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Dr' Xiande Zhao

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Check out. and. Leave. Greet and. Take. Bags. Process. Registration. Deliver. Bags. Deliver ... Then, with your team draw a revised map of the procedure. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Dr' Xiande Zhao


1
Building Customer Loyalty
  • Dr. Xiande Zhao
  • Department of Decision Sciences and Managerial
    Economics
  • Tel. 2609-7650
  • Email xiande_at_baf.msmail.cuhk.edu.hk

2
STEPS TO BUILDING CUSTOMER LOYALTY
Define Customer Needs
Design Products and Services
Target Customers
Responsibilities of a Frontline Manager
Listen to Customer
Customer Satisfaction and Loyalty
Recover from Mistakes
Deliver
Give Feedback for Redesign
3
Designing the service and Service Delivery
Process
  • Design of the service package
  • Eight service design elements
  • Service Blueprinting

4
Service Design Elements
  • Structural Elements
  • Delivery System
  • Front Office, Back Office, Automation, Customer
    Participation
  • Facility Design
  • Size, Aesthetics, Layout
  • Location
  • Customer demographics, single and multiple
    sites, competition, site characteristics
  • Capacity Planning
  • Managing queues, number of servers,
    accommodating average demand or peak demand

5
Service Design Elements
  • Managerial Elements
  • Service Encounter
  • Service culture, motivation, selection and
    training, empowerment
  • Quality
  • Measurement, monitoring, methods, expectations
    vs. perceptions, service guarantee
  • Managing Capacity and Demand
  • Strategies for altering demand and controlling
    supply, queue management
  • Information
  • Competitive resources, data collection

6
Service Blueprinting
  • A tool for simultaneously depicting the service
    process, the points of customer contact, and the
    evidence of service from the customers point of
    view.

Process
Service blueprinting
Points of Contact
Evidence
7
Service Blueprint Components
CUSTOMER ACTIONS
line of interaction
ONSTAGE CONTACT EMPLOYEE ACTIONS
line of visibility
BACKSTAGE CONTACT EMPLOYEE ACTIONS
line of internal interaction
SUPPORT PROCESSES
8
Service Blueprint Components
9
Express Mail Delivery Service
Truck Packaging Forms Hand-held Computer Uniform
Truck Packaging Forms Hand-held Computer Uniform
PHYSICAL EVIDENCE
Customer Calls
Customer Gives Package
Receive Package
CUSTOMER
Driver Picks Up Pkg.
(On Stage)
Deliver Package
CONTACT PERSON
(Back Stage)
Customer Service Order
Airport Receives Loads
Fly to Sort Center
Load On Truck
Dispatch Driver
download Sort
Fly to Destination
SUPPORT PROCESS
Load on Airplane
Sort Packages
10
Overnight Hotel Stay
Bill Desk Lobby Hotel Exterior Parking
Hotel Exterior Parking
Cart for Bags
Desk Registration Papers Lobby Key
Elevators Hallways Room
Cart for Bags
Room Amenities Bath
Menu
Delivery Tray Food Appearance
Food
PHYSICAL EVIDENCE
Arrive at Hotel
Give Bags to Bellperson
Call Room Service
Check out and Leave
Receive Bags
Sleep Shower
Go to Room
Receive Food
CUSTOMER
Eat
Check in
Greet and Take Bags
Deliver Bags
Deliver Food
(On Stage)
Process Registration
Process Check Out
CONTACT PERSON
Take Food Order
(Back Stage)
Take Bags to Room
Registration System
Registration System
Prepare Food
SUPPORT PROCESS
11
Building a Service Blueprint
Step 4 Map contact employee actions, onstage and
back-stage.
Step 6 Add evidence of service at each customer
action step.
Step 3 Map the process from the customers point
of view.
Step 1 Identify the process to be blue-printed.
Step 2 Identify the customer or customer segment.
Step 5 Link customer and contact person
activities to needed support functions.
12
Application of Service Blueprints
  • New Service Development
  • concept development
  • market testing
  • Supporting a Zero Defects Culture
  • managing reliability
  • identifying empowerment issues
  • Service Recovery Strategies
  • identifying service problems
  • conducting root cause analysis
  • modifying processes

13
On the Job Application Sharpening Your Hiring
Criteria
  • Select a customer-contact position in your
    organization and write a brief description of the
    ideal employee you would like to fill that
    position. Include the characteristics that are
    crucial to outstanding customer service. Two
    types of characteristics
  • personality traits that cannot be imparted easily
    through training- such as friendly and responsive
    manner with people
  • skills that can be affected by training- such as
    knowledge of specific computer programs or
    procedures.

