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SERVICE STRATEGY
PREPARED BY
•EKREM TAÇYILDIZ
•BURCU ERDEM
•KEREM ÖZGER
AFTER COMPLETING THIS CHAPTER,WE WILL BE ABLE TO :
1.Formulate a strategic service vision.
2.Critically discuss the competitive environment of services.
3.Describe ,with examples,how a service competes using the
generic service strategies of overall cost leadership
,differentation,and focus.
4.Discuss the service purchase decision in the context of
qualifiers , service winners,and service losers.
5.Discuss the competitive role of information in services.
6.Explain the concept of the virtual value chain and its role in
service innovation.
7.Discuss the limits in the use of information.
8.Categorize a service firm according to its stage of
competitiveness.
9.Conduct a data envelopment analysis.
THE STRATEGIC SERVICE VISION
 Service strategy must begin with vision of the place
and purpose of enterprise. A vision is formulated by
this four question.
 Target market
 Service concept
 Operating strategy
 Delivery system
SERVICE DELIVERY SYSTEM;
What are important features of the service
delivery system including.
 The role of people?
 Technology?
 Equıpment?
 Layout?
 Procedures?
OPERATING STRATEGY;
What are important elements of the strategy?
 Operations?
 Financing?
 Marketing?
 Organization?
 Human resources?
 Control?
SERVICE CONCEPTS;
What are important elements of this service to be
provided, stated in terms of results produced for
customers?
How are these elements supposed to be perceived by
the target market segment?
 By the market in general
 By employees
 By others
TARGET MARKETS SEGMENT
What are common characteristics of important market
segments?
What dimensions can be used to segment the market?
 Demographic?
 Psychographics?
UNDERSTANDING THE COMPETITIVE ENVIRONMENT
OF SERVICES.
In general,service firms compete in a diffucult economic
enviroment,and there are many reason for this diffuculty.
 Relatively low overall entry barriers: service innovations are not
patentable thus innovations can easily be coppied by competitors.
 Minimal opportunities for economies of scale: The necessity of
physical travel limits the market area and result in small-scale outlets.
 Erratic sales fluctuations: service demand varies as a function of the
time of day and the day of the week.
 No advantage of size in dealing with buyers or suppliers: the
small size of many service firms palace them at a disadvantage
in bargaining with powerful buyers or suppliers.
 Product substitutions: product innovations can be substitute
for services.
 Customer loyallty: Established firms using personalized service
create a loyal customer base which becomes a barrier to entry
by new services.
 Exit barriers: Marginal service firms may continue to oparate
despite low even noneexistent, profits.
COMPETITIVE SERVICE STRATEGIES
There are three generic competitive strategies;
 Overall cost leadership
 Differentiation
 Focus
OVERALL COST LEADERSHIP;
Having a low-cost position provide a defense against
competition
Because efficient competitors will suffer first from
competitive pressures.
 Seeking out low-cost customers:some customers cost
less to serve than others, and they can betargetted by
the service provider.
 Standardizing a custom service: the key word here is
routine.(ne kadar standartlaştırırsan o kadar ucuzlar)
Overall cost leadership;
• Reducing the personal element in service delivery: the
potentially high-rsik strategy of reducing the personal element
in service delivery can be accepted by customers if increased
convenience results.
• Reducing network costs: Unusal start-up costs are
encountered by service firms that require a network to knit
together providers and customers.
• Taking service operations offline: for services in which the
customer need not to be present, the service transaction can
be “decoupled” with some content performed “offline”.
Performing services offline represent significant cost saving.
DIFFERENTIATION;
The essence of the differentiation stratgey lies in creating a
service that is perceived as being unique.
 Making the intangible tangible
 Customizing the standart product
 Reducing perceived risk
 Giving attention to personnel training
 Controlling quality
FOCUS
The focus strategy is built around idea of servicing a
particular target market very vell by addressing
customers’ specific needs.
As a result the firm achives competitive advantage
in its market segment by meeting specific customers
needs and/or by lower costs through specialization.
WINNING CUSTOMERS IN THE MARKETPLACE
Depending on the competition and personal needs,
costumers select a service provider using creteria
listed here.
 Availability: how accesible is the service?
 Convienience: isn’t service closee to customer.
 Dependability: how reliable is the service.
 Personalization: are you treated as an individual?
Winning customers in the
marketplace
• Price : is it enough cheap?
• Quality: can you satisfy your customers’ prior
expectations.
