WELCOME TO SERVICE ECONOMY THE SERVICE ECONOMY Chapter

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WELCOME TO SERVICE ECONOMY THE SERVICE ECONOMY Chapter 1 Mc. Graw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2014

WELCOME TO SERVICE ECONOMY THE SERVICE ECONOMY Chapter 1 Mc. Graw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2014 by The Mc. Graw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Learning Objectives • Describe the central role of services in an economy. • Identify

Learning Objectives • Describe the central role of services in an economy. • Identify and differentiate the five stages of economic activity. • Describe the features of preindustrial, and postindustrial societies. • Describe the features of the experience economy contrasting the consumer (B 2 C) with the business (B 2 B). • Explain the essential features of the service-dominant logic. • Identify and critique the six distinctive characteristics of a service operation and explain the implications for managers. • Describe a service using the service package dimensions. • Use the service process matrix to classify a service. 1 -2

Service Definitions Services are deeds, processes, and performances. Valarie Zeithaml & Mary Jo Bitner

Service Definitions Services are deeds, processes, and performances. Valarie Zeithaml & Mary Jo Bitner A service is a time-perishable, intangible experience performed for a customer acting in the role of a co-producer. James Fitzsimmons 1 -3

Definition of Service Firms Service enterprises are organizations that facilitate the production and distribution

Definition of Service Firms Service enterprises are organizations that facilitate the production and distribution of goods, support other firms in meeting their goals, and add value to our personal lives. James Fitzsimmons 1 -4

Percent Employment in Services Nation % of World Labor 21. 0 17. 0 %

Percent Employment in Services Nation % of World Labor 21. 0 17. 0 % Ag 50 60 15 17 35 23 USA Indonesia Brazil Russia Japan Nigeria Banglades h 4. 8 3. 9 3. 0 2. 5 2. 4 2. 2 2 45 23 12 5 70 63 20 16 24 23 26 10 11 78 39 53 65 69 20 26 Germany 1. 4 3 28 69 China India % Goods % Services 1 -5

Role of Services in an Economy FINANCIAL SERVICES · Financing · Leasing · Insurance

Role of Services in an Economy FINANCIAL SERVICES · Financing · Leasing · Insurance MANUFACTURING Services inside company: · Finance · Accounting · Legal · R&D and design BUSINESS SERVICES · Consulting · Auditing · Advertising · Waste disposal INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICE · Communications · Transportation · Utilities · Banking DISTRIBUTION SERVICES · Wholesaling · Retailing · Repairing PERSONAL SERVICES · Healthcare · Restaurants · Hotels CONSUMER (Self-service) GOVERNMENT SERVICES · Military · Education · Judicial · Police and fire protection 1 -6

Stages of Economic Activity Quinary (Extending Human Potential): Health, Education, Research, Arts, Recreation Quaternary

Stages of Economic Activity Quinary (Extending Human Potential): Health, Education, Research, Arts, Recreation Quaternary (Trade and Commerce): Transportation, Communications, Retailing, Finance, Government Tertiary (Domestic Services): Restaurants, Hotels, Laundry, Maintenance Secondary (Goods-Producing): Manufacturing, Processing Primary (Extractive): Agriculture, Mining, Fishing, Forestry 1 -7

Trends in U. S. Employment by Sector Percent Services: Value from enhancing the capabilities

Trends in U. S. Employment by Sector Percent Services: Value from enhancing the capabilities and interactions among people Goods: Value from making a product Agriculture: Value from harvesting nature Year 2012 1 -8

Stages of Economic Development Society Game Pre. Against Industrial Nature Industrial Postindustrial Predominant Activity

Stages of Economic Development Society Game Pre. Against Industrial Nature Industrial Postindustrial Predominant Activity Use of Human Labor Agriculture Mining Raw muscle power Against Goods Machine fabricated production tending nature Among Services Persons Artistic Creative Intellectual Standard Unit of of Living Social Life Measure Structure Extended household Individual Subsistence Quantity of goods Community Quality of life in terms health, education, recreation Technology Routine Simple hand Traditional tools Authoritative Bureaucratic Machines Hierarchical Interdependent Information 1 -9

Distribution of U. S. Employment, 2009 Agriculture and mining 2% Construction Retail and wholesale

