Monday, May 20, 2019
Singapore Airlines
The Emerald look into Register for this journal is forthcoming at www. emeraldinsight. com/ seekregister The current issue and full text archive of this journal is lendable at www. emeraldinsight. com/0960-4529. htm MSQ 15,3 A type study of penny-pinching visitation and recuperation within an international airway David Bamford Manchester School of Management, UMIST, Manchester, UK, and 306 Tatiana Xystouri Ministry of Finance, Nicosia, Cyprus generalisation Purpose This cover seeks to examine the utileness of internecine masterfessionalcesses of utileness character reference convalescence for an international respiratory tract. tar mature/ methodology/ap masterach An carry through query methodology was adopted. The search manifold a re cyclorama of available avail case literature the identi? cation of ec centimerics of nonst artworker/errors within the host go with the development of key lessons and aspireion guidelines. Findings It is argued that, f or do reco very(prenominal) to be effective, it must be external (to the guest) as strong as inbred (to the institution). The pauperisation to incorporate employees and non oerlook their signi? nominatece, power and in? uence on the delivery of eccentric dish out is soaringlighted.Through comparison with anformer(a) airline the ? ndings re-assert that attend flavor excellence loafer only be achieved through employee gladness, loading and devotion as a result of senior management commitment, focus and drive. look into limit points/implications The methodology applied was appropriate, generating data to facilitate discussion and from which to draw speci? c conclusions. A comprehend limitation is the angiotensin-converting enzyme case fire however, Remenyi argues that this can be enough to add to the body of knowledge. For further investigation, in that respect is an current opportunity for future research n the atomic bite 18a of dish out whole tone, bere avement and recovery, as substantially as the unattackable timber gaps within the airline. Practical implications Key lessons and management guidelines for improving go caliber are r to each peerlessed. Originality/ prize The makeup describes how an international airline has tangible gain reference ill and recovery arrangings in place, but fails to capitalise on the data and reading generated. Keywords Customer servings tone of voice, return failures, helping remediatements, International travel, air passages Paper type search paper Managing help Quality Vol. 15 zero(prenominal) 3, 2005 pp. 06-322 q Emerald theme Publishing Limited 0960-4529 DOI 10. 1108/09604520510597845 Introduction Services marketing and management literature widely live that keeping current clients and under authentic affinitys with raw(a) aces is a key course strategy (Piercy, 1995). The growing edification of consumers does represent an ongoing ch onlyenge to all manner of usefulness nerves. According to Zemke and Bell (1989) nonhing is as common as the organisation committed more than to lip value than guest service more cheered in advertising than action. This is non helped in the link among guest satisfaction and pro? s being neither candid nor simple. Zeithaml (2000) highlights troika major problems in measuring relationships as (1) the time-lag amid measuring customer satisfaction and measuring pro? t improvements (2) the number of other variables in? uencing con feederacy pro? ts much(prenominal) as price, distribution (3) that other variables (such as behavioural issues) should be included in the relationship as they explain causality between satisfaction and results. However, a number of studies arrive present a clearly positive relationship between organisation instruction execution and customer satisfaction/service excellence.Wirtz and Johnston (2003) highlight the positive correlation between the pro? ts and service exc ellence of Singapore Airlines (SIA). Commenting on the combative nature of the airline industry, one of their interviewees states . . . it is outstanding to realise that they (customers) are not just comparing SIA with other airlines. They are comparing us against many industries, and on many factors (Wirtz and Johnston, 2003, p. 11). A case of service failure and recovery 307 Van der Wiele et al. (2002, p. 191) ? d the same result for an employment agency, stating perceived quality is related to organisational performance indicators in the same year and/or in the next year. Service failure and the attendant complaints from customers are a likely natural event over a product/service lifetime and the rapid, effective discussion of these has proven to be vital in finding customer satisfaction and loyalty. Indeed, the importance of service recovery reinforces the need for organisations to ? nd approaches that are effective in both unwraping service failure and in developing str ategies to recover successfully.Service recovery should be the cornerstone of a customer satisfaction strategy. This paper examines the effectives of versed memberes of service quality recovery for an international airline. Literature review The changing environment in the service sector ? According to Gronroos (1987) the dimensions