Service Process: (3) Operational People Are Interested To Improve The
The document discusses factors to consider when designing a service process. It addresses operational issues like balancing batch processing with individual customer treatment. Key factors in service process design include the service itself, customer participation, degree of customer contact, complexity, and location of delivery. Strategic decisions involve basic technology, conversion/materials, equipment, and process flow. Process flow is developed through blueprints, charts, and benchmarks to optimize customer and work flows.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0 ratings0% found this document useful (0 votes)
49 views
Service Process: (3) Operational People Are Interested To Improve The
The document discusses factors to consider when designing a service process. It addresses operational issues like balancing batch processing with individual customer treatment. Key factors in service process design include the service itself, customer participation, degree of customer contact, complexity, and location of delivery. Strategic decisions involve basic technology, conversion/materials, equipment, and process flow. Process flow is developed through blueprints, charts, and benchmarks to optimize customer and work flows.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 18
Service process
The service process refers to how a service is provided or
delivered to a customer. Delivery system is a creative process.It begins with a service concept and strategy to provide a service. In order to achieve these objectives, various alternatives must be analysed and identified before a decision is made. Designing a service process involves issues such as location facility, design and layout for effective design and layout for effective customer and work flow, procedure and job definitions for service providers, extent of customer involvement, measures to ensure service quality, equipment selection and adequate service capacity. According to C. Lovelock there are 7 operational issues, which have to be considered while designing the service quality process. (1) In order to achieve economies of scale and perform consistently the operation people would prefer to process in a batch while the marketing would prefer to cater to individuals so that the customer feels as being treated specially. (2) The decisions on designs and facility layout should satisfy the objectives of both.
(3) Operational people are interested to improve the
productivity as the cost of production per unit will reduce. (4) Operation people want a standardised service since it keeps the cost lower and is easy for implementation. On the other hand the marketing people prefer customization to match customers' needs. (5) Manage the queues in such a way that it is possible to use the available space. (6) Operational employees feel that the job design should minimize error and standardize tasks, making efficient use of approach. The operational personnel lie to manage capacity in such a way that wasteful under-utilisation will not take place. DESIGNING SERVICE PROCESS: The following factors are to be considered in the service process design and implementation: (1) The Service Itself: It is necessary to understand whether the service itself is process dependent. Most of the equipment based services like laundry and lawn care as well as services with highly intangible attributes like insurance and banking are process dependent. (2) Customer Participation: In case of most service system the customer is present when the service is being performed. The customer can be made a productive labour instead of being a passive bystander. Productivity can be increased by shifting some of the service activities on to the customer. The customer participation can increase the degree of customisation. By involving the customer in the service process it can support a competitive strategy of cost leadership with limited customisation. A spectrum of service delivery system is possible depending on the degree of customer involvement from self- service to complete dependence on a service provider. (3} Degree of Customer Contact: It refers to the physical presence of the customer in the system. The degree of customer contact can be measured by the amount of time that the customer is present in the system in relation tc**the total service time. In case of high contact services the customer determine the timing of demand and the nature of the services by directly participating in the process. In case of low contact system consumers have direct influence on the production process because they are not present. (4) Degree of Divergence: A standardised service with low divergence is designed for high volumes with a narrowly defined and focused service. Since the tasks are routine it require a workforce with relatively low levels of technical skills. For customised services more flexibility and judgement are required to perform the service tasks. In addition to this more information is exchanged between the customer and social worker. Customised services require high levels of technical and analytic skill since the service process is unprogrammed and not well defined. In order to achieve customer satisfaction, decision making is delegated to service workers. (5) Location of Service Delivery: The service delivery process should be located either at the service providers premises or carried out at the customer place. In case of services like painting, carpet cleaning etc. the service has to be delivered at home. Services that require the customer to come to the supplier have a greater opportunity to control the delivery experience, e.g. legal advice, medical, etc. Many services are being delivered without the customer and supplier meeting e.g. ATMs, telephone banking, etc. (6) Complexity of Service: Complexity of services reflects the number of steps that are involved in delivering the services. By looking at the blueprint it can be easily determined whether the service is high or low in complexity and its divergence can be determined by having a SERVICE PROCESS PLANNING: ".. The following strategic decisions and design elements must be considered in the service planning process. (1) Basic Technological Decision. (2) Conversion/Materials Decision. (3) Specific Equipment Decision. (4) Process Flow Decision: (a) Blue prints. (b) Flow charts. (c) Front and back Office. (d) Layouts. (e) Benchmarks.
