Sullivan, M. (1993) ‘The antecedents and consequences of customer sat-
isfaction’, Marketing Science, 12, 125–43.
Bebko, C.P. (2000) ‘Service intangibility and its impact on customer expectations of
service quality’, Journal of Services Marketing, 14(1), 9–26.
Hubbert, A.R., Sehorn, A.G. and Brown, S.W. (1995) ‘Service expectations: the consumer
versus the provider’, International Journal of Service Industries Journal, 6(1), 6–21.
Johnson, C. and Mathews, B.P. (1997) ‘The influence of experience on service expecta-
tions’, International Journal of Service Industries Management, 8(4), 290–305.
O’Neill, M., Wright, C. and Palmer, A. (2003) ‘Disconfirming user expectations of the
online service experience: inferred versus direct disconfirmation modeling’, Internet
Research, 13(4), 281–296.
Yap, K.B. and Sweeney, J.C. (2007) ‘Zone of tolerance moderates the service
quality–outcome relationship?’, Journal of Services Marketing, 21(2), 137–48.
21. Discussion questions
1 What is the difference between desired service and adequate service? Why would a
services marketer need to understand both types of service expectations?
2 Consider a recent service purchase that you have made. Which of the factors influ-
encing expectations were the most important in your decision? Why?
3 Why are desired service expectations more stable than adequate service expectations?
4 How do the technology changes influence customer expectations?
5 Describe several instances in which a service company’s explicit service promises were
inflated and led you to be disappointed with the service outcome.
6 Consider a small business preparing to buy a computer system. Which of the influences
on customer expectations do you believe will be pivotal? Which factors will have the
most influence? Which factors will have the least importance in this decision?
7 Do you believe that any of your service expectations are unrealistic? Which ones?
Should a service marketer try to address unrealistic customer expectations?
8 In your opinion, what service companies have effectively built customer franchises
(immutable customer loyalty)?
9 Intuitively, it would seem that managers would want their customers to have wide tol-
erance zones for service. But if customers do have these wide zones of tolerance for
service, is it more difficult for firms with superior service to earn customer loyalty?
Would superior service firms be better off to attempt to narrow customers’ tolerance
zones to reduce the competitive appeal of mediocre providers?
10 Should service marketers delight their customers?
Exercises
1 Keep a service journal for a day and document your use of services. Ask yourself before
each service encounter to indicate your predicted service of that encounter. After the
encounter, note whether your expectations were met or exceeded. How does the
answer to this question relate to your desire to do business with that service firm again?
2 List five incidents in which a service company has exceeded your expectations. How
did you react to the service? Did these incidents change the way you viewed subse-
quent interactions with the companies? In what way?
Notes
1
The model on which this chapter is based is taken from V.A. Zeithaml, L.L. Berry and A.
Parasuraman, ‘The nature and determinants of customer expectations of service’, Journal of the
Academy of Marketing Science 21, no. 1 (1993), pp. 1–12.
2
R.B. Woodruff, E.R. Cadotte and R.L. Jenkins, ‘Expectations and norms in models of consumer
satisfaction’, Journal of Marketing Research 24 (August 1987), pp. 305–14.
Chapter 3 Customer expectations of service74
22. 3
J.A. Miller, ‘Studying satisfaction, modifying models, eliciting expectations, posing problems, and
making meaningful measurements’, in Conceptualization and Measurement of Consumer
Satisfaction and Dissatisfaction, ed. H.K. Hunt (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University School of
Business, 1977), pp. 72–91.
4
W.H. Davidow and B. Uttal, ‘Service companies: focus or falter’, Harvard Business Review
(July–August 1989), pp. 77–85.
5
A. Parasuraman, L.L. Berry and V.A. Zeithaml, ‘Understanding customer expectations of service’,
Sloan Management Review 32 (Spring 1991), p. 42.
6
L.L. Berry, A. Parasuraman and V.A. Zeithaml, ‘Ten lessons for improving service quality’,
Marketing Science Institute, Report No. 93–104 (May 1993).
7
D. Bowen, ‘Leadership aspects and reward systems of customer satisfaction’, speech given at
CTM Customer Satisfaction Conference, Los Angeles, 17 March 1989.
8
D.L. Davis, J.G. Guiltinan and W.H. Jones, ‘Service characteristics, consumer research, and the
classification of retail services’, Journal of Retailing 55 (Fall 1979), pp. 3–21; and W.R. George
and L.L. Berry, ‘Guidelines for the advertising of services’, Business Horizons 24 (May–June
1981), pp. 52–6.
9 E.R. Cadotte, R.B. Woodruff and R.L. Jenkins, ‘Expectations and norms in models of consumer
satisfaction’, Journal of Marketing Research 14 (August 1987), pp. 353–64.
10 Parasuraman, Berry and Zeithaml, ‘Understanding customer expectations’, p. 40.
11
Davidow and Uttal, ‘Service Companies’.
12 W. Boulding, A. Kalra, R. Staelin and V.A. Zeithaml, ‘A dynamic process model of service quality:
from expectations to behavioral intentions’, Journal of Marketing Research 30 (February 1993),
pp. 7–27.
13
R.T. Rust and R.L. Oliver, ‘Should we delight the customer?’, Journal of the Academy of
Marketing Science 28 (Winter 2000), pp. 86–94.
14 T.S. Gross, Positively Outrageous Service (New York: Warner Books, 1994).
15
J. Clemmer, ‘The three rings of perceived value’, Canadian Manager (Summer 1990), pp. 30–2.
16 Rust and Oliver, ‘Should we delight the customer?’.
17 Parasuraman, Berry and Zeithaml, ‘Understanding customer expectations’, p. 41.
18 See http://corporate.ritzcarlton.com
Notes 75