Friday, 4 April 2014

7 P's : Service Marketing Mix: 7 P's of Service Marketing


Service Marketing Mix: 7 P's


Product:

  • Service products are heart of the service marketing.
  • Marketing mix begins with creating a service concept that will offer value to target customers and satisfy needs better than competing alternatives.
  • Service product consist  of a core and supplementary service element 
    • Core product meet primary need
    • Supplementary element help to use the core product / add value on core product

Place:

  • Delivering product element to customers involves decisions
  • Delivery decision: Where; When; How
  • Delivery may involve use of physical or electronic channel 
  • speed and convenience of place and time have become important determinants of effective service delivery

Price:

  • Payment is play central role in marketing
  • It is facilitating a value exchange between the firm and its customers.
  • For customer point of view, price is key part of the costs they must incur to obtain wanted benefits. 
  • Revenue management is an important part in pricing
  • Identify and minimize non-monetary cost incur by user: (time; expenditure; waiting; physical effort; negative sensory experiences.)

Promotion:

  • Promotion is nothing but communication between manufacture and customer
  • This component plays three vital roles
    • Providing information and advice
    • Persuading target customers of the merit of a specific brand or service product
    • Encourage customer to take action at specific time
  • Communication is educational for new customer 
  • Communication can be done by individual or in wide array
    • individual: salespeople, front line staff; websites 
    • wide array of advertising media


Process:

  • Customer are often involve in the process, especially when acting as co-producers.
  • Creating and delivering product elements requires design and implementation of effective processes. 
  • Badly design process -
    • slow
    • ineffective service delivery
    • wasted time
    • disappointing experience 
  • Difficult to make sure that front-line staff do their job well

Physical Environment 

  • Service firms need to mange physical evidence carefully
  • Because it can have a profound impact on customers' impressions
  • Physical evidence are-
    • Building
    • Landscaping
    • Vehicles
    • Interior furnishing
    • Equipment
    • Staff Members' Uniforms
    • Signs
    • Printed materials 
    • Other visible cues
  • This all provide tangible evidence of a firm's service quality 

People

  • Finally, in service always require direct interaction between customers and contact personnel.
  • This interaction influences how customers perceive service quality.
  • Service quality/customers' satisfaction depends on front-line staff
  • Therefore, successful service firm give significant effort to recruiting, training, and motivating employees

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