(5) People Decision.
(1) Basic Technological Decision: In some cases,
technology exists but not in consumerised form. So the question arises: Whether the technology available can be developed to provide the materials, processes and equipment to deliver the service? For an example, at one time it was possible to design printed electronic circuits on small chips, but the technology and specific equipment required to produce the chips were beyond the state of the act. In the same way telephone was invented in 1876, but the technology came in use for consumer 15 years later when the telephone dial was invented. (2) Conversion/Materials Decision: The decision on conversion process is complex as it depends on technological and market factors as well as economic considerations. There are many alternative processes and materials that will satisfy the design specifications. When each person or machine supplying a service is dedicated to providing that specific service efficiency is achieved. However effectiveness is achieved by the flexibility in the conversion process. In other words, the broadest range of services should be supplied by the service provider. (3) Specific Equipment Decision: Technology selection is an important decision for any firm. It must fully support the design of the product or service as it creates the demand and requirements for all other parts of the operating system. It is necessary for a manager to be able to Visualise' the physical process taking place in order to make intelligent decisions about equipment and process technology. Types of Basic Conversion Systems: The selection of equipment is dependent on the type of conversion systems that is chosen. The conversion system can be grouped into three basic categories: (a) Fixed position (b) Process based and (c) Product or service based. Fixed position conversion is often characteristic of custom, high quality personal service. Examples: Beauty treatments, landscaping etc. Higher education is a good example of process based conversion or batch production in services. Students move in batches from class to class. The conversion system is said to be service based if the equipment required to serve a customer is arranged in a sequence according to the steps in the service process. Service sector Management Example: Fast food restaurants. Process Flow Decision: It is related to conversion/materials decision and specific equipment decision. The process flow decision is developed on the basis of flow process charts, blue prints, layouts and benchmarking. (a) Service Blue Print: A service blue print is a flowchart of the service process. It is a picture of a service system. It conveys the service concept by showing the service at an overview level. It shows how each job or department functions in relation to the service as a whole. In preparing a service blue print the following important steps are taken: (I) Identify the activities involved in developing the service and prevent them in a diagrammatic form, (II) Identify the failure points. Develop a system and procedure to reduce the likelihood of their occurring in the first instance. • . (iii) Set standards for measuring the performance. (iv) Analyze the profitability of the service delivered. The blueprinting exercise also gives the managers the opportunity to identify the potential point of failure and design "foolproof" procedures so that they may not occur again. Thus, a blue print is a precise definition of the service delivery system that allows the management to test the service concept before final commitments are made. By identifying potential points of failure and highlighting opportunities to enhance customer's perception of the service, the blue print facilitates problem solving and creative thinking. Uses of Service Blue Prints: Managers employ the concept of blue prints to assist in the decision making activities associated with strategy setting, allocation of resources, integration of service functions and overall evaluation of performance. Blue prints are used by marketing managers in developing advertising and sales promotion campaigns. Details service blue prints are useful to marketing and communication people. The marketing managers can employ them in consumers research. They can also use them as a starting point for development of consumer material in order to convey invisible actions. When it is time to shift the new services from R&D into routine operation, the marketing manager performing an R&D function can use detailed blue prints in order to communicate operational details. Detailed service blue prints can be used by human resource managers in preparing job description, selection criteria, performance appraisal system and compensation schemes. The training managers can use them as a foundation for setting realistic training objectives and creating task based training material. Even the technology managers can adopt detailed service blue prints as the technical basis in order to evaluate the need for new software and order or develop it. (b) Service Mapping/Flow Charting: Flowcharting can be applied to any type of service when a management needs to gain a better understanding of how the service is