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Title: Chapter


1
3
Service Management (5e) Operations, Strategy,
Information Technology By Fitzsimmons and
Fitzsimmons
  • Chapter 3
  • Service Strategy

2
Learning Objectives
  • Formulate a strategic service vision.
  • Discuss the competitive environment of services.
  • Describe how a service competes using the three
    generic service strategies.
  • Discuss the service purchase decision.
  • Discuss the competitive role of information in
    services.
  • Explain the role of the virtual value chain in
    service innovation.
  • Discuss the limits in the use of information.
  • Categorize a service firm according to its stage
    of competitiveness.
  • Conduct a data envelopment analysis (DEA).

3
Strategic Service Vision1. Target Market Segments
  • What are common characteristics of important
    market segments?
  • What dimensions can be used to segment the
    market, demographic, psychographic?
  • How important are various segments?
  • What needs does each have?
  • How well are these needs being served, in what
    manner, by whom?

4
Strategic Service Vision2. Service Concept
  • What are important elements of the service to be
    provided, stated in terms of results produced for
    customers?
  • How are these elements supposed to be perceived
    by the target market segment, by the market in
    general, by employees, by others?
  • How do customers perceive the service concept?
  • What efforts does this suggest in terms of the
    manner in which the service is designed,
    delivered, marketed?

5
Strategic Service Vision3. Operating Strategy
  • What are important elements of the strategy
    operations, financing, marketing, organization,
    human resources, control?
  • On which will the most effort be concentrated?
  • Where will investments be made?
  • How will quality and cost be controlled
    measures, incentives, rewards?
  • What results will be expected versus competition
    in terms of, quality of service, cost profile,
    productivity, morale/loyalty of servers?

6
Strategic Service Vision4. Service Delivery
System
  • What are important features of the service
    delivery system including role of people,
    technology, equipment, layout, procedures?
  • What capacity does it provide, normally, at peak
    levels?
  • To what extent does it, help insure quality
    standards, differentiate the service from
    competition, provide barriers to entry by
    competitors?

7
South-west Airlines
  • Target market segment
  • Interstate business travelers with carry-on
    luggage who are currently driving
  • Short flights
  • Service Concept
  • On time performance
  • Frequent departures
  • Operating Strategy
  • Fast airport turnaround to allow productive use
    of aircraft and provide frequent departures
  • Service delivery system
  • Cabin crew with good interpersonal skills to
    create fun atmosphere
  • No assigned seating to provide fast gate
    turnaround
  • Short distance haul mostly carry-on luggage
    less ground crew

8
Competitive Environment of Services
  • Relatively Low Overall Entry Barriers
  • not patentable
  • Typically not capital intensive
  • Exception when you are first in a small market,
    or prized location advantage
  • Economies of Scale Limited
  • limited opportunities for economies of scale
    because of simultaneous production and
    consumption
  • Erratic Sales Fluctuations-
  • demand varies by time of day and day of the week
    with random arrivals

9
Continued
  • No Power Dealing with Buyers or Suppliers
  • Typically service firms are small, so they have
    less power
  • Exception are McDonalds buying beef
  • Product Substitutions for Service
  • For example blood pressure or diabetes checking
    can be done at home due to innovations. So
    service firms need to watch for competition from
    other service firms and product innovations.
  • High Customer Loyalty
  • This can act as a barrier to entry
  • Exit Barriers
  • Typically low

10
Competitive Service Strategies
  • Porter argues that three generic competitive
    strategies exist
  • Overall cost leadership
  • Differentiation
  • Focus

11
1. Overall Cost Leadership
  • Requires efficient scale facilities, tight cost
    and overhead control, and use of innovative
    technology
  • Implementation of this strategy typically
    requires high capital investment in state of the
    art equipment, and aggressive pricing (even when
    it may lead to start up losses).
  • Examples, Wal-Mart, McDonalds

12
How to attain cost leadership?
  • Seeking Out Low-cost Customers
  • Some customers cost less to serve than others
  • Sams club and Costco serve customers who buy
    bulk and ask for little to no service
  • Standardizing a Custom Service
  • Example HR block has taken only routine
    preparation though tax forms can be customized
  • Reducing the Personal Element in Service Delivery
    (promote self-service)
  • Technology use has allowed banks to provide
    access to ATMs and reduce human interface
  • Reducing Network Costs (hub and spoke)
  • Taking Service Operations Off-line when customer
    is not required to be present ex. drop off for
    laundry in Chicago

13
2. Differentiation
  • Differentiation in service means being unique in
    brand image, technology use, features, or
    reputation for customer service.
  • HOW?
  • Making the Intangible Tangible (memorable)
  • For example giving toiletries in hotels to remind
    of the comfortable stay
  • Customizing the Standard Product
  • For example addressing a customer by the name can
    give an impression of customization of otherwise
    a standardized service
  • Reducing Perceived Risk
  • By providing guarantee, example pest control
  • Giving Attention to Personnel Training
  • Service providers will ultimately make the
    difference
  • Delivering consistent level of high Quality at
    multiple sites

