Service Characteristics
Service Characteristics
Service Characteristics
DEFINITIONS
Services are economic activities that create value and provide benefits for
customers at specific times and places bringing about a desired change in or on
behalf of the recipient of the services
• delivered from the accountable service provider, mostly in close coactions with his service suppliers,
• generated by functions of technical systems and/or by distinct activities of individuals, respectively,
• commissioned according to the needs of his service consumers by the service customer from the
accountable service provider,
• rendered individually to an authorized service consumer at his/her dedicated request,
• And, finally, consumed and utilized by the requesting service consumer for executing and/or supporting
his/her day-to-day business tasks or private activities.
A service is the non-material equivalent of a good. Service provision has been defined as an economic activity
that does not result in ownership and is claimed to be a process that creates benefits by facilitating either a
change in customers, a change in their physical possessions, or a change in their intangible assets.
Meaning
Service plays an important role in every national’s economy and country economy
always depends on service infrastructure like transportation, communication, education
and government services. In today's economy, you don't have to produce anything to get
rich not have to employ anybody. Now day’s money rests on bigger markets and more
ways to make money. Having a name, a status, an idea can be sufficient. E. g.
entertainment and sports figures make money by bringing people happiness.
A service is a financial activity that is basically intangible and does not result in the
ownership of anything. Service can not be owned by anyone, The American economy is
quickly becoming service leaning. According to the Monthly Labor Review Online,
after Second World War factory jobs declined in figure, while service-based
employment increased. And it is increasing with rapid growth. Difference between
services and manufacturing processes comprises the nature of outputs and the primary
production processes, which are closely related. Service inputs include the facility
where the service is provided, any products that are essential in providing the service.
Even product-based organizations must give and manage a service package for their
clientele. The bunch of services might include pre-sale services such as technical
advice and dependable delivery, as well as post-sale services such as prompt repair and
training. Not like most products, services are intangible, inseparable, variable and
perishable.
• Intangibility: Cannot be seen, felt, tasted, smelt or heard before being
purchased
• Challenge: Making the intangible, tangible
Service Characteristics
Intangibility of service: Service cannot be defined as physical attributes because it
cannot be seen, tasted, felt, heard, touched or smelled before it is bought, so it is
difficult for consumers to tell in advance what they will be getting. (Sheila Webber,
2001) The experience consumers obtain from the service has an impact on how they
will perceive it. And perceived service is risky and difficult to evaluate, customer tend
to rely more on personal references, reputation, facilities of the service provider as an
indication of quality. Service marketers identify the feelings that they want the
customer to experience as a result of the service. They stress the positive elements of
tangibility in the service, make all communications with the customer very clear and
focus constantly on service quality. For example when anybody buys a car, he/she takes
it to test drive, if they like it than only pay and buy the car ,never pay for test drive. But
if you buy a meal at a restaurant, you do not know what is going to serve. Now buyers
only look at tangible evidence like cleanliness, decoration, staff movement, which
provide the information of quality of intangible service. (Kotler et al. 1996, 61)
Inseparability of service: Services cannot be separated from the service supplier. It is
labour intensive. After it is sold, the customer can not be taken away from the producer
it is simultaneously produced and consumed. It is being produced at the same time that
the customer is receiving. So customer is also part of the product. For example in a
restaurant, you order your meal, during the time of waiting and delivery of the meal, the
service provided by the service provider is all part of the service production process and
is inseparable, the staff in a restaurant are as part of the process as well as the quality of
food provided.
key characteristics.
1. Intangibility
Services are intangible and insubstantial: they cannot be touched, gripped, handled,
looked at, smelled, tasted or heard. Thus, there is neither potential nor need for
transport, storage or stocking of services. Furthermore, a service cannot be (re)sold or
owned by somebody, neither can it be turned over from the service provider to the
service consumer nor returned from the service consumer to the service provider.
Solely, the service delivery can be commissioned to a service provider who must
generate and render the service at the distinct request of an authorized service consumer.