created and delivered. It is also known as service mapping when portraying an existing situation and service blueprinting, when planning a new or revised process and prescribing how it ought to function. Developing a flowchart begins by identifying Each interaction that a particular type of customer has while using a specific service. Managers should distinguish between the core products and supplementary elements. The next stage is to put all these interactions linearly into the sequence in which they occur. The service delivery process is like a rivet, some activities take place upstream and others downstream. At each step the management needs to know what does the customer really wants and where is the potential for failure at this step. It is seen that flowcharting provides a means for managers to gain understanding of the underlying service processes and is the first step necessary in exercising control over such procedures. This technique is particularly useful for depicting the set of activities experienced by customers in learning about ordering, using and paying for a specific service. Managers must recognize that unless they fully understand the customers own exposure to the involvement in a service environment, it is very difficult to improve service quality and productivity. (c) Front and Back Office: The front office is that part of the system which, is directly experienced and visible to the customer. This is the place where the actual service is performed. That part of the system from which the office is excluded is the back office. e.g. Kitchen in a restaurant. It is the manufacturing side of the service that is not visible to the customer. There are certain services like banks where the back office Ts visible to the customer. (d) Layouts: The layouts of a service organisation can be Process layout, Product layout or Group layout. In process layout the resources are arranged according to the particular state in the process that is to be applied to the customer. It allows the servers to specialise at particular tasks. In product layout the requirements of specific group of customers are identified and only than the resources are sequentially set-up so that the customers flow through the system and move from one system to another until the service is complete. E.g. Car servicing. Group layout is a composite to batch and flow and embraces the advantages of both. The group layout approach is generally more customer focused and given satisfaction to the employees or it offers a wider variety of possible tasks. (E) Benchmark, Benchmarking and Steps in Benchmarking: Benchmark: | The word benchmark is defined by The Oxford Dictionary for the Business World as "Standard or point of reference". Benchmark is related to a company's product, services and practices. Normally benchmarking is required by a company to have market leadership in the industry and competitive advantages over others due to its enhanced performance. Performance and quality improvement process is directly linked to financial performance in terms of net profit of the company. Benchmark is a lever to make workforce in a company to change. The benchmarks show much more profit than the profit of another company in the same market and with the same products but using different mechanisms. Benchmarking: Benchmarking is not a single time job. At the same time, benchmarking is neither a complex job such as building a nuclear reactor nor is an inaccessible technology for an ordinary manager. It is just a process of continuous improvement over a company's manufacturing process, distribution process, advertisement process, consumer. satisfaction process and so on. In the late 1970s, when the Japanese competitors such as Cannon, Mitsubishi etc. entered into the US market the Xerox Co. pioneered the process of benchmarking its manufacturing costs against those of domestic and Japanese competitors. However, this benchmarking concept has become widely accepted only in he late 1980s. Nowadays, international quality standards due to the use of benchmarks are taken as a cue and they are applicable to India management practices also. Approaches of Benchmarking: The benchmarking of a company may be related to (1) Consumer services, (2) Distribution channel, (3) Product development, (4) Reduction of total manufacturing cost, (5) Improving maintenance operation, (6) Improving/curtailing human resources, (7) Downsizing inventory levels, (8) Quality and strategic positioning of the market and so on. When the benchmarking is completed and implemented, the results of such company in terms of its net profit are astounding. As an example, the British Airways (BA) began the process of benchmarking the customer satisfaction by identifying the strengths and weaknesses of BA. It found out that its staff members were rarely visible to passengers when there were problems in the baggage hall. Through the benchmarking process, it came to know that many other airlines and staff members assisting in the baggage area. After the benchmarking process, the BA implemented the following: Service people were placed in the baggage hall, Lost-baggage-passengers were given drinks in the lounge, Providing free-telephone