Distribution of U. S. Employment, 2009 Agriculture and mining 2% Construction Retail and wholesale trade 14% 5% Manufacturing 9% Federal government 2% Professional and business services 12% Information 2% Transportation and utilities 19% Other services 4% Health care and social assistance 11% Educational services 2% Leisure and hospitality 9% State and local government 13% Self employed and Financial services unpaid family workers 6% 6% 1 -10

Projected U. S. Job Growth, 2008 – 2018 1 -11

Projected U. S. Job Growth, 2008 – 2018 1 -11

Economic Evolution Economy Agrarian Industrial Service Experience Economic Offering Food Packaged goods Commodity service

Economic Evolution Economy Agrarian Industrial Service Experience Economic Offering Food Packaged goods Commodity service Consumer services Business services Function Extract Make Deliver Stage Co-create Nature Fungible Tangible Intangible Memorable Effectual Attribute Natural Standardized Customized Personal Growth Method of Supply Stored in bulk Inventoried Delivered on demand Revealed over time Sustained over time Seller Trader Producer Provider Stager Collaborator Buyer Market Customer Client Guest Collaborator Expectation Quantity Features Benefits Sensations Capability 1 -12

The Four Realms of an Experience 1 -13

The Four Realms of an Experience 1 -13

Experience Design Principles • Theme the Experience (Forum shops) • Harmonize Impressions with Positive

Experience Design Principles • Theme the Experience (Forum shops) • Harmonize Impressions with Positive Cues (O’Hare airport parking garage) • Eliminate Negative Cues (Cinemark talking trash containers) • Mix in Memorabilia (Hard Rock T-shirts) • Engage all Five Senses (Mist in Rainforest) 1 -14

Typology of Services in the 21 st Century Core Experience Essential Feature Examples Creative

Typology of Services in the 21 st Century Core Experience Essential Feature Examples Creative Present ideas Advertising, theater Enabling Act as intermediary Transportation, communications Experiential Presence of customer Massage, theme park Extending Extend and maintain Warranty, health check Entrusted Contractual agreement Service/repair, portfolio mgt. Information Access to information Internet search engine Innovation Facilitate new concepts R&D services, product testing Problem solving Access to specialists Consultants, counseling Quality of life Improve well-being Healthcare, recreation, tourism Regulation Establish rules and regulations Environment, legal, patents 1 -15

Foundation Premises of Service. Dominant Logic 1. Service is the fundamental basis of exchange.

Foundation Premises of Service. Dominant Logic 1. Service is the fundamental basis of exchange. 2. Indirect exchange masks the basis of exchange. 3. Goods are distribution mechanisms for service provision. 4. Operant resources are the source of competitive advantage 5. All economies are service economies. 6. The customer is always a co-creator of value. 7. The enterprise can only offer value propositions. 8. A service-centered view is customer oriented and relational. 9. All economic and social actors are resource integrators. 10. Value is uniquely determined by the beneficiary. 1 -16

Distinctive Characteristics of Services • Simultaneity: opportunities for personal selling, interaction creates customer perceptions

Distinctive Characteristics of Services • Simultaneity: opportunities for personal selling, interaction creates customer perceptions of quality • Perishability: cannot inventory, opportunity loss of idle capacity, need to match supply with demand • Intangibility: creative advertising, no patent protection, importance of reputation • Heterogeneity: customer involvement in delivery process results in variability • Customer Participation in the Service Process: attention to facility design, opportunities for co-production, concern for customer and employee behavior 1 -17

Non-ownership Classification of Services Type of Service Customer value Examples Management Challenge Goods rental

Non-ownership Classification of Services Type of Service Customer value Examples Management Challenge Goods rental Obtain temporary right to exclusive use Vehicles, tools, furniture, equipment Site selection and maintenance Place and space rental Obtain exclusive use of defined portion of a larger space Hotel room, seat on airplane, storage unit Housekeeping and achieving economies of scale Labor and expertise Hire other people to do a job Car repair, surgery, management consulting Expertise is a renewable resource, but time is perishable Physical facility usage Gain admission to a facility for a period of time Theme park, camp ground, physical fitness gym Queuing and crowd control Network usage Gain access to participate Electric utility, cell phone, internet Availability and pricing decisions 1 -18

Implications of Rental/Usage Paradigm • Creates the option of renting a good upon demand

Implications of Rental/Usage Paradigm • Creates the option of renting a good upon demand rather than purchase. • Service often involves selling slices of larger physical entities. • Labor and expertise are renewable resources. • Time plays a central role in most services. • Service pricing should vary with time and availability. Question: Can services in general be described as customers sharing resources? 1 -19