of service quality are diverse and relate to both the basic service package and augmented service crack. Two important contributions in developing models for measuring service quality are from Johnson et al. (1995) and Silvestro et al. (1990, cited in Dale, 1999), who assessed service quality in the UK. They identi? d 15 aspects of service quality, and categorised them into three factors (1) Hygiene factors those expected by the customer. (2) Enhancing factors those that channel to customer satisfaction, although failure to deliver is not likely to cause dissatisfaction. (3) Dual threshold factors those whose failure to deliver will cause dissatisfa ction while delivery above a speci? c take aim will cause satisfaction. While the above model gives a clear view of what criteria a customer may use to judge service quality, it is not as widely describe as the one proposed by Parasuraman et al. (1985) who condensed ten original factors into ? e categories (tangibles, ? responsiveness, reliability, assurance and empathy). Gronroos (1988a, b) later added a one-sixth factor and withdrawed it recovery. Parasuraman et al. (1985) also suggested quality consists of the gap between what the customer expects and receives and that this gap is affected by quaternion gaps on the MSQ 15,3 308 provider side (customer expectations management perceptions of consumer expectations service quality speci? cations actual service delivery). Unfortunately when customers are asked for feedback the methodologies used sometimes lack empirical rigor and are often a chemical reaction to a speci? crisis in the organisation (Berman, 1996). This loss of dat a at the organisational level sum that transactional changes are not tied to customer priorities in a routine manner. Dale (2003) summarises three major changes in the service sector. Stating the present emphasis on the service encounter, in particular the contribution made by service providers in enhancing and maintaining service quality, arises from environmental trends relating to . consumers awareness and expectations . technological developments and sophistication and . competitive elements.In price of consumers awareness and expectations, as society gets wealthier and the marginal utility derived from additional increments of goods declines, people turn to service expenditures. The growth in ? nal inquire from consumers may be attributed to consumer expectations of quality, which are believed and accepted to be increase (Fitzsimmons and Fitzsimmons, 1998). With regards to technological developments and sophistication, computerisation and technological innovations are radic ally altering the way in which many organisations do melodic phrase with their customers.They can go a major contribution in the delivery of quality service. One view is that technological advances offer an opportunity to amplify service in a variety of ways to improve the competitive stance (Schlesinger and Heskett, 1991). In terminal figures of competitive elements, since entering the impudently millennium, it has become clear that most organisations are change magnitudely, in their quest for impart and advancement, interested in how they can achieve differentiation and competitive expediency (Verma, 2000). Globalisation and value impelled headache imperatives thitherfore mean that mis puddles will not be tolerated.Services failures, recovering and learning The cushion of active recovery strategies on a companys tax income and pro? tability is dramatic. For example, Hampton Inn hotels in the USA realised $11 million in additional r even offue from the implementation of its service fasten and scored the highest customer retention rate in the industry (Ettorre, 1994). Research by the Of? ce of Fair occupation (OFT, 1990) illustrated when people occupy a complaint about goods and services and the complaint is satisfactorily fragmentised, three living quarters of them will debase the same strike off again.Where the complaint is not resolved, less than half will buy the same brand again. Clearly there is a pro? t to be made by retaining the customer loyalty of those whose complaints the company resolves (Citizens Charter Complaints Task Force, 1995). The ability to deal in effect with customer problems is closely related to employee satisfaction and loyalty. These are critical concerns in industries where customer relationships are closely associated with an some(prenominal)(prenominal) service provider (Schlesinger and Heskett, 1991). Heskett et al. (1994) identi? s a number of factors that are considered important for employee satisfaction. T hese include satisfaction with the parentage itself instruction pay advancement fairness treatment with respect and dignity teamwork the companys interest in employees well-being and the service workers perceptions of their abilities to meet customer needs. Of course the greatest rampart to effective service recovery and organisational learning is that only 5-10 per cent of dissatis? ed customers choose to complain practiseers(a) a service failure (Tax and Brown, 1998, p. 7 Dube and Maute, 1996). Instead, most silently switch providers or attempt to get even by making negative comments to others (Singh, 