2. Perish ability
• The service relevant resources, processes and systems are assigned for service
delivery during a definite period in time. If the designated or scheduled service
consumer does not request and consume the service during this period, the service
cannot be performed for him. From the perspective of the service provider, this is a
lost business opportunity as he cannot charge any service delivery; potentially, he can
assign the resources, processes and systems to another service consumer who requests
a service. Examples: The hair dresser serves another client when the scheduled
starting time or time slot is over. An empty seat on a plane never can be utilized and
charged after departure.
• When the service has been completely rendered to the requesting service consumer, this
particular service irreversibly vanishes as it has been consumed by the service consumer.
Example: the passenger has been transported to the destination and cannot be transported
3. Inseparability
The service provider is indispensable for service delivery as he must promptly generate and render the
service to the requesting service consumer. In many cases the service delivery is executed
automatically but the service provider must preparatorily assign resources and systems and actively
keep up appropriate service delivery readiness and capabilities. Additionally, the service consumer is
inseparable from service delivery because he is involved in it from requesting it up to consuming the
rendered benefits. Examples: The service consumer must sit in the hair dresser's shop & chair or in the
plane & seat; correspondingly, the hair dresser or the pilot must be in the same shop or plane,
respectively, for delivering the service.
4. Simultaneity
Services are rendered and consumed during the same period of time. As soon as the service consumer
has requested the service (delivery), the particular service must be generated from scratch without any
delay and friction and the service consumer instantaneously consumes the rendered benefits for
executing his upcoming activity or task.
5. Variability
Each service is unique. It is one-time generated, rendered and consumed and can never be exactly
repeated as the point in time, location, circumstances, conditions, current configurations and/or
assigned resources are different for the next delivery, even if the same service consumer requests the
same service. Many services are regarded as heterogeneous or lacking homogeneity and are typically
modified for each service consumer or each new situation (consumerised). Example: The taxi service
which transports the service consumer from his home to the opera is different from the taxi service
which transports the same service consumer from the opera to his home - another point in time, the
other direction, maybe another route, probably another taxi driver and cab.
Each of these characteristics is retractable per se and their inevitable coincidence complicates the
consistent service conception and makes service delivery a challenge in each and every case. Proper
service marketing requires creative visualization to effectively evoke a concrete image in the service
consumer's mind. From the service consumer's point of view, these characteristics make it difficult, or
even impossible, to evaluate or compare services prior to experiencing the service delivery.
Mass generation and delivery of services is very difficult. This can be seen as a problem of inconsistent
service quality. Both inputs and outputs to the processes involved providing services are highly
variable, as are the relationships between these processes, making it difficult to maintain consistent
service quality. For many services there is labor intensity as services usually involve considerable
human activity, rather than a precisely determined process; exceptions include utilities. Human
resource management is important. The human factor is often the key success factor in service
economies. It is difficult to achieve economies of scale or gain dominant market share. There are
demand fluctuations and it can be difficult to forecast demand. Demand can vary by season, time of
day, business cycle, etc. There is consumer involvement as most service provision requires a high
degree of interaction between service consumer and service provider. There is a customer-based
relationship based on creating long-term business relationships. Accountants, attorneys, and financial
advisers maintain long-term relationships with their clients for decades. These repeat consumers refer
friends and family, helping to create a client-based relationship.
Consumer Management:
Can be minimised through effective consumer management. (separating smokers from
non-smokers, restaurant reservations)
Most errors are one-time events and cannot be foreseen nor corrected ahead of
time
Consistency of service varies from firm to firm, among employees of the firm
and also while interacting with the same service provider on day-to-day basis
Service standardisation and quality control are difficult to achieve and maintain
since each employee is a different personality
Customisation:
Producing or creating services customised exactly to the consumer’s specifications.
Such services end up satisfying a customer, but take longer to produce.
However, the service provider could end up charging a premium for such services
Standardisation:
The service firm could look at standardisation of services through training employees
and service providers
A better option is to replace human capital with machines (ATMs, automated car wash)
• Some services can inventory a part of their services (mostly related to goods)
• DEMAND STRATEGY:
• Development of non-peak time demand; use of non peak time to prepare for the
pea time demand
• SUPPLY STRATEGY: