Chapter 10 - Oakton Community College
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Transcript Chapter 10 - Oakton Community College
Services and Other Intangibles:
Marketing the Product that Isn’t there
Chapter
Chapter 10 Ten
Chapter Objectives
Describe the characteristics of services and
the ways marketers classify services
Appreciate the importance of service quality
to marketers
Explain the marketing of people, places, and
ideas
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Marketing What Isn’t There
Intangibles:
Services and other experience-based products that
cannot be touched
Examples: concerts, movies, tax preparation, hair
styling, college education, online banking, etc.
Does marketing work for intangibles? Yes!
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What is a Service?
Services:
Acts, efforts, or performances exchanged from
producer to user without ownership rights
Services accounted for 75% of US employment in 2010
Services may target consumers and/or businesses
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Figure 10.1
Characteristics of Services
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How Services Differ from Goods
Intangible
No physical object makes it hard to
communicate benefits.
Perishable
Services cannot be saved, and it is
challenging to synchronize supply
and demand.
Heterogeneous
or Variable
Inseparable
Services depend on their employees
for quality, which makes consistency
difficult to achieve.
Production and consumption are
simultaneous, meaning the
consumer takes part in production.
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Table 10.1
Marketing Strategies for Different Service
Characteristics
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Marketing Services
Marketers often use vivid
imagery in advertising to
help market intangibles
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Marketing Services
Disintermediation occurs when the Internet or other
technology can be used to “cut-out the middleman”
Capacity management allows firms to adjust their
services to match supply with demand
a
How do hotels or airlines manage capacity?
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Characteristics of Services
Service encounter:
Interaction between the customer and service provider
Service encounter dimensions:
Social contact dimension
Physical dimension
The quality of service is only as good as its worst
employee
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Classifying Services
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Classifying Services
Goods-dominated products
Firms that sell tangible products still provide support
services
Equipment- or facility-based services
Operational factors, locational factors, and
environmental factors are important (amusement parks)
People-based services
Increasing in importance as people lack the time or
expertise to do on their own
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Core and Augmented Services
Core service:
The benefit a customer gets from the service
Augmented service:
Additional services that enhance value
Augmented services help to differentiate businesses
from one another
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The Service Encounter
Physical elements of the service encounter
Servicescape:
Environment in which the
service is delivered and where
the firm and customer interact
Servicescapes influence purchase
decisions, service quality evaluations
and customer satisfaction
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The Service Encounter
Web sites influence customer perceptions
First stop for many potential customers
Poor navigation, unattractive sites offer negative
first impressions
SEO (search engine optimization) is critical for
getting noticed
Also consider paid search advertising
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Providing Quality Service
Quality service ensures that customers are satisfied
with what they have paid for
Satisfaction is based on customer expectations
Not all customers expect the same level of service
Not all customers can be satisfied
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Service Quality Attributes
Search qualities:
Characteristics that the consumer can examine before
purchase
Experience qualities:
Characteristics that buyers can determine during or after
consumption
Credence qualities:
Characteristics that are difficult to evaluate even after
they have been experienced
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When Services are Assessed
Search Quality: Before the purchase
What does the shop look like? Is it clean?
Experience Quality: After the purchase
How was the meal? How was your stay?
Credence Quality: Requires knowledge
Web MD
Vidal Sassoon-If you don’t look good…
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m7SqJY5rIv4
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Measuring Service Quality
Several methods of measuring service quality exist:
Mystery shoppers
Lost customers
SERVQUAL scale
Gap analysis
Critical incident technique
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Measuring Service Quality
SERVQUAL scale (questionnaire) measures customer
perceptions of five key dimensions
Tangibles
Reliability
Responsiveness
Assurance
Empathy
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Figure 10.2
The Gap Model of Service Delivery
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Strategic Issues in Delivering Service Quality
Additional methods of measuring service quality:
Critical incident technique uses customers’ complaints
to identify problems that lead to dissatisfaction
Maximizing the likelihood that a customer will use a
service and become a loyal user requires:
Development of effective marketing strategies
Fast and appropriate responses to service failures
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Table 10.2
Marketing Strategies for Service Organizations
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Marketing People, Places, and Ideas
Politicians and
celebrities are
commonly marketed
Consultants “package”
celebrities
Name changes are
common
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Table 10.3
Strategies to Sell Celebrities
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Marketing People, Places, and Ideas
Place marketing strategies treat a city, state, country,
or other locale as a brand (Epcot, Florida)
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Marketing People, Places, and Ideas
Marketing ideas
Gaining market share for a concept, philosophy, belief,
or issue
Example: Religious institutions market ideas about faith
Consumers often do not perceive the value they receive
when they conform with an idea or fail to believe an idea
is worth its ultimate cost
Joel Osteen
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The Future of Services
New dominant logic for marketing:
Service is the central core deliverable in every exchange
Services will continue to grow due to several factors:
Changing demographics
Globalization
Technological advances
Proliferation of information
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