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Title: Marketing – Chapter 5: Services and Relationship Marketing | Lecture Summary

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This document summarizes Chapter 5 on Services and Relationship Marketing, covering the unique characteristics of services, service processes, and key dimensions of services marketing. It also explains service quality measurement (SERVQUAL), service recovery, relationship marketing principles, loyalty and retention, and customer experience and engagement. The summary is suitable for exam preparation and understanding core concepts in services marketing

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chapter 5: Services and Relationship Marketing

5.1 The Unique Characteristics of Services
What is a service?
- A service is any act or performance offered by one party to another that is essentially
intangible
- Consumption of the service does not result in any transfer of ownership even though
the service process may be attached to a physical product
Why are services important?
- Services are a large part (46%) of the U.S. Gross Domestic Product than goods
- Increase of 200% since 2000
- More demand for services and more interest in new ones

Distinguishing (unique) characteristics of services:
1. Intangibility: (untouchable) Services cannot be seen, tasted,
felt, heard, or smelt before they are bought
- A performance rather than an object
- Difficult to evaluate before consumption
- Increased uncertainty
- Use substitute cues

Quality-related cues:
→ Intrinsic cues: features that come from the product
itself things: you can directly see, touch, smell, taste;
or feel.
→ Extrinsic cues are said to surround the ‘service
product’ and can be changed relatively easily

Evidence management = The use of tangible elements to reinforce the quality of a service
eg. Michelin star, tripadvisor,...

2. Perishability (mortal/ physical): Services are manufactured and consumed
simultaneously: no storage possible (eg. empty seats in a theatre → these
places are lost and can never be sold)
Particularly a problem with demand fluctuations (demand doesn’t stay constant)
- Charging for missed appointments
- Differential pricing
- Reservation system
- Shared services

Increase off-peak demand: finding ways to get more customers during slow or less busy
times
eg. Winter Efteling

Differential pricing = Dynamic pricing:
Charge different prices for the same service depending on
- Time of purchase
- Customer segments

, - Demand levels

Offer additional services: giving customers extra benefits or options beyond the main product
or service
eg. offering a biking tour to your hotel stay

3. Variability
- Services vary greatly depending on who provides them and when, where, and
how
- Quality = difficult to control
eg. in theatre: better main character yesterday → disappointing

→ Increase consistency: People
- Invest in recruiting the right employees
- Provide excellent training
- Motivate staff by providing employee incentives (motivation)

→ Employee empowerment and accountability (responsibility)
- Empower employees to take action
- Increase visibility of service employees and accountability to customers

→ Standardize the service performance (=how well a service does its job)
process

→ With a little help from technology

4. Service inseparability
Services are consumed at the point at which they are produced
→ service delivery cannot be separated or split out of service provision or
service consumption
- Customers participate actively
- Value is created in the provider-customer interaction (co-creation)
- Often in the presence of other customers
→ Particularly difficult when demand rises

5. Lack of ownership
- Services cannot be owned, nothing is transferred
- Loyal schemes (e.g., frequent flyer programmes) are used to create some
sense of ownership
→ psychological ownership: you can manipulate this loyalty
programmes

eg. “I’ve earned Gold status with this airline,” → creates a feeling of pride and
belonging → This emotional attachment makes them more likely to choose the
same airline again, even if a competitor offers a cheaper ticket.

Some remarks on services
- Difficult to protect (E.g., yoga everywhere)
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