on arrival information to both meeters and greeters, Help-line telephone in the terminal etc. These benchmarks embedded in the minds of the passengers and they were ready to pay more for a ticket; the company was able to reduce 150 million pounds from its overhead in its second year of this benchmarking process. Steps in Benchmarking: The following steps are required to do benchmarking process: Step 1: Identify the Items to be Benchmarked: The very first step is to identify your own self as a company. Zoom in and focus accurately on the analysis, implementation and retrieval of your own work. After doing this, identify the company's operation, function or service which are to be benchmarked. Define them categorically. Never take broad subject area, such as reducing delivery time to consumers. The delivery time may be related to one or more of the following channels: (i) One- level channel (retailers). A big company such as Hindustan Lever Ltd. has region-wise and area-wise two-level channel on its more than 135 products. In such case the company has to benchmark on "delivery of shampoo to customers in Chennai area through the wholesaler and/or retailer". Step 2: Create a Benchmarking Team: Benchmarking arises from the result of a team effort. Formation of a team is the norm, even though individuals can also do benchmarking process, the results of the team are far superior to the results of an individual benchmark. Therefore, a blend of skills, expertise, experience and understandability of each other member and preparedness to achieve the objective is the basic requirement needed to form a team. Once the team is formed, rules and responsibilities of each member must be assigned. In case of not attaining the basic requirement of a team, then plethora of wrong and unrequired information may be collected, or they may be improperly used and analysed by the improper team. The very purpose of benchmarking process will end up as a failure.
Step 3: Trace out the Benchmark Partners: Few companies may
follow the world class practices and these benchmark leaders may be taken as a partner. However the basic requirement is such company is also ready to share their benchmarking information. Their comparable operation may be within the same industry or in dissimilar industries, but with best practices. In addition to this, articles from magazines/newspapers, publications of consultancies, printouts issued by trade associations etc. can also be used as benchmark partners. Step 4: Identify the Data Collection Process: There are numerous ways of collecting data, such as postal surveys, direct interviews, collection through questionnaire, desk-fop research through internet and so on. However, these collections' of data depend on the type, quantity and resources of the benchmarkable product/service, ability, design and execution of the benchmarking team and the objectives of the benchmarking process. Step 5: Termination of the Benchmarking Study: The benchmark study must be finalised after analysing all the data in an impartial way. Irrelevant, inaccurate and unreliable data must be thrown out and the team must come out with the findings. Compare your company's strength and weakness with those of benchmarking partners, in case you find out any performance gap between yours and the benchmarking partners in terms of performance, efficiency, implementation, operation etc., fill that gap. Suppose this gap is not filled by your company/team, the whole benchmarking process becomes meaningless. Step 6: Implement the Findings: The findings derived after filling the gap as given in step 5 should be ruthlessly implemented in to the task force of predetermined operation, function or service (refer step 1) The benchmarking by a company on its operation, function or service may become the standard in its industry, such benchmarked company slowly becomes the leader and other companies in the same as well as dissimilar industries adopt its standards. The knowledge is disseminated, the consumers are benefited and the power of a company in terms of its profit and net worth value to shareholders are multiplied in many fold. Source: Indian Journal of Marketing, (5) People Decision: The decision regarding people means determining the number of people, their skills, and the labour cost. Many a times people decisions are made on the assumption that people may be hired any way. The need to have knowledgeable, continuous and .motivated workforce is overlooked. A firm may have sophisticated technology but it is the people who manage them and therefore in people decision knowledgeable and motivated work fpfce cannot be overlooked PHYSICAL EVIDENCE Generally a service transaction involves the interaction of the service provider with the customer in a service environment. Services like hotel services and hospitals are delivered in physical environment created by the service firm. Physical evidence is termed as the social environment along with the tangible cues. Zeithaml & Bitner defines physical evidence as "the environment in which the service is delivered and where the firm and customer interact; and any tangible commodities that facilitate performance communication of the service".