1990). Why are customers reluctant to complain? Several authors such as Dube and Maute (1996) and Singh (1990) uncover four reasons (1) customers believe that the organisation will not be responsive (2) they do not wish to confront the individual responsible for the failure (3) they are uncertain about their righteousnesss and the ? rms obligations and (4) they are concerned a bout the high cost in time and effort of complaining.To counter this several approaches fork over been highlighted that are effective in identifying service failures setting performance standards communicating the importance of service recovery training customers in how to complain and using technological support offered through customer call centres and the internet (Dale, 2003). According to Bitner et al. (1997) the level of customer participation in a service experience varies across services and customers can play a variety of personas. Through a review of the literature Bitner et al. 1997) identify three (1) the customer as productive resource (2) the customer as contributor to quality, satisfaction and value and (3) the customer as competitor to the service organisation. These roles are not mutually exclusive, meaning individuals behaviours in a speci? c situation may apply to more than one of the three roles. What can ? rms do to improve recovery performance? Academic tur n out, for example Hart et al. (1990), Mason (1993) and Bowen and Lawler (1995), suggests there are speci? practices that improve service-recovery speciality hiring, training and empowerment establishing service-recovery guidelines and standards providing easy access and effective responses through call centres and maintaining customer and product databases. Bitner et al. (1990) in a study of 700 critical incidents found that it is not necessarily failure itself that leads to customer dissatisfaction, most customers do accept that things can go wrong. It is more likely the organisations response/lack of response to the failure that causes resentment and dissatisfaction.Boshoff (1997) surveyed 540 travellers, presenting them with a constantly negative service situation (a missed ? ight connection caused by ? ight delay) and looked for the most successful recovery strategies. They were a fast response by the highest possible person in terms of seniority a fast response accompanied by full refund confident(p) some amount of compensation a large amount of compensation provided by a high ranking manager. An apology was of limited use unless accompanied by some form of tangible compensation.A market- operate approach to service recovery consists of many tools in addition to identifying and responding to complaints surveys mystery shopping focus groups customer and employee advisory panels and service operating performance data (Day, A case of service failure and recovery 309 MSQ 15,3 310 1994). In identifying opportunities to improve services, many ? rms integrate complaint data with data gathered through one or more of these research methods. Firms determining investment priorities in service improvement examine the feign of various options (e. g. ncreasing the speed of front-desk check-in versus expanding the room-service menu at a hotel) on customer satisfaction, repurchase intention, operation cost, and market share. The intention is to identify those proce ss improvements that will pee the greatest impact on pro? tability (Rust et al. , 1995). Investment decisions should also be driven by customer pro? tability assessments. For example, United Airlines determined that business travellers account for 40 per cent of its business by headcount, but supply 72 per cent of its revenue mile-collecting vacationers constitute 60 per cent of travellers but provide only 28 per cent of revenue.The most browse business travellers, dubbed road warriors, generate 37 per cent of revenue even though they make up only 6 per cent of the passengers. United learned through complaints and survey results that the road warriors were the customers least(prenominal) satis? ed and most frustrated with air travel. Based on the data, the company invested $400 million to provide business travellers with better seats, pabulum, and lounges a pre-departure service to avoid long lines more frequent-? ier bene? ts and perks such as showers in terminals (Rust et al. 1995). The relationship between service recovery and organisational pro? tability can be clearly seen by examining the service-pro? t mountain chain (Heskett et al. , 1994). This argues that pro? t results from customer loyalty, which results from customer satisfaction with the service system customer satisfaction (value) is generated by satis? ed, loyal, and productive employees. The impact of service recovery can be traced through improvements in the service system and through the direct effect on satisfaction of end a customer complaint.Resolving problems effectively has a strong impact on customer satisfaction and loyalty (McCollough and Bharadwaj, 1992). Conversely, poor recovery following a great(p) service experience can create terrorists, customers so dissatis? ed that they actively prosecute opportunities to criticise the company (Heskett et al. , 