• Reputation : how are you known in market?
• Safety : is your service safe enough?
• Speed: how long must ı wait for services?
QUALIFIERS
 Criteria used by a customer a subset of service
firms meetin minumum performance requirements.
Criteria used by a
customers tomake the
final purchase decision
among competitors that
have been previously
qualified.
 Price
 Convenience
 Reputation
e.g ATM use by banks
Criteria representing
failure to deliver a
service at or above the
expected level, resulting
in adissatisfied customer
who is lost forever.
 Dependabilty
 Personalization
 Speed
e.g delivering package on
time.
Service Winner Service Losers
COMPETITIVE ROLE OF INFORMATION IN
SERVICES
For service management, information technology
is helping to define the competetive strategy of
succesful firms
CREATION OF BARRIERS TO ENTRY
Many services exist in market that have low entry
barriers. There are three examples.
 Reservation system (birer cümle)
 Frequent user club
 Switching costs.
REVENUE GENERATION
Real time information technologies with a focus
on internal operation can play a competitive role in
increasing revenue opporunities.
 Yield management
 Point of sale
 Expert system
Yield management : An information system that
attempts to maximize revenue for service with
time-perishable capasity(e.g airline, hotels)
Point of sale : It is a system that helps to
facilitate sales.
Expert system: a computer program that can
make inferences using a knowledge base and
decision rules.
DATABASE ASSET
Database aservice firm posseses can be a hidden
asset of strategic importance. The expense of
assembling and maintaining a large database is
itself a barrier to entry by competitors.
 Selling informations
 Devoloping services
 Micromarketing
PRODUCTIVITY ENHANCEMENT
New developments in the collection and analysis of
information have increased our ability to manage
multisite service operations.
Inventory status;
Knowledge about the
ınventory helps us to
control productivity and
provide to profitable
Data envelopment
analysis;
A linear programing
technique that measure
the performance of
service units to
determine an efficiency
frontier for internal
benchmarking.
THE VIRTUAL VALUE CHAIN
Stage in the customer relationship where
information is gathered, organized, selected
synthesized, and disturbuted to create innovative
service products to meet customer needs.
 First stage(visibility)
 Second stage(mirroring capability)
 Third stage ( new customer relationship)
LIMITS IN THE USE OF INFORMATION
 Anticompetitive
 Fairness
 İnvasion of privacy
 Data security
 Reliability
Anticompetitive: to create entry barriers, the use of
reservation system and frequent user programs has
been ıdentified as potentially anticpmatitive.
Fairness : Do firms behave equal to each
customers?
İnvasion of privacy: Do firms follow their customers’
behaving and their purchase.
Data security: Do firms use or sell their customers
datas without consent of the customer?
Reliability: Are the data accurate?
USING INFORMATION TO CATEGORIZE
CUSTOMERS.
Firms want to catogorize in terms of customer
profitability. There are popular 4 techniques that
given here.
Coding grade: customers based on how profitable
their business is.
Routing: firms distributed different queues
customers based on their code.
 Targetting; they interest customers' based on the
value of their business
 Sharring;corporate data about your transaction
history with other firms is a source of revenue.
STAGES IN SERVICE FIRM
COMPETITIVENESS
If a service firm is to remain competetive,
continuous improvment in productivity and quality
must be part of its strategy and corporate culture.
 Available for service
 Journeyman
 Distinctive competence achieved
 World-class service delivery
AVAIABLE FOR SERVICE
Some services firms and often, government services
in particular , fall into this category because they view
operations as a necessery evil to be performed at
minimum cost. This firms are noncompetitive, and they
only exist in this stage until they are challenged by
competition.
JOURNEYMAN
After maintaining a sheltered existence in stage
1, a service firm may face competition and, thus
may be forced to reevaluate its delivery
system.Operations managers then must adopt
industry practices to maintain parity with new
competitors and avoid a significant loss of market
share.
DISTINCTIVE COMPETENCE ACHIVED
Firms in stage 3 are fotunate to have senior
managers with a vision of what createsvalue for the
customer and who understand the role that
operations managers must play in delivering the
service.
WORLD-CLASS SERVICE DELIVERY
Not satisfied with just meeting customer expectations,
world-class firms expand on these expectations to
levels that competitors find difficult to meet.
