1 / 15

Service Recovery

Service Recovery. Mtg. 410 Donna J. Hill, Ph.D. Fall 2000. Service Recovery. Refers to the actions taken by an organization in response to a service failure. Figure 7-1 Unhappy Customers’ Repurchase Intentions. Unhappy Customers Who Don’t Complain. 9%.

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 Mtg. 410 Donna J. Hill, Ph.D. Fall 2000

  2. Service Recovery • Refers to the actions taken by an organization in response to a service failure

  3. Figure 7-1Unhappy Customers’ Repurchase Intentions Unhappy Customers Who Don’t Complain 9% Unhappy Customers Who Do Complain 37% 19% Complaints Not Resolved 46% 54% Complaints Resolved 70% 82% Complaints Resolved Quickly 95% Percent of Customers Who Will Buy Again Minor complaints ($1-$5 losses) Major complaints (over $100 losses) Source: Adapted from data reported by the Technical Assistance Research Program.

  4. Recovery Paradox • Companies should plan to disappoint customers so that they can recover and gain even greater loyalty from them as a result!

  5. Figure 7-3 Customer Response Following Service Failure Service Failure Take Action Do Nothing Stay with Provider Switch Providers Complain toProvider Complain to Family & Friends Complain to Third Party Switch Providers Stay with Provider

  6. Types of Complainers • Passives • Voicers • Irates • Activists

  7. Fairness • Outcome (fair compensation) • Procedural (policies, rules, and timeliness) • Interactional (politeness, courtesy, honesty)

  8. Welcome and Encourage Complaints Fail Safe the Service Service Recovery Strategies Act Quickly Learn from Lost Customers Treat Customers Fairly Learn from Recovery Experiences Figure 7-5 Service Recovery Strategies

  9. Pricing • High Price • Price Increases • Unfair Pricing • Deceptive Pricing Figure 7-6Causes Behind Service Switching Inconvenience • Location/Hours • Wait for Appointment • Wait for Service Core Service Failure • Service Mistakes • Billing Errors • Service Catastrophe Service Encounter Failures Service Switching Behavior • Uncaring • Impolite • Unresponsive • Unknowledgeable Response to Service Failure • Negative Response • No Response • Reluctant Response Competition • Found Better Service Ethical Problems • Cheat • Hard Sell • Unsafe • Conflict of Interest Involuntary Switching Source: Sue Keaveney • Customer Moved • Provider Closed

  10. Service Guarantees • guarantee = an assurance of the fulfillment of a condition (Webster’s Dictionary) • for products, guarantee often done in the form of a warranty • services are often not guaranteed • cannot return the service • service experience is intangible • (so what do you guarantee?)

  11. Table 7-7Characteristics of an Effective Service Guarantee Source: Christopher W.L. Hart, “The Power of Unconditional Guarantees,” Harvard Business Review, July-August, 1988, pp. 54-62.

  12. Why a Good Guarantee Works • forces company to focus on customers • sets clear standards • generates feedback • forces company to understand why it failed • builds “marketing muscle”

  13. Service Guarantees • Does everyone need a guarantee? • Reasons companies do NOT offer guarantees: • guarantee would be at odds with company’s image • too many uncontrollable external variables • fears of cheating by customers • costs of the guarantee are too high

  14. Service Guarantees • service guarantees work for companies who are already customer-focused • effective guarantees can be BIG deals - they put the company at risk in the eyes of the customer • customers should be involved in the design of service guarantees • the guarantee should be so stunning that it comes as a surprise -- a WOW!! factor • “it’s the icing on the cake, not the cake”

  15. Lessons from the Hampton Inn Guarantee • Focus on customer needs. • KISS • Deep management conviction is fundamental. • Empowerment is the key. • Train, train, train. Reinforce, reinforce, reinforce. • Perpetuate stories of the guarantee in action • Understand the moments of truth. • Teach customers to complain. • Develop tracking systems. • Give regular feedback on reasons the guarantee was invoked. • Use internal guarantees to support the external guarantees.

More Related