Monday, April 18, 2016

Service Quality and Service Guarantee

Service quality defines the level a customer is satisfied because it is the critical element customers use to evaluate service (Zeithaml, Bitner & Gremler 2013, p. 87). Therefore in a consumer service experience within a store, service providers must reach out to customers and listen to their desired fulfilments while also assisting their journey from enquiries, selection process, purchase process through to the possible post purchase issues. Ensuring service quality and eliminating the need for service recovery is “doing it right the first time”, this shows the business is reliable (Zeithaml, Bitner & Gremler 2013, p. 201). Canary Jane’s Flowers is a floral service combined with highly priced yet small sized gift goods, for example candles, rosedale hankies and hand creams. The higher costs of the small gift products would naturally create an implied higher service quality. “The intangibility and unpredictability of services generally cause consumers to perceive a higher risk associated with a service” (Sharma & Varghese 2013). Customers can have uncertainty and be unconfident of the service quality for particularly high priced stores, like Canary Jane’s (Sharma & Varghese 2013).
A method to reduce consumer’s uncertainty with the quality of a product is guarantees, which ensure the customer is 100% satisfied (Hart 1988). “A service guarantee is a promise by a company to compensate the customer in some way if the defined level of service delivered is not met.” (Sharma & Varghese 2013). There are several characteristics of effective guarantees that will be explained relating to Canary Jane’s Flowers and the benefits of having an effective guarantee will be illustrated. Effective guarantees should be unconditional, meaningful, easy to understand and easy to invoke (Zeithaml, Bitner & Gremler 2013, p. 202). Canary Jane’s guarantees that the flowers will last at least 4 days after buying them, this is unconditional because it “promises customer satisfaction unconditionally, without exceptions” (Hart 1988). This guarantee is meaningful because it covers the aspects of the service that is important to the customer, which is the freshness and quality of the flowers. It is also meaningful financially; a full refund or replacement is given. The guarantee is easy to understand as it is simple and pinpoints the promise (Hart 1988). A guarantee must be easy to invoke, as explained by Hart (1988) “A customer who is already dissatisfied should not have to jump through hoops to invoke a guarantee.”
“Service guarantees have been advocated as a potentially powerful weapon today in trying to differentiate between services and gain the competitive edge” (Sharma & Varghese 2013). Another benefit of service guarantees is maintaining quality (Zeithaml, Bitner & Gremler 2013, p. 204).The organisation can maintain quality as the guarantee is an indicator of what the service should provide, for instance at Canary Jane’s Flowers they guarantee same day delivery if you order before 2pm. By having this benchmark an employee knows the minimum needs that need to be met for the customer, which in this case is getting the flowers delivered to the customer on the same day. Canary Jane’s Flowers uses Murphy Alan Johns for the delivery of their orders and if for any reason there is a disruption with the process, then the staff will assist with the delivery to ensure that the guarantee is met. Small to medium enterprises often bestow less service guarantees due to less workers to help achieve promises, avoiding over promising is considered safe in the employer's eyes. The low number of apparent written and verbal guarantees from Canary Jane’s will ultimately impact the “willingness of the customer to make frequent visits” (Sharma & Varghese 2013). Ensuring the guarantees are used effectively, they will benefit the business. Canary Jane’s will increase loyal customers through the use of guarantees, which equates to profitability in the long run. Guarantees are irrelevant if the organisation does not monitor whether they are successfully delivering a quality service.



References: 

Zeithaml, V, Bitner, M & Gremler, D 2013, Services marketing, McGraw-Hill Irwin, New York.
Sharma, K & Varghese, M 2013, 'Influence of Service Guarantee on Consumer Behavior in organized retail stores', Romanian Journal of Marketing, vol. 1, pp. 10-17.
Hart, C 1988, 'The Power of Unconditional Service Guarantees', Harvard Business Review, vol. 66, no. 4, pp. 54-63.

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