Physical Evidence includes all the efforts taken by the service
provider to tangibilise their services, they include: (a) Physical facilities. (b) Physical environment, and (c) Social settings. (a) PHYSICAL FACILITIES: On the basis of physical evidence like building, furniture, equipment, stationery etc the potential customers forms an impression about the service organisation. Physical evidence include essential evidence and peripheral evidence. Essential evidence are the technical facilities without which the service delivery is not possible e.g. air-craft in the airline services. Essential evidence is integral to the service offerings. In every services, the quality and standard of the essential evidence will be of major influence in the customer's purchase decision. Peripheral evidence can actually change hands during the service transaction, they include stationery, brochures etc. Though services can be performed without these items, still they can be used to enhance the corporate image. Examples of physical evidences that could be included for a fast food restaurant: Physical Evidences Inferences (1) Food - Taste, smell, presentation etc. (2) Seating - Comfort, layout, availability. (3) Overall appearance - Cleanliness, decor, lighting, attractiveness. (4) Facilities - Payphones, toilets, children amusement. (5) Service delivery - Efficient, prompt (6) Atmosphere - Friendly, cold, indifferent. - Location of entrances, car parking. .sr Another factor influencing consumer expectations of service quality and satisfaction is the physical setting or the service environment within which the service takes place. The important elements of physical settings are: (i) Ambience. (ii) Space. (iii) Decor and Artifacts. (i) Ambience: The ambience of the physical setting include temperature, lighting, noise, music, scent and colour. All these factors affect the way the people think, feel and respond to a particular service setting. The most comfortable source of light is the natural light. In the absence of natural light artificial light is needed. Different types-of lights create different types of atmosphere. For an example, low levels of lighting are associated with romantic setting, well lit passages create a feeling of safety and so on. Often colour and lighting are used in conjunction. Colours create different feelings, some colours have a soothing feeling while some have disturbing feelings. Green and blue are cool colours whereas red, orange and yellow are warm colours. Temperature and humidity also affect the comfort of the customer and employees. It affects the efficiency directly. (i) Space: People need space around them to feel comfortable. Ease of access, good visibility, proximity of linked services will help to make the customer feel comfortable. The service provider should not expect the customer to share their space with others as it will lead to 8 Physical Evidence includes all the efforts taken by the service provider to tangibilise their services, they include: (a) Physical facilities. (b) Physical environment, and (c) Social settings. (a) PHYSICAL FACILITIES: On the basis of physical evidence like building, furniture, equipment, stationery etc the potential customers forms an impression about the service organisation. Physical evidence include essential evidence and peripheral evidence. Essential evidence are the technical facilities without which the service delivery is not possible e.g. air-craft in the airline services. Essential evidence is integral to the service offerings. In every services, the quality and standard of the essential evidence will be of major influence in the customer's purchase decision. Peripheral evidence can actually change hands during the service transaction, they include stationery, brochures etc. Though services can be performed without these items, still they can be used to enhance the corporate image. Examples of physical evidences that could be included for a fast food restaurant: Physical Evidences Inferences (1) Food - Taste, smell, presentation etc. (2) Seating - Comfort, layout, availability. (3) Overall appearance - Cleanliness, decor, lighting, attractiveness. (4) Facilities - Payphones, toilets, children amusement. (5) Service delivery - Efficient, prompt (6) Atmosphere - Friendly, cold, indifferent. - Location of entrances, car parking. . Another factor influencing consumer expectations of service quality and satisfaction is the physical setting or the service environment within which the service takes place. The important elements of physical settings are: (i) Ambience. (ii) Space. (iii) Decor and Artifacts. (i) Ambience: The ambience of the physical setting include temperature, lighting, noise, music, scent and colour. All these factors affect the way the people think, feel and respond to a particular service setting. The most comfortable source of light is the natural light. In the absence of natural light artificial light is needed. Different types-of lights create different types of atmosphere. For an example, low levels of lighting are associated with romantic setting, well lit passages create a feeling of safety and so on. Often colour and lighting are used in conjunction. Colours create different feelings, some colours have a soothing feeling while some have disturbing feelings. Green and blue are cool colours whereas red, orange and yellow are warm colours. Temperature and humidity also affect the comfort of the customer and employees. It affects the effeciency directly. (i) Space: People need space around them to feel comfortable. Ease of access, good visibility, proximity of linked services will help to make the customer feel comfortable. The service provider should not expect the customer to share their space with others as it will lead to 10