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Services Marketing

Themes Of My Presentation

The Servuction Model Art of BluePrinting Steps in Designing a BluePrint Fail Points

The Servuction Model ( the service experience)

Model used to illustrate factors that influence service experience, including those that are visible and invisible to consumer. Invisible component consists of invisible organizations and systems.

The Servuction Model ( the service experience)

Visible part consists of 3 parts: inanimate environment, contact personnel/service providers, and other consumers. Inanimate environment: All nonliving features present during service encounter. Contact personnel: :Employees other than primary providers that interact with consumer.

The Servuction Model ( the service experience)

Service Provider: Primary provider of core service, such as dentist, physician or instructor. Other Customers Customer A : Recipient of bundle of benefits created through service experience. Customer B : Other customers who are part of Customers As experience.

Customer Involvement in Production Process

Servuction model demonstrates consumers are an integral part of service process. Participation may be active or passive, but always there. Managers must understand interactive nature of services and customer involvement in production process.

Art of Blueprinting

Blueprinting is flowcharting of a service operation. Enables marketing managers to understand the parts of operating system visible to consumer, hence part of servuction system. Identifying components of an individual firms servuction system is difficult.

Art of Blueprinting

Many firms underestimate points of contact. Service flowcharts allow managers to better understand servuction process. Designing the process is key to product design. Visible part of operations must be supported by invisible process.

Art of Blueprinting

Blueprint provides communications between operations and marketing on paper before they occur in real time.

Steps in Designing a Blueprint

Identify the process to blueprinted Map process from the customers point of view Draw line of interaction Draw line of visibility Map process from customer contact persons view distinguishing visible activities

Steps in Designing a Blueprint


Draw line of internal interaction Link customer and contact person activities to needed support functions

The Evidence of Service


(from the customers point of view)
People Contact Employees Other Customers

Operational Flow of Activities

Process

Physical Evidence

Steps in the Process Flexibility

Tangible Communication Price Servicescape Guarantees

Service Blueprint Components


CUSTOMER ACTIONS
Line of Interaction

ONSTAGE CONTACT EMPLOYEE ACTIONS


Line of Visibility

BACKSTAGE CONTACT ACTIONS


Line of Internal Interaction

INVISIBLE SUPPORT ACTION

Service Blueprint Component


CUSTOMER ACTIONS
Line of Interaction

ONSTAGE CONTACT EMPLOYEE ACTIONS


Line of Visibility

BACKSTAGE CONTACT ACTIONS


Line of Internal Interaction

INVISIBLE SUPPORT ACTION

Overnight Hotel Stay


Customer Physical Evidence Hotel Carts Desk Exterior for Lobby Parking Bags Key Arrive Give Bags Check In Process Papers Take bags to room Paper System Elevators Hallways Room Go to Room Cart for Bags Receive Bags Delivery Bags

Contact Person

(On Stage)

Greet Take Bags

(Back Stage)

Invisible Process

Bill Overnight Hotel Stay Customer Physical Evidence Menu Delivery Tray Food Appearance Receive Food Deliver Food Food Desk Lobby Hotel Parking

Call Room Service

Eat

Check Out & Leave Process Check Out

Contact Person
Invisible Process

(On Stage)

(Back Stage)

Take Food Order Prepare Food Paper System

Art of Blueprinting

Provides a check on logical flow of whole process Bottlenecks represent points in system where consumer waits longest. Balanced Production Line: Process times and inventories of all steps are same or consumer never waits for next process.

Art of Blueprinting

Managers should recognize benefits of changing system to process consumers more effectively. Target times should initially be set by marketing and based on consumers expected level of service.

Fail Points

Three Characteristics:
Potential for operations malfunction is high. Results of the malfunction visible to consumers. System malfunction is regarded by consumers as particularly significant.

Operations Blueprint

Alternative way to develop blueprint would be to start from consumer scripts. Consumers would describe their process they follow in using a service.

USAir Blueprint

Consumers asked about a USAir flight might start with the travel agent. Then they might describe the airport, parking, and terminal.

Constructing Blueprint

1st step: elicit scripts from both employees and consumers. One-sided blueprint: Unbalanced blueprint based on managements perception of how sequence events should occur.

USAir Blueprint

Employee scripts are equally important in identifying parts not observable to consumer.

Constructing Blueprint

Consumers posses purchasing scripts that guide their thinking and behavior during service encounters.

Convergent/Divergent Scripts

Convergent scripts: Employee/consumer scripts that are mutually agreeable and enhance consumer satisfaction. Divergent scripts: Scripts that mismatch and point to areas in which expectations are not met.

Constructing Blueprint

Two-Sided blueprint: Considers both employee and customer perceptions of how events occur. Consumers are asked to pay special attention to contact activities of service encounters.

Script Norms

Script Norms: Proposed scripts that group events and orders events in sequence of occurrence.

Constructing Blueprint

Blueprint development process identifies steps where system can go awry. Process involves specifying timeframe of service execution.

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