1994). Loyal customers expect problems to be dealt with effectively and are disappointed when they are not, making service r ecovery key (Zeithaml et al. , 1993). Examples from the airline industry Wirtz and Johnston (2003), comment how SIA continues to get service quality right.They have consistently been one of the most pro? table airlines in the world and are routinely voted exceed airline, outflank business mannikin, best cabin crew service, best in-? ight food, best for punctuality and safety, best for business travellers, best air cargo carrier, and even Asias most admired company. SIA seems to follow many of the normative models that are well researched and publish in the service literature such as a strategic focus on customers adopting a total company approach to service excellence incremental improvement and periodic process design and continuous benchmarking.The company strives for a constant exceeding of expectation (e. g. Berry, 1995) and has active customer feedback systems (e. g. Berry and Parasuraman, 1997, Wirtz and Tomlin, 2000). SIAs culture of service excellence at a pro? t is in line with the service pro? t chain (Heskett et al. , 1997) and the cycle of success (Schlesinger and Heskett, 1991). Final observations made by Wirtz and Johnston (2003, p. 18) include what they term as these somewhat surprising ? ndings SIAs holistic process perspective a culture were all staff look at all processes all the ime to search for incremental improvement SIA strive to maintain consistency in service excellence that meets the needs of every customer (maintaining the dif? cult balance between standardisation and customisation) a simultaneous focus on service excellence and costs/pro? ts, pushed right out to the front line staff. Their conclusion is that SIA has no secret formula for success they just follow widely known and applied frameworks and models. At British Airways (BA) in 1983, the then chief executive, Colin Marshall, launched the Customer starting time campaign.The cornerstone of the Customer First campaign was detailed research into what customers expect in t erms of ain service. BA established monitoring mechanisms, which continually told them what the customers expect, and how well they were doing against these expectations. The market research covered both customers and staff, so as to form the starting point for a fully integrated campaign to improve standards of service. The training programmes included a personal development course looking at such aspects as handling feelings, understanding and coping with stress, and being assertive.The programme was then extended to embrace all non-customer contact staff. long emphasis has been placed on teamwork and on an appreciation of the contribution that each individual and each role makes towards the success of the airline as a social unit. Further, the Quality Assurance Unit, whose activities were to focus on de? ning detailed customer service standards, and develop quality control mechanisms by which BA could measure their local performance against customer expectations, monitored the progress of improving service quality.At the same time, a service quality audit was developed to meet the needs of overseas stations. The objective has been that all staff within the company becomes actively involved and committed to the corporate objective of improving customer service, with the slogan Putting our customers ? rst if we dont, someone else will (Hamill and Davies, 1986). SAS suffered an $8 million operating loss in 1981. Within two geezerhood, they achieved a gross pro? t of $71 million on sales of $2 billion, although the industry as a whole lost a total of $1. 7 billion (Albrecht, 1985).The success story at SAS was claimed to come from an organisational commitment to manage the customers experience through so-called moments of truth, the ? rst 15-second encounter between a passenger and the front-line people (Carlzon, 1987, p. viii). Carlzon, SAS President at the time and later author of Moments of Truth, his take on successful customer service quality, put all 27,000 employees through a company-wide training programme. Everyone, from baggage handlers to company vice presidents authoritative the training in a two-day workshop, speci? cally targeted to meeting the needs of their customers.According to Carlzon this cross-functional training is of the essence(p) if only front-line staff have it then their best efforts to satisfy customers may be blocked by back-room staff. He goes on to propose that the link between tactics and strategy is not made in many customer service organisations, ultimately resulting in failure of service quality. Research method An action research methodology was adopted (Remenyi et al. , 1998). Action research was developed during the 1960s and has proven particularly useful in the area of managing change and identifying areas for improvement (Remenyi et al. 1998). Moore (1999) states that to be properly regarded as action research, a visualize must contain a continuous thread of objective evaluation and a mechan ism whereby the results of the A case of service failure and recovery 311 MSQ 15,3 312 evaluation and the lessons learned during the project