1 / 16

Service Recovery

Service Recovery. Mgt 664. Service Recovery. You can please - all of the people some of the time; some of the people all of the time; BUT, you can never please all of the people all the time.

haley
Download Presentation

Service Recovery

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Service Recovery Mgt 664

  2. Service Recovery You can please - all of the people some of the time; some of the people all of the time; BUT, you can never please all of the people all the time. • A group of four people go out to dinner on Friday night. Three people’s food is brought to the table, one person’s order was lost. What is an adequate recovery? • What if it happened at lunch on Wednesday?

  3. Services loved and despised • Name a service to which you have committed to never return? • Name a service where you have experienced a great recovery?

  4. “Reworking” customers not easy • Recoveries fix circumstances and attitude • 96% of disgruntled customers “walk” rather than complain. • Complaining customers are an asset • Demanding customers are an asset

  5. Key to a quick recovery • Shift efforts from recovery to prevention • Capture/document the failures • Insert counter measures • If 96% of service failures “walk,” service providers may know of failures that are not obvious to management. • How management responds to the providers will determine how much is revealed to them in the future.

  6. Learning vs. Accountability Blame- free culture open reporting Full investigation     learning    Punishment accountability A preliminary model  X X X Process improvement

  7. The Value of Open Reporting Failures Observed (without voluntary reporting) All failures Near Misses

  8. Accountability AND Open Reporting • just culturejust, a. 2. Equitable; impartial; fair; as, a just decision • provides a fair and productive alternative to the two extremes of punitive or blame-free cultures. • balances the need to have a non-punitive learning environment with the need to hold persons accountable for their actions. David Marx, Just Culture: A Primer for Health Care Executives http://www.mers-tm.net/support/Marx_Primer.pdf

  9. Just Culture at a Glance

  10. The Problematic Middle Ground • At-risk behavior • Did the employee intend to violate the rule? Yes • Did the employee understand the risk? No • Some deviations from rules may be justified • Sometimes, the written procedure and the actual procedure performed by employees don’t match.

  11. Changing Standards Old Standard Old Standard New Standard New Standard

  12. Just Culture without it with it Ignorance is not bliss.

  13. Service Recovery Policies • Bumper to bumper warranty • Unconditional Guarantee • Replacement or money back • Discount on current service • Discount coupons for future service

  14. Service Recovery Policies Effective Unconditional Guarantees • Unconditional without exceptions • Easy to understand and communicate • Meaningful (valued by customer) • Easy and painless to invoke • Easy to collect

  15. Won’t customer take advantage? • Negative word of mouth (customer tell an average of 9-10 people) • Low propensity to complain. Only 4% complain about actual failures • Actual failure vs. perceived failure: only perceptions matter • May save a lifetime customer

  16. Quitting is an option • There are customers that it would be better for your competitor to have. • Perpetually dissatisfied • Unprofitable

More Related