understanding of customer service for Diploma in Customer Service Level 3. Learning Outcome 1: Be able to follow their organisation’s accepted customer service language Assessment Criteria: 1.1 Communicate to customers their organisation’s service offer‚ how it balances organisational and customer needs and how it meets customer expectations 1.2 Compare the service offers of commercial‚ public sector and third sector organisations and how they each meet customer expectations 1.3
Premium Customer service Customer
EFFECT OF AFTER SALE SERVICES ON CUSTOMER SATISFACTION AND LOYALTY IN AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRY OF ETHIOPIA BY KINDYE ESSA MUSTOFA ADDIS ABABA UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF MANAGEMENT‚ INFORMATION AND ECONOMICS SCIENCE MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION PROGRAM August 2011 EFFECT OF AFTER SALE SERVICES ON CUSTOMER SATISFACTION AND LOYALTY IN AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRY OF ETHIOPIA A Thesis Submitted to the School of Graduate Studies of Addis Ababa University in Partial Fulfillment to the Requirements
Premium Customer service Customer satisfaction Service system
International Review of Management and Marketing Vol. 2‚ No. 4‚ 2012‚ pp.220-230 ISSN: 2146-4405 www.econjournals.com Customer Relationship Management (CRM) in Hotel Industry: A framework Proposal on the Relationship among CRM Dimensions‚ Marketing Capabilities and Hotel Performance Abdul Alem Mohammed School of Tourism‚ Hospitality and Environmental Management‚ COLGIS‚ Univerisiti Utara Malaysia‚ Sintok‚ Malaysia. Email: abd_102006@yahoo.com Basri bin Rashid School of Tourism‚ Hospitality
Premium Marketing Customer relationship management
Implementing a Customer Relationship Strategy" The Asymmetric Impa ’et of Poor Versus Excellent Execution Mark R. Colgate Peter J. Danaher University of Auckland‚ New Zealand The benefits of developing customer relationships are well established. However‚ a well-intentioned relationship marketing strategy may fail because of poor implementation. In this study‚ the authors look at the effects of implementing a customer relationship strategy. Specifically‚ they examine the implementation
Premium Marketing
A Term paper on CUSTOMER SATISFACTION AND BEYOND Subject: Sales management Submitted to: Mr. Raghunathan Submitted By: Group: 13 Praveen Kumar Jha (09234) Ravi Teja Reddy. S (0409020) Ramya. K (09238) Shwetha Reddy. T (0409018) Krishna Sumanth .C (0409004) Executive summary: Business industry today is complex. There are big competitions in every business. That is why many research and study are being conduct for their continuous growth. Customer’s loyalty is one factor that can
Premium Sales Customer service Customer
LITERATURE REVIEW Job Satisfaction and Turnover Intention This study was conducted to measure the level of job satisfaction and its impact on turnover intention. Job Satisfaction Survey (JSS) questionnaire containing nine facets of job satisfaction and a questionnaire containing three items for measuring job satisfaction and turnover intention respectively were used for data collection from private sector. Job satisfaction is defined as a person’s evaluation of his or Her job and work context
Premium Organization Employment Job satisfaction
1.0 Introduction The term “customer loyalty” is indisputably one of the most widely studied subjects by researchers in the world‚ intensively evolving over the years. According to past reviews‚ loyalty has been defined as a repeat purchase that is a result of a preference‚ attitude or market share. However‚ according to Uncles‚ Dowling and Hammond’s (2003) review of literature‚ there is no universally agreed definition (Jacoby and Chestnut‚ 1978; Dick and Basu‚ 1994; Oliver‚ 1999). Therefore‚
Premium Marketing Loyalty program
101 Manage customers for profits not just sales) Benson P. Shapiro‚ VKastuh Rangan‚ Rowland T. Moharty‚ and Elliot B. Ross (rl3 High sales volume does not necessarily mean high income‚ as many companies have found to their sorrow. In fact‚ profits (as a percentage of sales) are often much higher on some orders than on others‚ for reasons managers sometimes do not well understand. If prices are appropriate‚ why is there such striking variation? Let’s look at two examples of selling and pricing
Premium Cost Costs Cost accounting
http://jsr.sagepub.com Journal of Service Research DOI: 10.1177/1094670506294666 Journal of Service Research 2006; 9; 113 Denish Shah‚ Roland T. Rust‚ A. Parasuraman‚ Richard Staelin and George S. Day The Path to Customer Centricity http://jsr.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/9/2/113 The online version of this article can be found at: Published by: http://www.sagepublications.com On behalf of: Center for Excellence in Service‚ University of Maryland Additional services and information
Premium Marketing
LITERATURE REVIEW 2.1 Introduction “Job satisfaction does not seem to reduce absence‚ turnover and perhaps accident rates”. -Robert L. Kahn “Job satisfaction is a general attitude towards one’s job: the difference between the amount of reward workers receive and the amount they believe they should receive.” -P. Robbins Job satisfaction defines as “The amount of over all positive affect (or feeling) that individuals have toward their jobs.” -Hugh J. Arnold and Daniel C. Feldman “Job satisfaction is the
Premium Job satisfaction