Service Package 1 -20

Service Package 1 -20

The Service Package • Supporting Facility: The physical resources that must be in place

The Service Package • Supporting Facility: The physical resources that must be in place before a service can be sold. Examples are golf course, ski lift, hospital, airplane. • Facilitating Goods: The material consumed by the buyer or items provided by the consumer. Examples are food items, legal documents, golf clubs, medical history. • Information: Operations data or information that is provided by the customer to enable efficient and customized service. Examples are patient medical records, seats available on a flight, customer preferences, location of customer to dispatch a taxi. 1 -21

The Service Package (cont. ) • Explicit Services: Benefits readily observable by the senses.

The Service Package (cont. ) • Explicit Services: Benefits readily observable by the senses. The essential or intrinsic features. Examples are quality of meal, attitude of the waiter, on-time departure. • Implicit Services: Psychological benefits or extrinsic features which the consumer may sense only vaguely. Examples are privacy of loan office, security of a well lighted parking lot. 1 -22

The Service Process Matrix Degree of labor Intensity Low High Degree of Interaction and

The Service Process Matrix Degree of labor Intensity Low High Degree of Interaction and Customization Low High Service Factory Service Shop * Airlines * Hospitals * Trucking * Auto repair * Hotels * Other repair services * Resorts and recreation Mass Service * Retailing * Wholesaling * Schools * Retail banking Professional Service * Doctors * Lawyers * Accountants * Architects 1 -23

Open Systems View of Services 1 -24

Open Systems View of Services 1 -24

Village Volvo’s Service Package • Supporting Facility • Facilitating Goods • Information • Explicit

Village Volvo’s Service Package • Supporting Facility • Facilitating Goods • Information • Explicit Services • Implicit Services 1 -25

Village Volvo’s Distinctive Service Characteristics • Intangibility • Perishability • Heterogeneity • Simultaneity •

Village Volvo’s Distinctive Service Characteristics • Intangibility • Perishability • Heterogeneity • Simultaneity • Customer Participation in the Service Process 1 -26

Managing Village Volvo • How could Village Volvo manage its back office (repair operations)

Managing Village Volvo • How could Village Volvo manage its back office (repair operations) like a factory? • How can Village Volvo differentiate itself from Volvo dealers? 1 -27

Xpresso Lube Facility 1 -28

Xpresso Lube Facility 1 -28

Xpresso Lube’s Service Package • Supporting Facility • Facilitating Goods • Information • Explicit

Xpresso Lube’s Service Package • Supporting Facility • Facilitating Goods • Information • Explicit Services • Implicit Services 1 -29

Xpresso Lube’s Distinctive Service Characteristics • Intangibility • Perishability • Heterogeneity • Simultaneity •

Xpresso Lube’s Distinctive Service Characteristics • Intangibility • Perishability • Heterogeneity • Simultaneity • Customer Participation in the Service Process 1 -30

Beyond Xpresso Lube • What elements of Xpresso Lube’s location contribute to its success?

Beyond Xpresso Lube • What elements of Xpresso Lube’s location contribute to its success? • Given the example of Xpresso Lube, what other services could be combined to “add value” for the customer? 1 -31

Discussion Topics • Illustrate how the type of work he or she does influences

Discussion Topics • Illustrate how the type of work he or she does influences a person’s • • • lifestyle. For example, contrast a farmer, a factory worker, and a school teacher. Is it possible for an economy to be based entirely on services? What is the value of self-service in an economy? Determine if the service sector is currently expanding or contracting based upon the Non-Manufacturing Index (NMI) found at the ISM Report on Business on the Institute of Supply Management website: www. ism. ws/ismreport/ What are some management problems associated with allowing service employees to exercise judgment in meeting customer needs? Critique the “Distinctive Characteristics of Service Operations” by arguing that the characteristics of customer participation, simultaneity, perishability, intangibility, and heterogeneity may apply to goods as well. 1 -32

Interactive Class Exercise The class breaks into small groups. Each group identifies service firms

Interactive Class Exercise The class breaks into small groups. Each group identifies service firms that should be listed in the Fortune 100 and places them in rank order of estimated annual revenue. http: //money. cnn. com/magazines/fortune 500/2012/f ull_list/ 1 -33