Customers Perception of Service-: Dr. Saleem G Sonnekhan - SDMCET-DHW
Customers Perception of Service-: Dr. Saleem G Sonnekhan - SDMCET-DHW
SM
Chapter 2
CONSUMER BEHAVIOR IN SERVICES: Search,
experience and credence property, Customer expectation
of services, two levels of expectation, Zone of tolerance,
factors influencing customer expectation of services.
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• Search Qualities
– attributes a consumer can determine prior to
purchase of a product
• Experience Qualities
– attributes a consumer can determine after
purchase (or during consumption) of a product
• Credence Qualities
– characteristics that may be impossible to evaluate
even after purchase and consumption
SM Consumer Evaluation
Processes for Services
• Search Qualities
– attributes a consumer can determine prior to
purchase of a product
• Experience Qualities
– attributes a consumer can determine after
purchase (or during consumption) of a product
• Credence Qualities
– characteristics that may be impossible to evaluate
even after purchase and consumption
Dr. Saleem G Sonnekhan – SDMCET- DHW
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Figure 2-1
SM Continuum of Evaluation for
Different Types of Products
Most Most
Goods Services
Easy to evaluate
Difficult to evaluate
SM
Consumer Choice
• Need Recognition – Although there are many
different ways to characterize needs, the most
widely know is Maslow’s hierarchy, which
specifies five need categories arranged in a
sequence from basic lower- level needs.
• Physiological needs – biological needs such as food , water
sleep.
• Safety and security needs- include shelter, protection and
security.
• Social needs- affection, friendship, and acceptance.
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SM
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Figure 2-3
SM Categories in Consumer Decision-
Making and Evaluation of Services
Information Evaluation of
Search Alternatives
Use of personal sources Evoked set
Perceived risk Emotion and mood
Culture
Values and attitudes
Manners and customs
Material culture
Aesthetics
Educational and social
institutions
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SM Information search
SM
Perceived Risk
• More risk would appear to be involved with
purchase of services (no guarantees)
• Many services so specialized and difficult to
evaluate (How do you know whether the plumber
has done a good job?)
• Therefore a firm needs to develop strategies to
reduce this risk, e.g, training of employees,
standardization of offerings
Dr. Saleem G Sonnekhan – SDMCET- DHW
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SM Evaluation of Alternatives
Evoked Set
• The evoked set of alternatives likely to be smaller
with services than goods
• If you would go to a shopping centre you may
only find one dry cleaner or “single brand”
• It is also difficult to obtain adequate prepurchase
information about service
• The Internet may widen this potential
• Consumer may choose to do it themselves, e.g.
garden services
Dr. Saleem G Sonnekhan – SDMCET- DHW
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SM
SM Consumer Experience
SM
Authenticity
Caring
Control Courtesy
Formality
Friendliness
Personalization
Promptness
Dr. Saleem G Sonnekhan – SDMCET- DHW
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SM CUSTOMER EXPECTATIONS OF
SERVICES
SM
Ideal restaurant is as good as one
Expectations or in city and I want to go
Desires somewhere very special for
my anniversary”
Zone of
Tolerance
Adequate Service
SM Figure 3-2
The Zone of Tolerance
Desired Service
Zone of
Tolerance
Adequate Service
Level
of Zone of
Expectation Desired
Tolerance Desired Service
Service
Adequate Service
Zone
of
Tolerance
Adequate
Adequate Service
Service
First-Time Service
Outcome
Process
Recovery Service
Outcome
Process
LOW HIGH
Expectations
Enduring Service
Intensifiers
Desired
Service
Personal Needs
Zone
of
Tolerance
Adequate
Service
SM
Desired
Perceived Service Service
Alternatives
Zone
of
Tolerance
Self-Perceived
Service Role Adequate
Service
Situational
Factors
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SM
SM
SM
Implicit Service
Promises
Desired Word-of-Mouth
Service
Zone
Past Experience
of
Tolerance
Adequate Predicted
Service Service
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SM Predicted service;
SM Customer Perceptions of
Service Quality and
Customer Satisfaction
Reliability Situational
Factors
Responsiveness Service
Quality
Assurance
Customer
Empathy Satisfaction
Product
Quality
Tangibles
Personal
Price Factors
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SM Factors Influencing
Customer Satisfaction
• Product/service quality
• Product/service attributes or features
• Consumer Emotions
• Attributions for product/service success or
failure
• Equity or fairness evaluations
SM Outcomes of
Customer Satisfaction
80%
60%
40%
20%
0%
Very Dissatisfied Neither Satisfied Very
dissatisfied satisfied nor satisfied
dissatisfied
Satisfaction measure
Source: James L. Heskett, W. Earl Sasser, Jr., and Leonard A. Schlesinger, The Service Profit Chain, (New York, NY: The Free Press, 1997), p. 83.
SM Service Quality
SM Exercise to
Identify Service Attributes
In groups of five, choose a services industry and spend 10 minutes
brainstorming specific requirements of customers in each of the five
service quality dimensions. Be certain the requirements reflect the
customer’s point of view.
Reliability:
Assurance:
Tangibles:
Empathy:
Responsiveness:
SM A Service Encounter
Cascade for a Hotel Visit
Check-In
Restaurant Meal
SM A Service Encounter
Cascade for an Industrial
Purchase
Sales Call
Servicing
Ordering Supplies
Billing
Recovery: Adaptability:
Employee Response Employee Response
to Service Delivery to Customer Needs
System Failure and Requests
Coping: Spontaneity:
Employee Response Unprompted and
to Problem Customers Unsolicited Employee
Actions and Attitudes
SM Recovery
DO DON’T
• Acknowledge • Ignore customer
problem • Blame customer
• Explain causes • Leave customer to
• Apologize fend for him/herself
• Compensate/upgrade • Downgrade
• Lay out options • Act as if nothing is
• Take responsibility wrong
SM Adaptability
DO DON’T
• Recognize the • Promise, then fail to
seriousness of the need follow through
• Acknowledge • Ignore
• Anticipate • Show unwillingness to
• Attempt to try
accommodate • Embarrass the customer
• Explain rules/policies • Laugh at the customer
• Take responsibility • Avoid responsibility
• Exert effort to
accommodate
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SM Spontaneity
DO DON’T
• Take time • Exhibit impatience
• Be attentive
• Ignore
• Anticipate needs
• Yell/laugh/swear
• Listen
• Provide information • Steal from or cheat a
(even if not asked) customer
• Treat customers fairly • Discriminate
• Show empathy • Treat impersonally
• Acknowledge by name
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SM Coping
DO DON’T
SM
SM