Management is pro active in performing higher
standarts of performance and identifying new business
opportunities by listening to customers.world- class
service firm such as disney,marriot and american
airlines define the quality standarts by whic others are
judged.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR
ATTENTION

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Servi̇ce strategy

  • 1. SERVICE STRATEGY PREPARED BY •EKREM TAÇYILDIZ •BURCU ERDEM •KEREM ÖZGER
  • 2. AFTER COMPLETING THIS CHAPTER,WE WILL BE ABLE TO : 1.Formulate a strategic service vision. 2.Critically discuss the competitive environment of services. 3.Describe ,with examples,how a service competes using the generic service strategies of overall cost leadership ,differentation,and focus. 4.Discuss the service purchase decision in the context of qualifiers , service winners,and service losers. 5.Discuss the competitive role of information in services. 6.Explain the concept of the virtual value chain and its role in service innovation. 7.Discuss the limits in the use of information. 8.Categorize a service firm according to its stage of competitiveness. 9.Conduct a data envelopment analysis.
  • 3. THE STRATEGIC SERVICE VISION  Service strategy must begin with vision of the place and purpose of enterprise. A vision is formulated by this four question.  Target market  Service concept  Operating strategy  Delivery system
  • 4. SERVICE DELIVERY SYSTEM; What are important features of the service delivery system including.  The role of people?  Technology?  Equıpment?  Layout?  Procedures?
  • 5. OPERATING STRATEGY; What are important elements of the strategy?  Operations?  Financing?  Marketing?  Organization?  Human resources?  Control?
  • 6. SERVICE CONCEPTS; What are important elements of this service to be provided, stated in terms of results produced for customers? How are these elements supposed to be perceived by the target market segment?  By the market in general  By employees  By others
  • 7. TARGET MARKETS SEGMENT What are common characteristics of important market segments? What dimensions can be used to segment the market?  Demographic?  Psychographics?
  • 8.
  • 9. UNDERSTANDING THE COMPETITIVE ENVIRONMENT OF SERVICES. In general,service firms compete in a diffucult economic enviroment,and there are many reason for this diffuculty.  Relatively low overall entry barriers: service innovations are not patentable thus innovations can easily be coppied by competitors.  Minimal opportunities for economies of scale: The necessity of physical travel limits the market area and result in small-scale outlets.  Erratic sales fluctuations: service demand varies as a function of the time of day and the day of the week.
  • 10.  No advantage of size in dealing with buyers or suppliers: the small size of many service firms palace them at a disadvantage in bargaining with powerful buyers or suppliers.  Product substitutions: product innovations can be substitute for services.  Customer loyallty: Established firms using personalized service create a loyal customer base which becomes a barrier to entry by new services.  Exit barriers: Marginal service firms may continue to oparate despite low even noneexistent, profits.
  • 11. COMPETITIVE SERVICE STRATEGIES There are three generic competitive strategies;  Overall cost leadership  Differentiation  Focus
  • 12. OVERALL COST LEADERSHIP; Having a low-cost position provide a defense against competition Because efficient competitors will suffer first from competitive pressures.  Seeking out low-cost customers:some customers cost less to serve than others, and they can betargetted by the service provider.  Standardizing a custom service: the key word here is routine.(ne kadar standartlaştırırsan o kadar ucuzlar)
  • 13. Overall cost leadership; • Reducing the personal element in service delivery: the potentially high-rsik strategy of reducing the personal element in service delivery can be accepted by customers if increased convenience results. • Reducing network costs: Unusal start-up costs are encountered by service firms that require a network to knit together providers and customers. • Taking service operations offline: for services in which the customer need not to be present, the service transaction can be “decoupled” with some content performed “offline”. Performing services offline represent significant cost saving.
  • 14. DIFFERENTIATION; The essence of the differentiation stratgey lies in creating a service that is perceived as being unique.  Making the intangible tangible  Customizing the standart product  Reducing perceived risk  Giving attention to personnel training  Controlling quality
  • 15. FOCUS The focus strategy is built around idea of servicing a particular target market very vell by addressing customers’ specific needs. As a result the firm achives competitive advantage in its market segment by meeting specific customers needs and/or by lower costs through specialization.
  • 16. WINNING CUSTOMERS IN THE MARKETPLACE Depending on the competition and personal needs, costumers select a service provider using creteria listed here.  Availability: how accesible is the service?  Convienience: isn’t service closee to customer.  Dependability: how reliable is the service.  Personalization: are you treated as an individual?
