Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Managing Customer Satisfaction

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Managing Customer Satisfaction"— Presentation transcript:

1 Managing Customer Satisfaction
Week 3 Customer Expectations & Satisfaction

2 Customer satisfaction, service quality & confidence
The purpose of understanding customers’ expectations is to design services that meet their expectations Satisfaction is a result of the customers’ assessment of a service based on their prior expectations

3 Customer satisfaction
Figure 4.1 Customer satisfaction

4 Excellent service & customer delight
Delivering the promise—reliability & consistency Dealing well with problems & queries—service recovery When possible Treat the customer as an individual Provide something ‘extra’

5 Customer satisfaction continuum

6 Service quality Service quality definitions differ, but usually include: Satisfaction A relative impression of the organization & its services Quality delivered Whose perspective? Service manager or customer? Gaps

7 Service gap model Figure 4.3 Simplified gap model

8 Reasons for service gaps
Table 4.1 Reasons for gaps

9 Expectation-perception downsides
Service perceived as good when it is bad Vulnerable to competition Vulnerable to government interference Service perceived as bad when it is good Over-promising

10 Expectation-perception downsides
Service good last time but just “okay” this time Disney’s repeat visitors to the Magic Kingdom Satisfied customer switching suppliers Must measure post-purchase intentions Set appropriate expectations

11 Customer confidence Satisfaction requires experience, confidence does not Confidence is the belief, trust in services Influencers of confidence—not controllable Personal beliefs Media Word-of-mouth Influencers of confidence—controllable Visibility Familiarity Communication (knowledge of the organization)

12 Customer expectations
Ideal Ideal feasible (industry standard) Desirable (customer expects) Deserved (customer ought to receive given the cost) Minimum tolerable (must be achieved) Intolerable

13 Customer expectations zone of tolerance

14 Factors influencing expectations

15 Defining expectations
Service quality factors—attributes of service customers may expect

16 Hygiene & enhancing factors
Hygiene Factors—those that need to be in place to satisfy; if not they are a source of dissatisfaction. (ATM machines always work) Enhancing factors—absence has little effect on satisfaction (caring bank staff) Critical factors—have the potential to both delight and dissatisfy (competent bank staff) Neutral factors—little effect on satisfaction (well decorated bank lobby)

17 Delighting and dissatisfying factors

18 Four types of factors for a bank

19 Delight versus dissatisfaction

20 Finding expectations & assessing satisfaction
Questionnaires and surveys Focus groups Customer advisory panels New/lost customer surveys Complaint/compliment analysis Critical incident technique (CIT) Sequential incident analysis (walk through)

21 Assessing satisfaction
Questionnaires and surveys SERVQUAL score Mystery shoppers—assessing the customer experience Problems with assessments & data Changing questions Too many questions Missing the point Qualitative vs. quantitative Survey-weary customers Analysis fodder Resource hungry Little or no impact Satisfaction vs. success Open to manipulation

22 Managing perceptions Control chart—a way of identifying customer expectations then assess the impact of each factor during the service process Medical examination Arrival at clinic Reception Waiting for the doctor Examination Discussion of findings departure

23 Managing perceptions during the process

24 Managing perceptions at a clinic

25 Adequate performance satisfies the customer

26 Using enhancers to delight the customer

27 Delight shifts the zone of tolerance

28 Service excellence

29 Transaction satisfaction vs. overall satisfaction
How do transaction satisfactions develop into overall satisfaction with the service experience and outcome? Rational approach—customers use a weighted average SERVQUAL uses weighted factors Incidence approach—customers are less rational and react to individual incidences


Download ppt "Managing Customer Satisfaction"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google