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Service Characteristics of Travel and Tourism Marketing

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Title: Service Characteristics of Travel and Tourism Marketing


1
Service Characteristics of Travel and Tourism
Marketing
  • Objective discussing four distinguishing
    characteristics of services and several things
    management of service firms and in particular
    travel and tourism firms can do to increase the
    effectiveness of their business.

2
Services Marketing
  • Service industries are quite varies governmental
    services - courts, hospitals, police, fire
    departments, postal services, schools etc
    private nonprofit organizations - museums,
    colleges, hospitals etc business organizations -
    airlines, hotels, restaurants, advertising, real
    estate etc.

3
Satisfying the Customers
  • The aim of the service organizations is also
    serving and satisfying the customer.
  • The belief that customer comes first is
    reinforced in Four Seasons Hotels where employees
    who go to extraordinary efforts to satisfy the
    customer are entitled to be the Employee of the
    Year, story of Ron Dyment, doorman in Toronto.

4
Nature and Characteristics of Services
  • There are four distinguishing characteristics of
    services. They are
  • Intangibility
  • Inseparability
  • Variability
  • Perishability

5
Service Intangibility
  • means that unlike physical products, services
    cannot be seen, tasted, felt, heard or smelled
    before they are bought.
  • Buyers look for signals or tangible evidences
    like the place, people, price, equipment and
    information about the service in order to reduce
    uncertainty caused by intangibility before they
    pay the price. E.g. the cleanliness of the
    restaurant, employee uniforms of the hotel,
    Heublein vs Smirnoff.

6
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7
Service Inseparability
  • means that services cannot be separated from
    their both (1) providers and (2) other customers.
  • If a service employee provides the service, then
    the employee is part of the service. E.g. the
    food in the restaurant may be outstanding, but if
    the service person is rude, customers will
    downrate the overall service of the restaurant.
  • the other customers affect the service outcome as
    well. E.g. a couple may choose a restaurant but
    if a group of loud customers is seated next to
    them, the couple will be disappointed.

8
Service Variability
  • means that the quality of services depends on who
    provides them, plus, when, where, and how they
    are provided. E.g. within a given hotel chain,
    one reception desk agent may be cheerful and
    efficient one day but would be unpleasant and
    slow the other day.
  • Service providers service quality depends on his
    energy and his frame of mind at the time of each
    customer encounter.
  • Fluctuating demand makes it difficult to deliver
    consistent services during periods of peak
    demand.
  • Variability or lack of consistency is the major
    cause of customer disappointment in the industry.

9
Service Perishability
  • means that services cannot be stored for later
    sale or use. E.g. if a 100 room hotel can sell
    only 40 rooms today, selling the remaining 60 is
    gone forever.
  • If service providers are to maximize revenue,
    they must manage capacity and demand. E.g. hotels
    charge lower rates in the off-season to attract
    more guests restaurants hire part-time employees
    to serve during peak periods tour operators and
    airline companies have last-minute sales.
  • Service perishability is a serious problem when
    demand fluctuates.

10
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11
Marketing Strategies forService Firms
  • Services are different form tangible products,
    that is why, additional marketing approaches are
    needed to market services.
  • In service businesses, the customer and
    front-line service employees interact. Service
    providers must interact effectively with
    customers to satisfy them. That is why, companies
    take care of their employees to make profit.
    Because they believe that only

12
  • satisfied and productive service employees can
    create satisfied and loyal customers.
  • Internal marketing means that the service firm
    must effectively train and motivate its
    customer-contact employees to provide customer
    satisfaction.
  • Interactive marketing means that service quality
    depends on the quality of the buyer-seller
    interaction during the service encounter.
  • In order to increase the profit margin, there are
    three major marketing tasks for service companies

13
Managing Service Differentiation
  • Differentiated offer, delivery and image are the
    keys for the solution to price competition.
  • The offer can provide innovative features like
    e.g. in-flight movies, advance seating,
    frequent-flyer award programs in an airlines.
    British Airways offers a sleeping compartment and
    hot showers.

14
  • The delivery can be differentiated by having
    better customer-contact people, developing
    a superior physical environment, or by designing
    a superior deliver process like e.g. home banking
    can be provided as a better way to deliver
    banking services.
  • The image can differentiate the service company
    through symbols and branding.

15
Managing Service Quality
  • A service firm can also differentiate itself by
    delivering consistently higher quality than its
    competitors do.
  • Service quality will always vary, depending on
    the interactions between employees and customers.
    A company cannot always prevent service problems
    but can recover them. A good service recovery can
    turn angry customers into loyal ones. Companies
    empower front-line

16
  • service employees (giving authority to do
    whatever it takes to keep customers happy) to
    recover problems.
  • Good service companies also communicate their
    qualities to employees and provide performance
    feedback.

17
Managing Service Productivity
  • Service productivity can be increased by
  • training the employees better or hiring new and
    better employees
  • industrializing the service with equipment and
    standardized production as in McDonalds
  • using technology to save time and money
  • Trying to increase the productivity would reduce
    quality and diminish customer service. That is
    why, some service providers accept to have lower
    productivity levels.

18
Particular Characteristics of Travel and Tourism
Services
  • In particular, travel and tourism products have
    the
  • following special characteritics
  • Seasonality and demand fluctuations
  • High fixed costs of service operations
  • Interdependence of tourism products

19
Seasonality and demand fluctuations
  • As far as most leisure tourism markets are
    concerned, demand fluctuates greatly between
    seasons of the year. As a result, the
    occupancies in many tourism businesses increases
    to 90 to 100 per cent in the high season but
    drops to 30 per cent or less in the low season.
    In addition, seasonal closure of many leisure
    tourism businesses is common as well. These
    demand variations in tourism is more important
    because of perishability. That is why,
    generating demand when there is less demand, is
    always the major preoccupation for marketing
    managers.

20
High fixed costs of service operations
  • In the travel and tourism industry, it is
    generally the case that the operations have high
    fixed costs and relatively low variable costs.
    This fact focus all service operators attention
    on the need to generate extra demand. Since most
    large scale businesses are obliged to operate on
    a very narrow margin between total cost and total
    revenue because of intense competition, plus or
    minus one percentage point in average load
    factors makes the difference between profit or
    loss.

21
Interdependence of tourism products
  • The fortunes of all tourism organizations in a
    destination are linked. Since a vacationer
    chooses attractions at a destination together
    with the products of accommodation, transport,
    catering etc., all organizations should function
    in coordination. Partnership

22
  • Marketing in tourism is shaped and determined by
    two important factors
  • the operating characteristics of supplying
    industries
  • the nature of demand for tourism

23
Useful Links and Sources
  • Kotler, P. Bowen, J. and Makens, J. (1999).
    Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism (2nd ed.).
    Prentice Hall. NJ.
  • Kotler, P. and Armstrong, G. (2006) Principles of
    Marketing (11th ed.). Prentice Hall. NJ.
  • Middleton, V.T.C. (2004) Marketing in Travel and
    Tourism (3rd ed). Elsevier. Oxford.
  • http//www.hotelsmag.com
  • http//www.tourism.bilkent.edu.tr/eda
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