Monday, April 18, 2016

The Role of Customers Within the Organisation

The “key characteristic of a service is that it takes place at the interface with the customer”, therefore without customers the service does not exist (Maull, Geraldi & Johnston 2012). The role of the customer within a florist is to identify their needs and wants and communicate as effectively as possible to the service provider.
There is significant variance in the amount of participation that customers apply, and the optimal level may not always be reached (Gallan et al. 2012). As illustrated in Figure 11.1, a florist’s customer’s optimal level of participation is moderate. A florist like Canary Jane’s Flowers requires customer inputs for an adequate outcome but the florist still provides the range of flowers. It is not considered high participation because the client participation does not guide what flowers you buy, and customer does not co-create the outcome, like a personal trainer would.
The customer needs to be able to demonstrate the desire to search for information or a particular product, or able to create a flower arrangement order. In Canary Jane’s case the customer would either want to search for information about what they want, whether it be flowers or a gift, or have the ability to understand what type of flowers they want and order an arrangement. The employee provides product knowledge, organisation offerings and an end result; regardless if there is a sale or not.
It’s important to highlight that Canary Jane’s is a family friendly business; they sell some children toys and therefore attract a lot of adult customers with infants. Children can be stubborn and not obedient when they are told not to touch items, you can only control children to a certain extent. Due to this these customers are not able to perform their role in the service. However, Canary Jane’s have implemented a strategic method of dealing with such customers, they have put all the unbreakable and not precious items on the low height so this way the children can still touch items but there is no issue of them breaking these items.


The organisation, although a service, creates tangible aspects to support the intangible service. For instance, at Canary Jane’s Flowers they provide a business card of contact details on the gift bag with the purchase as well as a physical copy of the debit card receipt, (refer to appendix photos 11.21, 11.22, 11.23) therefore the business played their role in this encounter but if the customer does not follow through with their implicit role of storing their receipt for a reasonable period, then a resolution in order to resolve post purchase issues from the customer’s side has not been fulfilled. Since Canary Jane’s Flowers has attached their business details, it’s the customer’s implicit responsibility to contact the store if an issue arises; this is in both parties best interest. This leads into complaint behaviour and how to deal with complaints.

References: 


Maull, R, Geraldi, J & Johnston, R 2012, 'Service Supply Chains: A Customer Perspective', Journal of Supply Chain Management, vol. 48, no. 4, pp. 72-86.

Gallan, A, Jarvis, C, Brown, S & Bitner, M 2012, 'Customer positivity and participation in services: an empirical test in a health care context', Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, vol. 41, no. 3, pp. 338-356.

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