Unit 1
Unit 1
Marketing
Course Outcomes
CO No CO Description
• Unlike in manufactured goods, where price has one common name across a wide
range of goods, such as, fruits, clothes, computers, cars, etc.; price in services goes by
different names.
• The services are diverse. The extent of their diversity can be gauged by the names by
which the price is called in services. Some terms referring to price in different
services are listed. Almost every service has its own price terminology.
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The pricing tactics thatSERVICES
may be used to sell services are:
• (i) Differential or Flexible Pricing: Customer’s ability to pay differentials (as in professional services of
management consultants, lawyers). Ex services of management consultants, lawyers
• (ii) Discount Pricing: It refers to the practice of offering a commission or discount to intermediates such as
advertising agencies, stock brokers, property dealers for rendering a service. Ex try a new service
• (iii) Diversionary Pricing: It refers to a low price which is quoted for a basic service to attract customers. Ex.
restaurant
• (iv) Guaranteed Pricing: It refers to pricing strategy in which payment is to be made only after the results are
achieved. Ex. Employment agencies
• (v) High Price Maintenance Pricing: This strategy is used when the high price is associated with the quality of
the service. Ex. doctors
• (vi) Introductory Pricing: It is one in which an initial low price is charged in the hope of getting more
business at subsequently better prices. Ex. Start ups
• (vii) Offset Pricing: It is quite similar to diversionary pricing in which a basic low price is quoted but the extra
services are rather highly priced. Ex. doctor
• (viii) Competitive parity pricing: Prices are set on the basis of following those set by the market leader.
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• Place – TheSERVICES
place where you choose to conduct your service business can
make or break your organizational growth.
• You need to understand how visible your setup would be to potential
customers and how frequently it would be visited by consumers.
• For example, would you set up a fast-food center near a college or office
hub, where students and professionals can quickly grab a bite or next to a
big restaurant in a classy neighborhood?
• Since service delivery is simultaneous with its production and cannot be
stored or transported, the location of the service product assumes
importance.
• Service providers have to give special thought to where the service would
be provided.
• Thus, a fine dine restaurant is better located in a busy, upscale market as
against on the outskirts of a city. Similarly, a holiday resort is better
situated in the countryside away from the rush and noise of a city.
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SERVICES
• There are three critical issues that must be sorted out while evolving the
distribution channels for a service:
• (i) Location of the service: Location is concerned with the decisions a firm
makes about where its operations and staff are situated. The importance of
location for a service depends upon the type and degree of interaction
involved.
• (ii) Channels through which services are provided: The second decision
variable in the distribution strategy is whether to sell directly to the
customers or through intermediaries. Traditionally it has been argued that
direct sales are the most appropriate form of distribution for services.
• (iii) How to provide service to maximum number of customers: The third
decision variable in the distribution strategy is how to provide the service
to a maximum number of customers in the most cost-effective manner.
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• PromotionSERVICES
– The service industry usually has stiff competition across
different verticals and the business would need a lot of promotions to
pass on the right message to potential customers.
• While advertising, online and direct marketing are the best ways to
promote your service you need to have a good mix of communication
channels to address a larger audience.
• Since a service offering can be easily replicated promotion becomes
crucial in differentiating a service offering in the mind of the
consumer.
• Thus, service providers offering identical services such as airlines or
banks and insurance companies invest heavily in advertising their
services.
• This is crucial in attracting customers in a segment where the services
providers have nearly identical offerings.
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SERVICES
• The promotion mix of services include the following elements:
• (i) Advertising: It is any kind of paid, non-personal method of promotion by
an identified organisation or individual. The role of advertising in services
marketing is to build awareness of the service, to add to
customer’s
knowledge of the service, to help persuade the customer to buy, and to
differentiate the service from the other service offerings.
• (ii) Personal selling: Personal selling has a vital role in services, because of
the large number of service businesses which involve personal interaction
between the service provider and the customer, and service being provided
by a person, not a machine. The problem with using personal selling
to
• promote
(iii)Sales services is that inIncertain
promotion: the types of
case of services,
services,thethe
service cannot be
sales
separated
techniques from theare
which performer.
used are varied and various in number. Traditionally,
promotion
sales promotion has been used mainly in the fast moving consumer goods
market. However, in the recent past we have seen a trend for many service
firms to use sales promotion.
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SERVICES
• (iv) Publicity: It is unpaid for exposure which is derived by getting
coverage as a news or editorial item.
• It is possible to get publicity when the service which one is offering is
unique and, therefore, newsworthy, by holding a press conference in
which offered services can be associated with some issues of greater
social relevance or by involving the interest of the newspaper or its
staff in covering the service.
• (v) Word of mouth: One of the most distinctive features of promotion
in service businesses is the word of mouth communications. This
highlights the importance of the people factor in services promotion.
• Customers are often closely involved in the delivery of a service and
then talk to other potential customers about their experiences.
Research points to personal recommendations through word of
mouth being one of the most important information sources.
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• People: SERVICES
• Your business is not just built on your goals, company vision and principles
but also depends heavily on your employees.
• It is the people who work for you who are responsible in creating happy
and returning customers.
• People in your organization are the epicenter of the quality of your services
and need to have the best of talents to gain customer loyalty and trust.
• People are a defining factor in a service delivery process, since a service is
inseparable from the person providing it.
• Thus, a restaurant is known as much for its food as for the service provided
by its staff. The same is true for banks and departmental stores.
• Consequently, customer service training for staff has become a top priority
for many organizations today.
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• CustomersSERVICES
not only influence their own service outcomes, but they
can influence other customers as well. People can be subdivided into:
• (i) Service personnel: Service personnel are important in all
organizations but more so in an organization involved in providing
services.
• The behavior and attitude of the personnel providing the service is an
important influence on the customer’s overall perception of the
service and he can rarely distinguish between the actual service
rendered and the human element involved in it.
• (ii) Customers: Customers are important because they are a source of
influencing themselves, being actively involved in service delivery, and
other customers as well.
• In case of doctors, lawyers, consultants one satisfied customer will
lead to a chain reaction, bringing in his wake a number of other
customers.
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SERVICES
• Process – How efficiently your services are delivered to the customer
is an important aspect of your service blueprint and you need to
emphasize on setting up a process for doing so.
• You need to ask yourself “Do I want to have a process in place that is
quick, reliable and easy to monitor or one that is sluggish but
necessarily passes through several layers of hierarchy?”
• In today’s competitive world, companies are always in the race to
deliver services quickly, efficiently and with the highest quality.
• The process of service delivery is crucial since it ensures that the same
standard of service is repeatedly delivered to the customers.
• Therefore, most companies have a service blue print which provides
the details of the service delivery process, often going down to even
defining the service script and the greeting phrases to be used by the
service staff.
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SERVICES
• The importance of this element is especially highlighted in service
businesses where inventories cannot be stored.
• Through the introduction of automatic teller machines (ATMs) banks
have been able to free staff to handle more complex customer needs
by diverting cash only customers to the ATMs.
• This suggests that close is needed between the
marketing and operations staff who are
cooperation involved in
management.
process
• By identifying processes as a separate marketing mix element,
its importance to service quality is duly recognized.
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• Physical
it
SERVICES
Evidence – While offering your services, you can either do