Customer Behavior in Service Encounters
Customer Behavior in Service Encounters
Customer Behavior in Service Encounters
Customer Behavior
in
Service
Encounters
Overview Of Chapter 2
Post-Encounter Stage:
Evaluation against
expectations, future
intentions
How Differences among
Services Affect Customer
Behavior
Differences among Services Affect
Customer Behavior
Education
Software Consulting
Advertising/PR
Data Transmission
Four Categories Of Services
People Processing
Customers must:
Physically enter the service
factory
Co-operate actively with the
service operation
Managers should think
about process and output
from customer’s
perspective
To identify benefits created
and non-financial costs:
― Time, mental, physical
effort
Possession Processing
Possession Processing
Involvement is limited
Production and
consumption are
separable
Mental Stimulus Processing
Information Processing
Prepurchase Stage
Post-Encounter Stage
Prepurchase Stage
Prepurchase Stage: Overview
Easy Difficult
to evaluate to evaluate*
Clothing Restaurant meals Computer repair
Chair Education
Haircut
Motor vehicle Legal services
Entertainment
Foods Complex surgery
Situational Factors
Source: Adapted from Valarie A. Zeithaml, Leonard A. 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.
Components of Customer
Expectations
Figure 2.9
Levels of Customer Contact
with Service Organizations
Distinctions between High-Contact and
Low-Contact Services
High-Contact Services
Customers visit service facility and remain throughout service
delivery
Active contact between customers and service personnel
Includes most people-processing services
Low-Contact Services
Little or no physical contact with service personnel
Contact usually at arm’s length through electronic or physical
distribution channels
New technologies (e.g. the Web) help reduce contact levels
Advertising
Service Operations System Other
Customers Sales Calls
Interior & Exterior
Market Research Surveys
Facilities
Billing/Statements
Technical The
Equipment Misc. Mail, Phone Calls,
Core Customer E-mails, Faxes, etc.
Website
Service People Random Exposure to
Facilities/Vehicles
Mail Advertising
Market Research
Surveys
Technical Self The
Core Service Billing/Statements
Equipment Customer
Random Exposure
Phone, to Facilities/Vehicles
Fax, Web-
site, etc. Word of Mouth
Front Stage
Backstage (visible)
(invisible)
Theater as a Metaphor for Service
Delivery
William Shakespeare
As You Like It
Theatrical Metaphor: An Integrative
Perspective
Service dramas unfold on a “stage”—settings may
change as performance unfolds
Many service dramas are tightly scripted, others
improvised
Front-stage personnel are like members of a cast
Customers should be
given a realistic service
preview in advance of
service delivery, so they
Figure 2.13: Tourists Appreciate Easy-to-
have a clear picture of Understand Instructions When Traveling
their expected role
Post-Encounter Stage
Post-Encounter Stage: Overview
Prepurchase Stage
Evaluation of
service
Service Encounter Stage performance
Future intentions
Post-Encounter Stage
Customer Satisfaction Is Central to the
Marketing Concept