can be fed back into the process so that it becomes something which is dynamic and constantly modi? ed in the light of experience. The main advantage of action research is that it is done in real-time produces a concrete result and everyone in the organisation can see what is going on.This can have its disadvantages as well mistakes made are very public, but on the whole it makes for research which has the support and backing of people who might otherwise have shown little commitment to the idea. Its distinguishing feature is that it integrates something of real, practical worth into an organisation. This has to be the case, otherwise the research would never have been sanctioned ? rms do not have resources to spare and would not waste their own time and resources on a futile project. As detailed above, one potential weakness of the adopted r esearch methodology might be its very public nature.If the project did not produce tangible real-time results, those livelihood it may lose interest and bias any future initiatives. The applied methodology needed to be systematic so that it ? tted with the basic aims of the research. In nut interviews, observation and company documentation were all used. This investigations objective was to make an assessment of the airlines process of service quality recovery with respect to service failure, driven by the goal of customer satisfaction and internal improvement. Once access was established key measurables, and causes of failure were identi? d through a detailed examination of company processes, informal discussion with Company personnel, and formal interviews with various employees. This process, over a period of time, allowed the identi? cation of sources of errors within the host company. The case study The research presented here involved full participation from an international airline. During the 1990s the airline concentrated on improving customer service, reducing costs and aggressive marketing. Signi? cant effort and new approaches were initiated to improve the quality of service delivered to the customer, in order that the organisation remains ompetitive in future age. A central pivot of the airlines approach was a commitment to improve service to the customer and they subsequently won a number of passenger accolades. Service failure in the airline Among the key data was the record of passenger complaints during a four-year period. These records included the revenue-passengers carried by the airline, number of complaints received, number of complaints offered compensation and the amount of money paid out during each of the four years.They are represented in Table I. The number of recorded complaints increased by about 60 per cent and those offered compensation increased dramatically by 147 per cent during this period. The Year Revenue passengers car ried Complaints received Instances paid Amount of money paid (? ) Table I. Passenger complaints records 1 2 3 4 1,298,000 1,355,000 1,346,000 1,400,000 545 684 715 870 253 403 462 626 22,736 47,048 70,253 73,869 manager of the complaints department commented on these numbers by asserting the increase re? cted only a small extent of the increased passenger movement, even in year three when a slight trough was observed, the numbers of complaints showed no sign of decline. The percentage complaints paid increased from 47 per cent in year one to 72 per cent in year four. The complaints department manager af? rmed that increasing customer complaints have been a factor for the previous decade indicating the complaints/passengers ratio has been steadily increasing. In 1990 one complaint was recorded for every 2,700 passengers, a decade later, one complaint is recorded for just over 1,500 passengers.Figure 1 represents the number of complaints per 10,000 passengers during an 11-year period. In year 1, the complaints average was 3. 6 per 10,000 passengers, within ten years that became 6. 2. Due to this upward trend in complaints, the airlines expenditure on compensation is increasing noticeably year-by-year, demo in Table I. Expenditure on compensation increased by more than ? 50,000 in the period year eight to year 11, with the most fundamental increases being witnessed in ? scal years nine and ten. Table II demonstrates which recorded complaints are the most frequent and re? cts the main causes of late service failure in the airline. Commenting on the ? gures of Table II, a senior manager identi? ed the mass of complaints concentrating around three areas (1) delays, usually technical in nature (2) service interruptions, e. g. through frequent strikes and (3) complaints regarding the attitudes of priming staff. Complimentary letters were seldom received by the airline and were never logged or recorded. Anecdotal evidence suggests when a passenger regard an employ ee it is done face-to-face, not in writing. Interestingly, all current effort at the airline is putA case of service failure and recovery 313 Figure 1. Number of complaints per 10,000 passengers MSQ 15,3 temper of complaint Act of God Cabin staff attitude Downgraded Flight cancellations/diversion of ? ights/delays Food and drinking Ground staff attitude Lack of facilities Mishaps during ? ight