14
On the Job Application Sharpening Your Hiring
Criteria
  • Use the table below, list your ideal employees
    characteristics, distinguishing the personality
    traits and skills. Prioritize them according to
    their importance to the delivery of outstanding
    customer services in your business. Use the
    prioritized list as a guide for interviewing
    frontline job candidates and making hiring
    decisions.
  • Personality Traits Skills

15
  • Establishing standard and systems foroutstanding
    services

16
The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company (Three Steps of
Service)
1. Warm welcome
Break away to achieve instant pacification
Break away to achieve instant pacification
Dissatisfied
Complaint or dissatisfaction
Verify guest satisfaction by guest reaction
2. Anticipation and compliance
Fulfill need or wish
Fulfill need or wish
Identify need or wish
Routine
nonroutine service
Satisfied
Snap back to routine duties
Snap back to routine duties
Break away to respond
3. Fond farewell
Complete incident form and/or guest preference
pad when appropriate for each guest
Daily quality report analysis
Enter guest preferences or complaint into
guest history profile
Complete incident form and/or guest preference
pad when appropriate for each guest
Daily quality report analysis
Enter guest preferences or complaint into
guest history profile
17
On-the-job Application Traditional Supervisor
versus Coach-Counselor
The Impact of Supervisory Latitude
  • Using the form below, evaluate yourself as a
    supervisor.
  • Do you manage as a traditional supervisor or are
    you, with the support of your organization,
    changing your role to that of a coach-counselor?
  • The higher your score on the assessment, the
    closer your performance is to that of managers in
    breakthrough firms. Low scores signal
    opportunities for improvement.

18
On-the-job Application Traditional Supervisor
versus Coach-Counselor
The Impact of Supervisory Latitude
  • After you have completed the assessment, ask your
    employees to anonymously assess your performance
    as well.
  • For each characteristic listed below, add the
    employee responses and calculate an average.
    Compare the figure with your own assessments. Is
    there a gap?
  • Informally poll your employees on what you might
    do to improve.
  • .

19
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20
ON-THE-JOB APPLICATION ROLE-PLAYING
  • Using actual customer interactions as source
    material, create customer service situations for
    your frontline employees to roleplay. They can
    test ways to deal with customers, including
    trying out your ideas or experimenting with
    approaches they have developed on their own. Also
    involve your employees in thinking of problem
    situations they are an excellent source of
    experience, and asking them to help you will
    heighten their involvement.
  • To evaluate roleplay performances, use the
    customer satisfaction goals you developed in the
    previous On-the-Job Application. If, in the
    course of roleplaying, you identify new goals,
    add them to your list.

21
Tips for Effective Role-playing
  • Conduct role-playing frequently. The more
    frequent the practice, the more effective the
    experience.
  • Schedule sessions separate from any other
    meeting.
  • Encourage experimental behavior but never
    theatrical extremes.
  • Focus attention on content and process, not on
    the players.
  • Give each player a goal and a motive.
  • Assign realistic time limits to each role-play to
    focus the participants on reaching their goals.
  • Dont worry if the role-play situation is not
    resolved be concerned only that critical moments
    are experienced.
  • Remember, creating a constructive, low-risk
    environment for the exercise is a key to its
    success.

22
ON-THE-JOB APPLICATION DEVELOPING LISTENING POSTS
  • Listening posts exist in every service
    organization. The difference between average and
    breakthrough organizations is how effectively
    management listens, communicates the information
    internally, and acts on it. Take a moment to
    study the customer feedback pathway shown in the
    diagram. The solid lines show the desired flow of
    feedback. The dotted lines indicate how feedback
    can be lost. The steps that follow the diagram
    will help you develop your own listening posts.

23
Customer Feedback Pathway
Confirm Use
Discarded
Not Used
Listening Post
Customer Feedback
Internal Customer
Product, Procedure Improvement
Wrong Destination
External Customer
Desired flow
Lost feedback
24
Four Steps for Developing Effective Listening
Posts
  • Select a point in your organization where you
    receive customer feedback -- for example,
    telephone representatives, customer service
    representatives, or servers. Interview these
    employees to determine the feedback they receive
    based on the interviews and your own experience,
    categorize the significant types of feedback as
    shown below

25
Categorization of feedbacks
26
Four Steps for Developing Effective Listening
Posts
  •  Chart where this information goes. In the
    diagram of the customer feedback pathway, the
    internal customer is the person or group that
    can make the best use of the feedback. If the
    information goes nowhere or is misdirected,
    decide where it should go and take action to
    correct the situation.
  • Find out whether and how the information is being
    used. If it isnt, take action yourself or enlist
    your boss to help you.