14
3. Focus
  • This strategy is built around providing a target
    market with very specific need.
  • Works on the assumption that the firm can serve
    its narrow market more effectively and
    efficiently.
  • Example
  • Service Offered (e.g. Shouldice Hospital and
    hernia patients).
  • Harley Davidson

15
Customer Criteria for Selecting a Service
Provider
  • Availability (24 hour ATM)
  • Convenience (Site location)
  • Dependability (On-time performance)
  • Personalization (Know customers name)
  • Price (Quality surrogate because of
    intangibility)
  • Quality (both outcome process Perceptions
    important)
  • Reputation (Word-of-mouth)
  • Safety (Customer well-being)
  • Speed (Avoid excessive waiting)

16
Service Purchase Decision
  • Service Qualifier
  • To be taken seriously a certain level must be
    attained by the service provider on the
    competitive dimension, as defined by other market
    players.
  • Examples are cleanliness for a fast food
    restaurant or safe aircraft for an airline.
  • Service Winner
  • The competitive dimension used to make the final
    choice among competitors.
  • Example is price, convenience, reputation.

17
Service Purchase Decision (cont.)
  • Service Loser
  • Failure to deliver at or above the expected level
    for a competitive dimension.
  • Examples are failure to repair auto
    (dependability), rude treatment (personalization)
    or late delivery of package (speed).

18
Competitive Role of Information in Services

19
1. Creation of Barriers to Entry
  • Reservation system
  • American Airlines Sabre System
  • Frequent User club
  • American airlines used its reservation system to
    also create frequent flyer club to reward people
    to accumulate credit
  • Switching cost
  • Data transfer
  • New software and hardware requirements

20
2. Revenue Generation
  • Yield management
  • Real time pricing by monitoring demand and supply
  • Point of sale
  • information can travel to suppliers for real time
    inventory management
  • Server can transmit order information directly to
    the kitchen and to the cashier at the same time
  • Expert system
  • Past data can be fed to create expert systems
    which maintenance people can recall to trouble
    shoot problems

21
3. Database Asset
  • Selling information
  • Developing services
  • Data mining to find new trends for new services
    or improving existing services
  • Micromarketing
  • To target your advertisements

22
Using Information to Categorize Customers
  • Coding
  • grade customers on how profitable their business
    is.
  • Routing
  • used by call centers to place customers in
    different queues based on customer code.
  • Targeting
  • allows choice customers to have fees waived and
    get other hidden discounts.
  • Sharing
  • data about your transaction history with other
    firms is a source of revenue.

23
4. Productivity Enhancement
  • Inventory status
  • Real time inventory management and tie up with
    suppliers
  • Better movement of inventory through multiple
    sites

24
The Virtual Value Chain
  • Marketplace vs Marketspace
  • Physical versus virtual
  • Creating New Marketspace Using Information - 5
    steps
  • Gather
  • Organize
  • Select
  • Synthesize
  • Distribute

25
Example of USAA
  • United Service Automobile Association (USAA),
    which provides financial services to military
    personnel and their families has become a world
    class competitor by exploiting the virtual value
    chain.
  • Three Stage Evolution
  • 1st Stage (Visibility) See physical operations
    more effectively with information Ex. USAA
    paperless operation
  • 2nd Stage (Mirroring Capability) Substitute
    virtual activities for physical Ex. USAA
    automate underwriting
  • 3rd Stage (New Customer Relationships) Draw on
    information to deliver value to customer in new
    ways Ex. USAA event oriented service

26
Limits in the Use of Information
  • Anti-competitive (Barrier to entry)
  • How to account the expense on frequent flyer
    service?
  • Fairness (Yield management)
  • How to justify different price paid for same
    service by customers?
  • Invasion of Privacy (Micro-marketing)
  • Data Security (Medical records)
  • How to protect sensitive information about
    people?
  • Reliability (Credit report)
  • How to challenge erroneous information?

27
Stages in Service Firm Competitiveness

28
Stages in Service Firm Competitiveness
29
Discussion Topics
  1. Give examples of service firms that use both the
    strategy of focus and differentiation and the
    strategy of focus and overall cost leadership.
  2. What ethical issues are associated with
    micro-marketing?
  3. For each of the three generic strategies (i.e.,
    cost leadership, differentiation, and focus)
    which of the four competitive uses of information
    is most powerful?
  4. Give an example of a firm that begin as
    world-class and has remained in that category.
  5. Could firms in the world-class service delivery
    stage of competitiveness be descried as learning
    organizations?
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