CAMBRIDGE ASSOCIATION OF MANAGERS GRADUATE DIPLOMA IN HOSPITALITY‚ TOURISM AND RECREATION. CUSTOMER SERVICE CUSTOMER SATISFACTION IN HOSPITALITY AND TOURISM INDUSTRY [A CASE STUDY OF WHITESANDS BEACH HOTEL] DONE BY : LYNETTE A. NYAGAYA CANDIDATE NO: CAM / 2008 / GD/ KEN/ 00425 PURPOSE : Fulfillment of CAM graduate diploma in hospitality‚ tourism and Recreation. [Customer service] Dated July 2008 Presented to : Cambridge Association of Managers‚ International Examinations‚ Cambridge‚ UK
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PART A 1. INDUSTRY PROFILE 1.1 General Introduction: India’s consumer market is riding the crest of the country’s economic boom. Driven by a young population with access to disposable incomes and easy finance options‚ the consumer market has been throwing up staggering figures. India officially classifies its population in five groups‚ based on annual household income (based on year 1995-96 indices). These groups are: Lower Income; three subgroups of Middle Income; and Higher Income. However‚
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THIRTEEN CUSTOMER SERVICE FACTS BY: Michael A. Aun‚ CSP‚ CPAE Speaker Hall of Fame Reference - http://www.nsacentralflorida.com/Articles/Thirteencsfacts.pdf Thirteen Customer Service Facts. Fact Number One Dissatisfied customers tell an average of ten other people about their bad experience. Twelve percent tell up to twenty people. In very simple terms‚ bad news spreads rather quickly. Don’t think for a moment that your poor performance in servicing your client goes unnoticed. Not only
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TABLE OF CONTENTS Food Service: A Growing Industry 1 Categories of Food Service 2 Catering and Food Delivery Services 3 Hygiene and Sanitation 9 Design and Layout of the Dining 12 And Working Area Principles of Quantity Cooking 15 Planning Menu 21 Capital Requirements‚ Food Costing and Pricing
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Services Marketing A service is the action of doing something for someone or something. It is largely intangible (i.e. not material). A product is tangible (i.e. material) since you can touch it and own it. A service tends to be an experience that is consumed at the point where it is purchased‚ and cannot be owned since is quickly perishes. A person could go to a café one day and have excellent service‚ and then return the next day and have a poor experience. So often marketers talk about the nature
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PARTS OF A RESEARCH PROPOSAL Typical parts of a research proposal are: Title (or Cover) Page Abstract Table of Contents Introduction (including Statement of Problem‚ Purpose of Research‚ and Significance of Research) Background (including Literature Survey) Description of Proposed Research (including Method or Approach) Description of Relevant Institutional Resources List of References Personnel Budget The Title (or Cover) Page. Most sponsoring agencies specify the format for the title page‚
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American International University-Bangladesh (AIUB) Proposal On “Evaluating Services by a Customer Service Department” A study on Real Estate and Developer Business in Bangladesh Supervised By: DR. MD. FARUQUE HOSSAIN Faculty of Masters of Business Administration American International University-Bangladesh (AIUB) Submitted By; Debnath‚Pragya Paramita ID- 11-95135-3 Course name: Research
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INTRODUCTION Service tax is a tax on Services. Service tax is not a tax on profession / trade but it is a tax on the service provided in exercise of the profession / trade. It is leviable only if there is provision of service. SALE V/S SERVICE Service is different from sale. The fact that some goods have been used in the course of providing service’ doesn’t make that transaction a sale. The nature of the transaction depends on the intention of the parties. If the parties intended to enter into
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International Journal of Quality & Reliability Management Emerald Article: Creating‚ Maintaining and Reinforcing a Customer Service Culture Richard A. Martin Article information: To cite this document: Richard A. Martin‚ (1992)‚"Creating‚ Maintaining and Reinforcing a Customer Service Culture"‚ International Journal of Quality & Reliability Management‚ Vol. 9 Iss: 1 Permanent link to this document: http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/02656719210007545 Downloaded on: 07-02-2013 Citations: This document
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Four Characteristics of Services Russell Wolak‚ Stavros Kalafatis and Patricia Harris* Kingston Business School Kingston Hill Kingston upon Thames Surrey KT2 7LB Phone 0181 547 2000 Fax 0181 547 7026 E-mail p.harris@kingston.ac.uk ABSTRACT This study replicates US-based research by Hartman and Lindgren on the extent to which consumers differentiate between products and services. In addition‚ Hartman and Lindgren investigated the importance of four characteristics of services to consumers; intangibility
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