  • 17. Winning customers in the marketplace • Price : is it enough cheap? • Quality: can you satisfy your customers’ prior expectations. • Reputation : how are you known in market? • Safety : is your service safe enough? • Speed: how long must ı wait for services?
  • 18. QUALIFIERS  Criteria used by a customer a subset of service firms meetin minumum performance requirements.
  • 19. Criteria used by a customers tomake the final purchase decision among competitors that have been previously qualified.  Price  Convenience  Reputation e.g ATM use by banks Criteria representing failure to deliver a service at or above the expected level, resulting in adissatisfied customer who is lost forever.  Dependabilty  Personalization  Speed e.g delivering package on time. Service Winner Service Losers
  • 20. COMPETITIVE ROLE OF INFORMATION IN SERVICES For service management, information technology is helping to define the competetive strategy of succesful firms
  • 21.
  • 22. CREATION OF BARRIERS TO ENTRY Many services exist in market that have low entry barriers. There are three examples.  Reservation system (birer cümle)  Frequent user club  Switching costs.
  • 23. REVENUE GENERATION Real time information technologies with a focus on internal operation can play a competitive role in increasing revenue opporunities.  Yield management  Point of sale  Expert system
  • 24. Yield management : An information system that attempts to maximize revenue for service with time-perishable capasity(e.g airline, hotels) Point of sale : It is a system that helps to facilitate sales. Expert system: a computer program that can make inferences using a knowledge base and decision rules.
  • 25. DATABASE ASSET Database aservice firm posseses can be a hidden asset of strategic importance. The expense of assembling and maintaining a large database is itself a barrier to entry by competitors.  Selling informations  Devoloping services  Micromarketing
  • 26.
  • 27. PRODUCTIVITY ENHANCEMENT New developments in the collection and analysis of information have increased our ability to manage multisite service operations.
  • 28. Inventory status; Knowledge about the ınventory helps us to control productivity and provide to profitable Data envelopment analysis; A linear programing technique that measure the performance of service units to determine an efficiency frontier for internal benchmarking.
  • 29. THE VIRTUAL VALUE CHAIN Stage in the customer relationship where information is gathered, organized, selected synthesized, and disturbuted to create innovative service products to meet customer needs.  First stage(visibility)  Second stage(mirroring capability)  Third stage ( new customer relationship)
  • 30. LIMITS IN THE USE OF INFORMATION  Anticompetitive  Fairness  İnvasion of privacy  Data security  Reliability
  • 31. Anticompetitive: to create entry barriers, the use of reservation system and frequent user programs has been ıdentified as potentially anticpmatitive. Fairness : Do firms behave equal to each customers? İnvasion of privacy: Do firms follow their customers’ behaving and their purchase.
  • 32. Data security: Do firms use or sell their customers datas without consent of the customer? Reliability: Are the data accurate?
  • 33. USING INFORMATION TO CATEGORIZE CUSTOMERS. Firms want to catogorize in terms of customer profitability. There are popular 4 techniques that given here. Coding grade: customers based on how profitable their business is. Routing: firms distributed different queues customers based on their code.
  • 34.  Targetting; they interest customers' based on the value of their business  Sharring;corporate data about your transaction history with other firms is a source of revenue.
  • 35. STAGES IN SERVICE FIRM COMPETITIVENESS If a service firm is to remain competetive, continuous improvment in productivity and quality must be part of its strategy and corporate culture.  Available for service  Journeyman  Distinctive competence achieved  World-class service delivery
  • 36. AVAIABLE FOR SERVICE Some services firms and often, government services in particular , fall into this category because they view operations as a necessery evil to be performed at minimum cost. This firms are noncompetitive, and they only exist in this stage until they are challenged by competition.
  • 37. JOURNEYMAN After maintaining a sheltered existence in stage 1, a service firm may face competition and, thus may be forced to reevaluate its delivery system.Operations managers then must adopt industry practices to maintain parity with new competitors and avoid a significant loss of market share.
  • 38. DISTINCTIVE COMPETENCE ACHIVED Firms in stage 3 are fotunate to have senior managers with a vision of what createsvalue for the customer and who understand the role that operations managers must play in delivering the service.
  • 39. WORLD-CLASS SERVICE DELIVERY Not satisfied with just meeting customer expectations, world-class firms expand on these expectations to levels that competitors find difficult to meet. Management is pro active in performing higher standarts of performance and identifying new business opportunities by listening to customers.world- class service firm such as disney,marriot and american airlines define the quality standarts by whic others are judged.
  • 40. THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION