Prezentace předmětu:
Marketing of Sevices
Vyučující:
Ing. Michal Stoklasa, Ph.D.
Ing. Martin Klepek, Ph.D.
Název
prezentace
Název projektu
Rozvoj vzdělávání na Slezské univerzitě v Opavě
Registrační číslo projektu
CZ.02.2.69/0.0./0.0/16_015/0002400
Logolink_OP_VVV_hor_barva_cz

 MARKETING MIX: PEOPLE
.
The aim of the lecture is to teach you how to approach people within and outside your service
business
Michal Stoklasa
Garant předmětu
Martin Klepek
Přednášející

MARKETING MIX: PEOPLE
.
People
Service personnel
Customers
People management
Competencies
Lecture content

•In services, ‘People’ refers to all human actors who play a part in service delivery and thus
influence the buyer’s perceptions; namely, the firm’s personnel, the customer, and other customers
in the service environment.
•All of human actors participating in the delivery of a service  provide  cues  to  the  customer
regarding  the  nature  of  the  service  itself.
People
4

•How  these people are dressed, their personal appearance, and their attitudes and behaviours all
influence the customer’s perception of the service. If the service personnel are cold and rude,
they can undermine  all  the  marketing  work  done  to  attract  the  customers.
People
5

•If  they  are  friendly  and warm,  they  increase  customer  satisfaction  and  loyalty.
•Employee  behaviour  is  often  an integral  part  of  the  service  product.
•This  is  not  true  in  a  manufacturing  operation,  where employee behaviour may affect product
quality, but is not a part of the product.
People
6

•People constitute an important dimension in the management of services in their role both  as
performers  of  services  and  as  customers.
•People  as  performers  of  service  are important  because,  a  customer  sees  a  company
through  its  employees.
•The  employees represent the first line of contact with the customer.
People
7

•They must, therefore, be well informed and provide the kind of service that wins customer
approval.
•The firm  must recognize that each  employee is  a  salesman  for  the  company’s service.
•If  these  employees  are  not  given training in how to go about face-to-face customer contact,
the entire marketing effort may not prove to be effective.
People
8

•The importance of customers in services stems from the fact that most services  imply  active
and  involved  customer-organisation  interface.
•In  many  service situations,  customers  themselves  can  also  influence  service  delivery,
thus  affecting  service quality and their own satisfaction.
People
9

•Service  personnel are important in  all  organisations but more so  in  an organisation involved
in  providing  services.
•The behaviour and attitude of the personnel  providing  the service is an important influence on
the customer’s overall perception of the service and he can rarely distinguish between the actual
service rendered and the human element involved in it.
Service personnel
10

•Customer  contact  is  very  important  concept  in  services,  which  refers  to  the  physical
presence of the customer in the system.
•The extent of contact refers to the percentage of time a  customer  ought  to  be  in  the
system  out  of  the  total  time  it  takes  to  serve  him.
•The  low contact services include bank, post offices or retailing and the high contact services
include hotels, educational institutions, restaurants and hospitals.
Service personnel
11

• Services with high contact are more difficult to control and manage because a longer customer
contact is more likely to affect the time of demand, and nature of service and its quality;
whereas, in low contact services such contact has much less impact on the service.
Service personnel
12

•The  quality  and  performance  of  service personnel can be improved through:
•Careful selection and training of personnel,
•laying down norms, rules and procedures to ensure consistent behaviour,
•ensuring consistent appearance; and
•reducing  the  importance  of  personal  contact  by  introducing  automation  and computerization
wherever possible.
Service personnel
13

•Customers  are  important  because  they  are  a  source  of  influencing  themselves,  being
actively involved in service delivery, and other customers as well. In case of doctors, lawyers,
consultants one satisfied customer will lead to a chain reaction, bringing in his wake a number of
other  customers.
Customers
14

•It is  an  important  task  of  service  marketers  to  ensure  complete satisfaction  of  the
existing  customers.
•The  kind  of  customers  that  a  firm  attracts  exerts  an important influence on prospective
customers.
Customers
15

•The prospective  customer may feel attracted towards the organisation e.g., club, restaurant,
school, because it has his type of customers or the customer may turn away if he perceives the
existing customers to be a kind with whom he would not like to associate.
Customers
16

•The prospective  customer may feel attracted towards the organisation e.g., club, restaurant,
school, because it has his type of customers or the customer may turn away if he perceives the
existing customers to be a kind with whom he would not like to associate.
Customers
17

•Service marketing management will invariably be concerned with how or the way  decisions  are
made  and  the  implications  of  those  decisions.
•Thus the managerial processes behind such decisions and the variety and style of the managers
taking the decisions are of interest to service marketing and management researchers.
People management
18

Gilmore (2003)

•The way managers implement decisions is also vital in a service situation.
•Services are usually carried out by people and these people need to be motivated and capable of
doing the job.
•Services managers continually seek ways to motivate and encourage service deliverers.
People management
19

Gilmore (2003)

•Difference styles of management may be relevant in different situations:
•from extremes of authoritarian to humanistic; where time-scales can be short, medium or long term;
where the scope of activities is different in terms of strategic and tactical; and so on.
People management
20

Gilmore (2003)

•The  two  perspectives  of  marketing  management  and  consumers  in service marketing are not
necessarily mutually exclusive (this is demonstrated in the third category of consumer service
research above).
People management
21

Gilmore (2003)

•A ‘middle ground’ incorporating some combination of both domains and perspectives, although with
the emphasis on how services can be managed and delivered effectively to  create  and  maintain
satisfied  customers  is  a  useful  focus  for  service managers.
People management
22

Gilmore (2003)

•These  managers  have  primary  responsibility  for  the  operational  aspects  of service
delivery.  On  a  day-to-day  basis  customer–staff  interface  managers need to manage and guide
the movement of customers through the during-purchase and some aspects of the pre-purchase and
post-purchase experience.
Copmetencies for customer-staff interface management
23

Gilmore (2003)

•The activities inherent in this role are:
•managing all operational activities
•providing information and guidance to customers
•proactive communication with customers and staff
•accessibility to customers and willingness to help.
Copmetencies for customer-staff interface management
24

Gilmore (2003)

•Built upon previous knowledge and experience, the development of distinctive expertise for
customer–staff interface managers will entail the ability to exhibit motivation, communication,
co-ordination and leadership.
Copmetencies for customer-staff interface management
25

Gilmore (2003)

•Given  the  nature  of  front-line  service  activities,  some  decision  making  by
customer–staff interaction managers will entail dealing with each situation as it arises and
knowing when to be adaptable – for example, recognizing the need  for  adapting  or  changing
some  aspect  of  the  service  to  suit  different customers. Therefore managers need to be
motivated, prompt decision makers and their actions should demonstrate responsibility for their
tasks through their proactive behaviour. They should have a positive outlook in searching for
better ways to carry out operational tasks and service delivery.
Copmetencies - MOTIVATION
26

Gilmore (2003)

•Managing the customer–staff interface involves both verbal and non-verbal communication and
interaction with people. It is a prerequisite for successful direction and implementation in
ensuring everyone knows what is involved and each individual’s role in the whole activity. For
example, it is particularly important for a hotel manager or restaurant manager to be a good
persuader and have the ability to make good presentations to staff and win over their allegiance
and commitment. Also two-way communication in a timely way is vital so that managers receive
feedback about specific initiatives and activity.
Copmetencies - COMMUNICATION
27

Gilmore (2003)

•Different means of communication with customers is beneficial so that they understand what the
service product entails and how to use it. For example, communicating with the customers at all
stages of their experience with the company in different ways, from pre-purchase, during purchase,
through to the post-purchase stage, will provide very rich insights in terms of how the entire
service is perceived.
Copmetencies - COMMUNICATION
28

Gilmore (2003)

•Thus communication at all levels in a service operation,  from  customers,  front-line  staff
and  management  decision  makers, should be proactive and integrative so that a composite
knowledge of customers’ expectations and perceptions is developed.
•This allows managers to acquire insights and the ability to eliminate any perceived ‘gaps’ in the
service delivery. Additionally, managers need to maintain dialogue with each other and with
customers in order to eliminate misunderstanding and ensure customers have relevant and necessary
information for using the service.
Copmetencies - COMMUNICATION
29

Gilmore (2003)

•Because of the physical operational aspect of service delivery at the customer–staff interface,
co-ordination of individuals and teams, planning actions and sequence of activities, and
supervising both material and human resources are vital.
Copmetencies – CO-ORDINATION
30

Gilmore (2003)

•Therefore  the  activities  of  front-line  managers  require  co-ordinated communication,
interaction, integration and participation and the involvement of all staff. Indeed, all
customer–staff related decision making needs to be co-ordinated very carefully to achieve the
fundamental goal of providing a timely, reliable service with regularly updated physical facilities
and efficient service delivery.
Copmetencies – CO-ORDINATION
31

Gilmore (2003)

•Front-line service managers are very involved in the entire service delivery, and are clearly
evident to both customers and staff; therefore they need to lead by example.
•By demonstrating motivated involvement and leadership in the implementation process and being
available, managers are more likely to inspire the staff by their actions as much as by their
directions.
Copmetencies – LEADERSHIP
32

Gilmore (2003)

•This should contribute to the delivery of intangible aspects of service delivery such as
responsiveness, willingness to help customers, and refining the service product to suit  customers
by  obtaining  feedback  and  maintaining  relationships  with customers.
Copmetencies – LEADERSHIP
33

Gilmore (2003)

Conclusion
•People constitute an important dimension in the management of services in their role both  as
performers  of  services  and  as  customers.  People  as  performers  of  service  are important
because,  a  customer  sees  a  company  through  its  employees.  The  employees represent the
first line of contact with the customer.
•Customer  contact  is  very  important  concept  in  services,  which  refers  to  the  physical
presence of the customer in the system. The extent of contact refers to the percentage of time a
customer  ought  to  be  in  the  system  out  of  the  total  time  it  takes  to  serve  him.