Overbooking Reservation problems Strikes Travelled on jump-seat Cases 1 4 6 544 5 103 7 17 18 39 124 2 314 Table II. Passenger complaints records into recording complaints not compliments senior managers believed this was because the board of directors (BoD) expected complaint data to discuss ithin their meetings. The service recovery aim The airlines activities for service recovery and in-house improvement are proceduralised through a detailed ? owchart shown in Figure 2. Monthly service recovery, customer voice and quarterly meetings with cabin crew supervisors take place to allow issues t o be raised and discussed to seek improvement. Appreciation for outstanding performance is provided through gifts (e. g. drop off business class two-way tickets to any destination), and printed letters of appreciation, signed by the president of the airline.Discussion The research data revealed that 89 per cent of customer complaints resulted from 25 per cent of the problem areas, evidence of the Pareto principle in action. Evidence indicated the service recovery plan of the airline was not addressing these priority areas according to their signi? cance. Presented in Figures 3 and 4 are cause and effect diagrams (Dale, 2003) re? ecting the main service failures of the airline. With regard delays, diversions and cancellations, senior managers insist that some causes, such as the weather, are predictable yet cannot be controlled little can be done to avoid their consequences.According to the US Department of Transportation (1989) 70 per cent of delays in the commercial message ai rline service are caused by weather. In addition, external factors beyond the immediate control of the airline can cause service failure (? ight diversion or cancellation due to air-traf? c congestion, a failure in another airport where the airlines aircraft are engaged). For the airline the planned purchase of new aircraft and a scheduled upgrade of existing ? eet should reduced problems caused by purely technical failure.Service quality should improve and expenditure on compensation reduced. Findings here also con? rmed assertions from the literature that technological advances can offer opportunities to increase service in a variety of ways to improve competitive stance, and lead to cost savings (Mulconrey, 1986). Although this contrasts with the view that customers insist on client-centred performance as opposed to technical-centred A case of service failure and recovery 315 Figure 2. Flowchart of service recovery and in-house improvement processes performance (Kotler and Connor , 1977), the ? dings indicated that a reliable personal tincture service is what the airlines customers perceived as being good service quality. Findings indicated the perceived bad attitude of foundation staff was a major area of service failure. The airlines senior management team agreed that for employees to be competent in offering soft quality, rigorous selection procedures and appropriate training was vital. However, research evidence suggests that these principles were not applied passim the company. Dobbs (1993) af? rms that without formal training staff have few tools to meet the expectations of customers or managers.The level of consistent, appropriate and rivet training was found to be a key issue within the airline. Ground staff were not suf? ciently trained for the highly MSQ 15,3 316 Figure 3. Cause and effect of delays/ diversions/cancellations Figure 4. Cause and effect diagram of bad ground staff attitude customer centred aspects of their railway lines and ther efore lacked appropriate key skills and diplomacy for handling the demands of customers. This is demonstrated in Figure 5. The ability to deal effectively with customer problems is closely related to employee satisfaction and loyalty (Schlesinger and Heskett, 1991).Customer satisfaction is also increased when company management attempts to couple the service recovery process with offering initiatives to the employees (Reichheld, 1993). However, within the airline employee satisfaction is not as important as customer satisfaction. That ground staff are perceived as having a bad attitude con? rms assertions from the literature (Heskett et al. , 1994, p. 164) that important factors for employees are satisfaction with the trade itself treatment with respect and the companys interest in employees well being. A case of service failure and recovery 317 Figure 5.Ground staff attitude complaints Research ? ndings indicated a range of reasons for employee strikes. The diffusion of the single union 20 years ago (the Union of the Airline Staff) and the creation of several resulted, according to one senior manager, in the power to in? uence events in the hands of an uncompromising few. Employees who felt their needs were not taken into consideration used their union to make demands. Weak management support, in combination with discontented employees, results in continual strike action that gives an opening of a disorganised company (see Figure 6).The management of the airline failed to work towards a process of identifying and resolving the issues triggering employee dissatisfaction. Furthermore, the senior management team has been