Services Marketing Chapter 1:! New Perspectives On! !Marketing in the! ! !Service Economy! Slide © 2010 by Lovelock & Wirtz Services Marketing 7/e Chapter 1 – Page 1 Overview of Chapter 1! Services Marketing Why Study Services?! What are Services?! Marketing Challenges Posed by Services! Extended Marketing Mix Required for Services! Integration of Marketing with Other Management Functions! Developing Effective Service Marketing Strategies! Slide © 2010 by Lovelock
Premium Marketing
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
Premium Marketing Sales
BMA791 SERVICES MARKETING Semester 1‚ 2013 THIS UNIT IS OFFERED IN: Hobart Teaching Team: Dr Rob Hecker Marcus Bai Xuesong CRICOS Provider Code: 00586B Contact Details Unit Coordinator & lecturer: Dr Rob Hecker Campus: Hobart Room Number: 307 Email: Rob.Hecker@utas.edu.au Phone: +61 3 6226 1774 Fax: +61 3 6226 2170 Consultation Time: By appointment 2 Contents Contact Details ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Page 2
Premium Marketing
Introduction to Services Marketing In general‚ goods can be defined as objects‚ devices‚ or things‚ whereas products refer to both goods and services. A service is any act or performance that one party can offer to another that is essentially intangible and does not result in the ownership of anything. Its production may or may not be tied to a physical product. The distinction between goods and services is not perfectly clear. Service is the sum of all encounters between a customer and a service provider
Premium Marketing
Service Marketing 10MBAMM314 Syllabus Module I Introduction to services: What are services‚ Why service marketing‚ Difference in goods and service in marketing‚ Myths about services‚ Concept of service marketing triangle‚ Service marketing mix‚ GAP models of service quality Module II Consumer behaviour in services: Search‚ Experience and Credence property‚ Customer expectation of services‚ Two levels of expectation‚ Zone of tolerance‚ Factors influencing customer expectation of services Customer
Premium Marketing Service system Service
Services marketing-103038 Part A 1. Services marketing is marketing based on relationship and value. It may be used to market a service or a product. Marketing a service-base business is different from marketing a goods-base business. There are several major differences‚ including: 1. The buyer purchases are intangible 2. The service may be based on the reputation of a single person 3. It’s more difficult to compare the quality of similar services 4. The buyer cannot return the
Premium Marketing Strategic management Balanced scorecard
science to create the best laundry solutions for clients across India and the world. SPINZONE dry cleaning is a concept of Cleaning Services available to individuals and families‚ including dry cleaning and laundry. Spinzone dry cleaning intends to offer affordable "luxury" cleaning to all. Quality is made available to everybody. Spin zone dry cleaning is the best service provider in your area. The core business is the cleaning of clothes. Our professional team is taking care of each item with a great
Premium Laundry
Introduction Lusch et al. (2007) describe as marketing emerged in the beginning of the 20th century‚ it embraced the goods-dominant (G-D) logic. The concept of the Four Ps of marketing mix – product‚ price‚ place and promotion became treated as the basic model at that time. (Grönroos‚ 1989) Today‚ this paradigm is beginning to lose its position. Service marketing is one leading new approach to marketing. Four main characteristics of services defined by Kotler et al. (2009) are intangible‚ perishable
Premium Marketing
achieve international growth be it service or manufacturing sector. There are many routes for expansion such as‚ Greenfield investment‚ Joint venture‚ Mergers and acquisitions‚ sales or marketing alliances (The Economist‚ 2007). There will be many obstacles to achieve this. Services are an important part of global economy and this is increasing. While most of the international business strategies and theories which are good for manufacturing sector could be used for service firms but there are critical
Premium Marketing Service
Consumer Decision Making: The Three-Stage Model of Service Consumption Pre-purchase Stage Service Encounter Stage Post- encounter Stage Customers seek solutions to aroused needs Evaluating a service may be difficult Decision to buy or use a service is triggered by need arousal. What promts us to purchase? Needs. Triggers of need: Unconscius minds Physical conditions External sources Need arousal leads to attempts to find a solution. Evoked set – a set of products and brands
Premium Risk Decision making Cognition