Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 1 CHAPTER 15 Organizing for Change Management and S ervice Leadership.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The difference between what we want and what we have got
Advertisements

Management, Leadership, & Internal Organization………..
Chapter 13: Organizational Innovation and Change
Planning: Processes and Techniques
Implementing Strategy in Companies That Compete in a Single Industry
and Service Leadership
Slide © 2007 by Christopher Lovelock and Jochen Wirtz Services Marketing 6/E Chapter Chapter 15: Organizing for Change Management and Service Leadership.
Leadership Development Nova Scotia Public Service
Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 1 CHAPTER 13 Complaint Handling and S ervice Recovery.
Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 1 CHAPTER 4 Developing S ERVICE Products: Core and Supplementary.
Strategic Leadership: Creating a Learning Organization and an Ethical Organization Chapter Eleven Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All.
Strategic Planning and the Marketing Management Process
Planning and Strategic Management
7 Chapter Management, Leadership, and the Internal Organization
© 2007 by Prentice Hall1-1 Chapter 1 Meeting Present and Emerging Strategic Human Resource Challenges.
Implementing Strategy in Companies That Compete in a Single Industry
Implementing Strategy in Companies That Compete in a Single Industry
An Overview of Marketing
Strategic Staffing Chapter 2 – Business and Staffing Strategies
©2002 South-Western Chapter 1 Version 6e1 chapter An Overview of Marketing 1 1 Prepared by Deborah Baker Texas Christian University.
AGENDA u AN OVERVIEW OF CUSTOMER SERVICE u VISION AND MISSION u CORE COMPETENCIES u SUCCESS FACTORS u OBJECTIVES & STRATEGIES u CULTURE u VALUE STATEMENT.
HR STRATEGIES. Concept of strategy The direction and scope of an organization over the long term. It should match the resources of the organization to.
Human Resource Management (Business Strategy)
Moving From “Mini-Me” to Diversity Inclusion in Succession Planning
MARKETING STRATEGY O.C. FERRELL • MICHAEL D. HARTLINE
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Lectures Based on Leadership Communication By Deborah J. Barrett,
Essentials of Management Chapter 4
© 2014 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Human Resource Management Strategy and Analysis
Strategic Human Resource Management
Strategic Marketing Planning
DEFINITION OF MANAGEMENT
Slide © 2007 by Christopher Lovelock and Jochen Wirtz Services Marketing 6/E Chapter Chapter 15: Organizing for Change Management and Service Leadership.
1 CREATING A LEARNING ORGANIZATION AND AN ETHICAL ORGANIZATION STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT BUAD 4980.
1-1 Strategic Planning and the Marketing Management Process Chapter 1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights.
Understanding our Results
Chapter 1 Introduction Managers and Managing.
Logistics and supply chain strategy planning
The Denison Model.
Strategic Human Resource Management and the HR Scorecard
State of California Executive Leadership Competency Model January 12, 2011 Presentation for the California Citizens Redistricting Commission.
ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN AND DEVELOPMENT INTERVENTIONS.
Services Marketing Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz Services Marketing 7/e Chapter 15 – Page 1 Striving for Service Leadership Zeenat Jabbar.
Imran Ghaznavi Course Code: MGT557 COMSATS Strategic Human Resource Management.
WHAT IS MANAGEMENT? The Management Hierarchy
Why the “Why” Matters: The Impact of Organizational Culture Presentation for: 2012 Fall Conference.
11-1 Chapter 11 Leading Innovation Applying Innovation By David O’Sullivan and Lawrence Dooley © Sage Publications 2008.
Service and Relationship Marketing Module:2 Chapter:1 Managing People for Service Advantage.
Creating and Managing Change Chapter 18 Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Organizing for Service Leadership. Customer-Led versus Market-Oriented Philosophies of Management  Firms may lose market leader position if listen too.
DIRECTION SETTING: VISIONS, MISSIONS, VALUES, AND OBJECTIVES
PRESENTATION BY FREIGHTDYNAMICS TO NATIONAL GOVERNMENT 04 April 2001.
Chapter 8 Management, Leadership, and Internal Organization Learning Goals Define management and the skills necessary for managerial success. Explain the.
Unit-5 TQM culture Presented by N.Vigneshwari.  Culture is “the sum total learned beliefs, values, and customs that serve to direct the consumer behavior.
2 C H A P T E R © 2014 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in.
©2000 South-Western College Publishing
BUS 660 Entire Course (2 Sets) FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT This Tutorial contains 2 Sets of Papers for each Assignment (Check Details Below)
Chapter 11 Management Skills1 Section 11.1 Management Structures.
Marketing II Chapter 2: Company and Marketing Strategy Partnering to Build Customer relationships
HR Strategies & its impact on Business Strategy.
The Denison Organizational Culture Model & Link to Performance
HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Meeting Present and Emerging Strategic Human Resource Challenges
Strategy: The Totality of Decisions
Chapter 15: Striving for Service Leadership.
Building Better IT Leaders from the Bottom Up
Implementing Strategy in Companies That Compete in a Single Industry
Chp3 Strategic Human Resource Management
I4.0 in Action The importance of people and culture in the Industry 4.0 transformation journey Industry 4.0 Industry 3.0 Industry 2.0 Industry 1.0 Cyber.
Presentation transcript:

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 1 CHAPTER 15 Organizing for Change Management and S ervice Leadership

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 2 Overview of Chapter 15  Effective Marketing Lies at the Heart of Value Creation  Integrating Marketing, Operations, and Human Resources  Creating a Leading Service Organization  In Search of Human Leadership