unsuccessful in attempts to improve internal company communications. Although researchers have examine the concept of service for several decades, there is no real consensus about the conceptualisation of service quality (Cronin and Taylor, 1992 Rust and Oliver, 1994). Different researchers focus on different aspects of service Figure 6. Ca use and effect diagram of strikes MSQ 15,3 318 quality. The most common de? ition is the traditional notion that views quality as the customers perception of service excellence (Berry, 1995 Parasuraman et al. , 1985). Attempts have been made to provide applicable conceptual models, see for example Zhu et al. s (2004) paper on A mathematical model of service failure and recovery strategies for an example. Of perhaps more direct use here is a simple comparison of how the Airline operates re service quality, with one of the best in the business, SIA. Table III offers a straightforward comparison between various service recovery elements of the two airlines.Taken from Wirtz and Johnstons (2003) paper on SIA, which took SIAs senior managements perspective on sustaining their service excellence, we used ten key service recovery elements. Of these, all of which SIA excel at, our research indicates the airline actively pursue only one, acknowledging the challenge of delivering service excel lence. Disappointingly, they would appear to fail on every other element. As the two companies have similar systems in place the key difference would appear to be the level of senior management commitment. Indeed this comes across compellingly in the Wirtz and Johnston paper.If similarities exist in the perceived execution of objectives, a difference in perception of what the long-term view actually is may be key (see Bamford and Forrester, 2003). The research does indicate the airline BoD is actively trying to improve its service quality. Through levyd organisational intelligence information they are striving to improve the fundamentals of their service delivery. They can ? x what they can see they can ? x what they can directly in? uence. clean equipment is easy, though expensive to bring in changing company attitudes is another issue.The comparison with SIA highlights key differences between a so-called best in class, in terms of airline service quality and an airline that is trying very hard to prevail in an increasingly competitive market sector. Key lessons and management guidelines As business and management research is essentially a ? eld of applied studies it is appropriate that research of this type should convert at least some of its ? ndings into a series of practical management guidelines (Remenyi et al. , 1998). Therefore, although it Singapore Airlines (Wirtz and Johnston, 2003) Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes YesService recovery element get it on the challenge of delivering service excellence Adopt a total systems approach Strive for consistency with personalisation in service delivery Understand customers and anticipate their needs Listen to both customers and front-line staff Log compliments and complaints round-the-clockly training and motivate the front-line staff Provide dedicated resources for communication and motivation Manage the organisation with an eye for the detail in everything Focus, above all, on delivering consistentl y high quality at a pro? t for the companyThe airline Yes noneno(prenominal)No No No No No No No Table III. Airline service quality set-up and recovery comparison is not our main purpose to present prescriptions, the following maybe useful for practitioners. The key lessons presented below offer straightforward advice . Do not lose focus of internal service quality quality of the workplace job content and variation recruitment selection and suf? cient training of employees management support rewarding employees for good job performance recognising employees for good job performance. The latter is said to wield signi? cant in? ence over the quality of employee job performance (Piercy, 1995). . Put evaluation and reward systems into practice to ensure good performance is monitored and rewarded (e. g. with cash bonuses or free tickets). . Empower front-line employees. This is a tool for improving employee motivation, as having the power to own, manage and resolve a problem makes role s more meaningful and interesting. . Frequent service education and training can enhance the ability of front-line staff to provide greater levels of customer care. It also prepares them for handling the differing demands of customers.A case of service failure and recovery 319 Conclusions This research has reported the main causes of service failure within an international airline and through comparison with another airline the ? ndings re-assert that service quality excellence can only be achieved through employee satisfaction, commitment and loyalty as a result of senior management commitment, focus and drive. The paper has assessed the organisations process of service recovery with respect to the main causes of service failure, in its goal to achieving customer satisfaction and internal improvement.The analysis of the ? ndings conformed to the Pareto principle, by which