Managing People For Service Advantage
Managing People For Service Advantage
Managing People For Service Advantage
Customers perspective: Encounter with service staff is most important aspect of a service Firms perspective: Frontline (Boundary spanners) is an important source of differentiation and competitive advantage. Boundary spanners are:
A core part of the product the Service firm The brand Anticipating customer needs Customizing service delivery Building personalized relationships
scrutiny
by)
The act of expressing socially desired emotions during service transactions is referred to as emotional labor (Hochschild, The Managed Heart*)
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Organization versus Client: Dilemma whether to follow company rules or to satisfy customer demands
This conflict is especially acute in organizations that are not customer oriented
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Client versus Client: Conflicts between customers that demand service staff intervention
Customers Experience
In a hotel, everybody except the cook directly interacts
The quality of all these people will determine the service experience for a typical customer of the hotel. 7
Cycle of Failure
Customer turnover Repeat emphasis on attracting new customers Failure to develop customer loyalty
High employee turnover; poor service quality No continuity in relationship for customer
Use of technology Emphasis on to control quality rules rather than service Payment of low wages Minimization of selection effort Minimization of training
Customer dissatisfaction
Cycle of Failure
The employee cycle of failure Narrow job design for low skill levels Emphasis on rules rather than service Use of technology to control quality The customer cycle of failure Managers short-sighted assumptions about financial implications of low pay, high turnover human resource strategies
Cycle of Failure
Costs of short-sighted policies are ignored Loss of expertise among departing employees Disruption to service from unfilled jobs Constant expense of recruiting, hiring, training Lower productivity of inexperienced new workers Loss of revenue stream from dissatisfied customers who go elsewhere Loss of potential customers who are turned off by negative word-of-mouth Higher costs of winning new customers to replace those lost more need for advertising and promotional discounts
Cycle Of Mediocrity
Customers trade horror stories Other suppliers (if any) seen as equally poor Employees spend working life in environment of mediocrity Narrow design of jobs No incentive for cooperative relationship to obtain better service Complaints met by indifference or hostility Emphasis on rules vs. pleasing customers
Jobs are boring and repetitive; employees unresponsive Resentment at inflexibility and lack of employee initiative; complaints to employees
Training emphasizes Success = learning rules not making mistakes Service not focused on customers needs Good wages/benefits high job security
Promotion and pay Initiative is increases based discouraged on longevity, lack of mistakes
Source: Heskett and Schlesinger
Customer dissatisfaction
Cycle Of Mediocrity
Most commonly found in large, bureaucratic organizations Service delivery is oriented toward
Standardized service Operational efficiencies Prevention of employee fraud and favoritism toward specific customers
Cycle of Mediocrity
Job responsibilities narrowly and unimaginatively defined Successful performance measured by absence of mistakes Training focuses on learning rules and technical aspects of jobnot on improving interactions with customers and co-workers
Cycle of Success
Low customer turnover Repeat emphasis on customer loyalty and retention Customer loyalty
Lowered turnover, high service quality Continuity in relationship with customer Employee satisfaction, positive service attitude
Extensive training
Cycle of Success
Longer-term view of financial performance; firm seeks to prosper by investing in people Attractive compensation packages attract better job applicants More focused recruitment, intensive training, and higher wages make it more likely that employees are:
Cycle of Success
Broadened job descriptions with empowerment practices enable frontline staff to control quality and facilitate service recovery Regular customers more likely to remain loyal because:
Appreciate continuity in service relationships Have higher satisfaction due to higher quality
Hire the right people Enable these people Motivate and energize your people
Leadership that:
Fosters a strong service culture with passion for service and productivity Drives values that inspires, energizes and guides service providers
Empower frontline Build high performance service delivery teams Extensive training
Recruitment
The right people are a firms most important asset: Take a focused, marketing-like approach to recruitment Clarify what must be hired versus what can be taught
Clarify nature of the working environment, corporate values and style etc
Ensure candidates have/can obtain needed qualifications
Select and Hire the Right People: How to Identify Best Candidates
Observe behavior
Hire based on observed behavior, not words you hear Best predictor of future behavior is past behavior Consider group hiring sessions where candidates are given group tasks Willingness to treat co-workers and customers with courtesy, consideration, and tact Perceptiveness regarding customer needs Ability to communicate accurately and pleasantly
Use structured interviews built around job requirements Use more than one interviewer to reduce similar to me biases
Chance for candidates to try on the job Assess how candidates respond to job realities Allow candidates to self select themselves out of the job Manage new employees expectation of job
Promote core values, get emotional commitment to strategy Get managers to teach why, what, and how of job
Both are necessary but neither alone is sufficient for optimal job performance
Staffs product knowledge is a key aspect of service quality Staff must explain product features and position products correctly
Product/service knowledge
Service Orientation
Service employees need the right attitude towards service. Service is not being servile In fact, service jobs provide a lot of enriching experiences as well, and a lot of customers are very understanding, well-behaved and courteous under normal situations. 28
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place,
ranging
from
recruitment,
training,
motivation, to making the best use of the human resources, while keeping them happy.
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