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 3 Effective Marketing Lies at the Heart of Value Creation

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 4 The Service Profit Chain (Fig. 15.3)

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 5 Links in the Service Profit Chain (Table 15.1)

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 6 Firm Value Created by Customer Satisfaction (Fig. 15.4)

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 7 Integrating Marketing, Operations, and Human Resources

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 8 Interdependence Between Functions (Fig. 15.5)

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 9 Service Leaders Integrate Functions  Implementation of Service Profit Chain requires complete understanding of how marketing, operations and human resource functions relate to a firm’s strategy  Integrated functions create value for the firm  Strategies are defined and driven by a strong, effective leadership team  Has a coherent vision of what it takes to succeed

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 10 Defining the Three Functions  Marketing Function  Target “ right ” customers and build relationships  Offer solutions that meet their needs  Define quality package with competitive advantage  Operations Function  Create, deliver specified service to target customers  Adhere to consistent quality standards  Achieve high productivity to ensure acceptable costs  Human Resource Function  Recruit and retain the best employees for each job  Train and motivate them to work well together  Achieve both productivity & customer satisfaction

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 11 Creating a Leading Service Organization

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 12 From Losers to Leaders: Four Levels of Service Performance (1)  Service Losers  Bottom of the barrel from both customer and managerial perspectives  Customers patronize them because there is no viable alternative  New technology introduced only under duress; uncaring workforce  Service Nonentities  Dominated by a traditional operations mindset  Unsophisticated marketing strategies  Consumers neither seek out nor avoid them

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 13 From Losers to Leaders: Four Levels of Service Performance (2)  Service Professionals  Clear market positioning strategy  Customers within target segment(s) seek them out  Research used to measure customer satisfaction  Operations and marketing work together  Proactive, investment-oriented approach to HRM  Service Leaders  The crème da la crème of their respective industries  Names synonymous with outstanding service, customer delight  Service delivery is seamless process organized around customers  Employees empowered and committed to firm’s values and goals

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 14 Moving to a Higher Level of Performance  Firms can move either up or down the performance ladder  Organizations that are devoted to satisfying their current customers may miss important shifts in the marketplace  As a result, they may face difficulties attracting demanding new consumers with different expectations  Companies defending their control of their competitive edge may have encouraged competitors to find higher-performing alternatives  Organizations with a service-oriented culture may turn otherwise as a result of a merger or acquisition that brings in new leaders who emphasize short-term profits

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 15 In Search of Human Leadership

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 16 Leadership vs. Management  Leadership  Concerned with development of vision and strategies, and empowerment of people to overcome obstacles, make vision happen  Emphasis on emotional and spiritual resources  Works through people and culture  Produces useful change, especially non-incremental change  Management  Involves keeping current situation operating through planning, budgeting, organizing, staffing, controlling, and problem solving  Emphasizes physical resources—raw materials, technology, capital  Works through hierarchy and systems  Keeps current system functioning

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 17 Setting Direction vs. Planning  Planning  a management process, designed to produce orderly results, not change  Setting direction  involves creating visions and strategies that describe a business, technology, or corporate culture in terms of what it should become over long term and articulating feasible way of achieving goal  Many of best visions and strategies combine basic insights and translate them into realistic competitive strategy  “Stretch” – a challenge to attain new levels of performance and competitive advantage that might as first seem to be beyond the organization’s reach  Planning follows and complements direction setting, serving as useful reality check and road map for strategic execution  See Service Insights 15.2 : Can Cirque du Soleil Stretch Further?

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 18 Individual Leadership Qualities  Love for the business  See service quality as foundation for competing  Recognize key role of employees  Driven by a set of core values they pass on  Make communication a priority  Work with a team on decision-making  Know when to change when necessary  Walk the talk

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 19 Leadership, Culture and Climate (1)  Leadership traits are needed of everyone in supervisory or managerial positions, including those heading teams  Effective communication is essential for a leader  Organizational culture:  Shares understanding regarding what is important in the organization  Shares values about what is right or wrong  Shares understanding about what works and what doesn’t work  Shares beliefs, and assumptions about why things are important  Shares styles of working and relating to others

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 20 Leadership, Culture and Climate (2)  Organizational climate  The tangible surface layer on top of the organization’s underlying culture  Factors of influence: -Flexibility, Responsibility, Standards that people set, Perceived aptness of rewards, Clarity people have about mission and values, Level of commitment to a common purpose  Creating a new climate for service, based on understanding of what is needed for market success, may require  radical rethinking of HRM activities, operational procedures, and the firm’s reward and recognition policies

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 21 Summary of Chapter 15: Change Management and Service Leadership (1)  Service profit chain provides useful summary of behaviors required of service leaders to manage effectively  Marketing, operations, and human resource management functions need to be closely coordinated and integrated in service businesses  Four levels of service performance  Service losers  Service nonentitites  Service professionals  Service leaders  Service leadership is not based on outstanding performance within a single dimension, but must cut across marketing, operations and human resources

Slide © by Lovelock, Wirtz and Chew 2009 Essentials of Services MarketingChapter 1 - Page 22 Summary of Chapter 15: Change Management and Service Leadership (2)  To be effective, leaders need to understand difference between leadership vs. management, as well as setting direction vs. planning  Role modeling is one of traits of successful leaders  Leaders play a big part in nurturing an effective organizational culture that transforms an organization into a successful one