27
Four Steps for Developing Effective Listening
Posts
  • Go back to your listening posts and share with
    the employees the categories of significant
    feedback, their desired destinations, and the end
    uses of the information. Commit to keeping them
    informed about changes that the feedback has
    triggered 

28
On the Job Application Improving Service
Recovery
  • Every organization makes mistakes, but
    breakthrough service companies recover from them
    quickly and decisively. To understand whats at
    stake in service recovery responses, look at the
    graph, The Customer Impact of Service Recovery.
    It shows that recovery from mistakes has a large
    impact on customer loyalty.
  • To help you evaluate the efficiency and
    effectiveness of your service recovery responses.
    Generally, your cost and your risk of alienating
    the customer increase with the number of people
    involved and the time it takes to respond.

29
The Customer Impact of Service Recovery
Dissatisfied but Dont Complain
9
37
Complaints Not Resovled
19
46
Complaints Resolved
54
70
Complaints Resolved Quickly
82
95
Minor Complaints (1 - 5 losses)
Major Complaints (over 100 losses)
30
Assessing Your Service Recovery Procedures
  • Meet with the people in your unit who deal
    regularly with service recovery. Select two or
    three important service recovery problems that
    occur frequently and have a major effect on
    customer satisfaction and loyalty. Include at
    least one problem that is customer induced, for
    example, a customer who has given the wrong order
    or has used your product incorrectly.
  • Determine the lifetime value of your customer. To
    manage the cost and time tradeoffs of service
    recovery, you need to know the long-term value
    that each customer represents for your business.
  • Track each problem youve selected step by step
    from its initiation by customer to resolution as
    shown in the Sample Service Recovery Map. The
    vertical dimension of the map should list the
    people involved in the recovery, beginning with
    the customer. The horizontal dimension should
    represent the time it takes to complete the
    recovery. On the map each significant step should
    be represented by a box with a brief description.

31
Assessing Your Service Recovery Procedures
(continued)
  • With your team, evaluate each recovery youve
    mapped. Keeping in mind the lifetime value of
    your customer and the cost and customer
    satisfaction effects of the recovery procedure,
    discuss how each procedure can be improved.
  • If you decide changes are worthwhile, take the
    necessary steps to change them. Then, with your
    team draw a revised map of the procedure. Share
    the old and new map with the people affected by
    the changes.

32
Sample Service Recovery Map
Part II The Economics of Customer Loyalty
Higher Cost
General manager
9
Area manager
8
10
Frontline manager
11
5
7
  • People

Shift supervisor
4
Employee
12
2
3
6
Customer
1
13
Higher Customer Satisfaction
Lower Customer Satisfaction
Lower Cost
Time
33
Sample Service Recovery Map
Part II The Economics of Customer Loyalty
  • Sequence of Events
  • 1. Make Complaint
  • 2. Give Initial Response
  • 3. Consults Policy Manual
  • 4. Considers Complaint
  • 5. Considers Complaints
  • 6. Queries Employees
  • 7. Decides to Consult Boss
  • 8. Consults Boss
  • 9. Makes Decision
  • 10. Conveys decisions
  • 11. Conveys Decisions
  • 12. Informs Customers
  • 13 Complaint Resolved

34
Assignment Questions for Rapid Rewards at
Southwest Airlines (Due March 7)
  • Should Southwest save a few low-numbered boarding
    cards for its most frequent fliers? What is the
    key motivation for your opinion? What are the
    tradeoffs that Southwest must consider in making
    this decision?
  • Should Southwest allow its most frequent fliers
    that have missed their flight to take the next
    available flight with an empty seat or should
    these customers have to wait for the next
    available flight with an empty seat within the
    same fare class? What drives your decision?
  • What is Southwest Airline's value proposition?
    What are its sources of competitive advantage?
    How important are these advantages economically?
  • Consider the economics of the airline industry.
    How important are frequent fliers to financial
    performance?

35
Service Recovery Strategies
RIGHT
  • Do it the first time!
  • recovery is unnecessary
  • reliability
  • Welcome and encourage complaints
  • complainers are viewed as friends
  • Act quickly
  • take care of the problems on the front line
  • allow customers to solve their own problems

36
Service Recovery Strategies
  • Treat customers fairly
  • in outcome,procedure and interactions
  • Learn from recovery experiences
  • source of diagnostic, prescriptive information
  • Learn from lost customers
  • in depth interviews by skilled interviewers
  • Learn why we have lost this customer
  • Prevent future loss of customers

37
Service Recovery Strategies
38
Service Gurantees
39
Service Guarantees
  • What is service guarantee?
  • An assurance of the quality of service offered
  • A particular type of recovery tool

40
Types of Service Guarantees?
  • Unconditional satisfaction guarantees
  • HAMPTON INNs100 satisfaction Guarantee
  • We guarantee high quality accommodations,
    friendly and efficient services and clean,
    comfortable surroundings
  • If you are not completely satisfied, we dont
    expect you to pay.
  • Service attribute guarantees
  • Fed Ex Absolutely, positively overnight
  • A bank guarantees that customers will not wait
    for more than five minutes in a line, otherwise
    you get 5
  • Dominos pizza guarantees that the pizza will be
    delivered in 30 minutes, otherwise the pizza is
    for free

41
Types of Service Guarantees?
  • Combined guarantees
  • wide scope of total satisfaction guarantee and
  • Specific service performance standards
  • Example DataPro Singapore in IT consulting
  • Guarantees to deliver the report on time, to high
    quality standards, and to the contents outlines
    in the proposal
  • Should we fail to deliver according to this
    guarantee or should you be dissatisfied with any
    aspect of our work, you can deduct any amount
    from the final payment which deems as fair,
    subject to a maximum of 30

42
Types of Service Guarantees
  • External versus Internal Guarantee
  • External
  • Guarantees to external customers
  • Internal
  • one part of organization guaranteeing its
    services to others
  • E.g. house keeping supplies department guarantees
    the house keeping staff that they can get
    supplies on the same day, otherwise the supply
    department will pay 5 to the house keeping staff.

43
What are the benefits of service guarantees?
  • Force the company to focus on its customers
  • Set clear standard for the organization
  • Generate immediate and relevant feedback
  • Have opportunity to recover if guarantee is
    invoked
  • Information generated can be tracked integrated
    to continuous improvement efforts
  • Enhance employee morale and loyalty
  • Reduces customers sense of risk and builds the
    confidence in the organization

44
How does a service guarantee influence the bottom
line?
  • Effective service guarantee can affect
    profitability through through building customer
    awareness and loyalty, and trough positive word
    of mouth, and through reduction in costs as
    service improvements are made and service
    expenses are reduced.
  • The guarantee can reduce costs of employee
    turnover through creating a more positive service
    culture

45
Characteristics of Effective Guarantees
  • Unconditional
  • Makes its promise unconditionally-no strings
    attached
  • Meaningful
  • Guarantee elements should
  • be important to customers
  • The payout should cover fully the customers
    dissatisfaction

46
Characteristics of Effective Guarantees
  • Easy to understand and communicate
  • Customers know what to expect
  • Employees know what to do
  • Easy to invoke and collect
  • Guarantees can be accessed
  • and collected easily
  • Not a lot of hoops or red tape in the way of
    accessing or collecting on the guarantee

47
Should Every Service Organization Have Guarantee?
  • Answer No !!!!

48
Questions to be asked in deciding whether it is
appropriate in offering service guarantee
  • How high is service quality of services provided
    by the company?
  • Does the guarantee fit the companys image?
  • Is the service quality truly uncontrollable?

49
Should Every Service Organization Have Guarantee?
  • Are customers perceiving little risk in the
    service?
  • How high is the perceived variability in service
    quality among competitors?
  • Are competitors offering a guarantee?
  • Do the benefits outweigh the cost of guarantees?

50
Reading Assignment
  • .Read Chapter 7 and 8 of RB2
  • Zeithaml, V. A. and Bitner, M. J. (2003), Service
    Marketing Integrating Customer Focus Across the
    Firm, McGraw-Hill Book Company, 3rd Edition
  • Read Reference Article 6, 7,and 8
  • 6.Hart, C. W. L., Heskett, and Sasser, W. E.,
    Jr., The Profitable Art of Service Recovery,
    Harvard Business Review, July-August 1990, pp
    148-156
  • 7.      Boshoff, C. "An Experimental Study of
    Service Recovery Options" International Journal
    of service industry Management, Vol. 8, No. 2,
    1997, pp. 110-130
  • 8 Hart, C. W. L., Schlesinger, L. A. and Maher,
    D., Guarantees Come to Professional Service
    Firms, Sloan Management Review, Spring 1992

51
Short Case Assignment
  • Please read the Damaged Luggage case and answer
    the two assignment questions (due on March 21)
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