the majority of the organisations failure resulted from a small proportion of the problem areas (technical prob lems strikes ground staff attitude). The ? ndings indicated that for service recovery to be effective, it must be external (to the customer) as well as internal (to the organisation) so that internal improvement can be ensured. The ? ndings also substantiated previous claims of the need to approach service quality in a manner that goes beyond unsophisticated and narrow-minded practices that verlook the signi? cance, power and in? uence of the employee on the delivery of quality service and the smooth operation of the organisations activities. Finally, the ? ndings con? rmed previous assertions that employee satisfaction, commitment and loyalty require high levels of management commitment, as well as frequent communication. This research raises a number of implications for management. The interactive concepts of external and internal quality and their importance raise issues of recruitment and training to achieve the right blend of employee skills and motivation.There appears to exis t the need for the organisation to adopt management-employee relationship strategies, to ensure it manages and gets the best out of this key resource. Periodic review of performances and reward schemes are considered of vital importance, to aid the co-evolution of mutual understanding between managers and employees, and hence the development of superior service quality. A further implication for management is re? ected by the importance of understanding the positive personal effects of internal marketing on the pro? tability of the MSQ 15,3 320 rganisation. As the literature suggests (Albrecht, 1985 Hamill and Davies, 1986), satis? ed employees have all the means to make customers happy by offering superior quality service and thus reducing the occurrence of complaints substantially. The eventual result on the pro? tability of the organisation can only be encouraging, even at its most basic level fewer complaints mean less complaint expenditure and thus improve pro? ts. The methodo logy applied for collection of the research data was wholly appropriate and consistent with the perceived outcomes required.It generated ample data, which facilitated discussion and the drawing of speci? c conclusions. A perceived limitation is the adoption of a single case approach however Remenyi et al. (1998) argues that this can be enough to add to the body of knowledge. As a result of this research the Airlines senior management team have recognised the need to address internal marketing in a manner that will be translated into the companys philosophy and heathen attributes. This research has also provided a foundation for future work.Although many valuable insights were revealed through this research, there is an ongoing opportunity for future research in the area of service quality, failure and recovery, as well as the service quality gaps within the airline. References Albrecht, K. (1985), Achieving excellence in service, Training and Development Journal, Vol. 39 No. 12, pp . 64-7. Bamford, D. and Forrester, P. (2003), Managing planned and emergent change within an operations management environment, International Journal of trading operations & Production Management, Vol. 23 No. 5, pp. 546-64. Berman, E. 1996), Implementing TQM in state welfare agencies, Admin. Soc. Work, Vol. 19 No. 1, pp. 55-72. Berry, L. L. (1995), On large Service A Framework for Action, Free Press, New York, NY. Berry, L. L. and Parasuraman, A. (1997), Listening to the customer the concept of a service-quality information system, Sloan Management Review, Vol. 38, Spring, pp. 65-76. Bitner, M. J. , Booms, B. H. and Tetreault, M. S. (1990), The service encounter favourable and unfavourable incidents, Journal of market, Vol. 54, January. Bitner, M. J. , Faranda, W. T. , Hubbert, A. R. and Zeithaml, V. A. 1997), Customer contributions and roles in service delivery, International Journal of Service Industry Management, Vol. 8 No. 3, pp. 193-205. Boshoff, C. (1997), An experimental study of service recovery options, International Journal of Service Industry Management, Vol. 8 No. 3, pp. 110-30. Bowen, D. E. and Lawler, E. E. (1995), Empowering service employees, Sloan Management Review, Vol. 36, Summer, pp. 73-84. Carlzon, J. (1987), Moments of Truth, Ballinger Publishing, Cambridge, MA. Citizens Charter Complaints Task Force (1995), Complaints Handling in the Public Sector A Research record Conducted by MORI, HMSO, London.Cronin, J. J. and Taylor, S. A. (1992), Measuring service quality a re-examination and extension, Journal of marketing, Vol. 56, July, pp. 55-68. Dale, B. (1999), Managing Quality, 3rd ed. , Prentice-Hall International, Englewood Cliffs, NJ. Dale, B. (2003), Managing Quality, 4th ed. , Blackwell Publishing, Oxford. Day, G. S. (1994), Continuous learning about markets, California Management Review, Vol. 36, Summer, pp. 9-31. Dobbs, J. (1993), The empowerment environment, Training and Development, Vol. 47 No. 2, February, pp. 55-7. Dube, L. and Maute, M. (1996), The antecedents of brand switching, brand oyalty and verbal responses to service failures, in Swartz, T. , Bowen, D. and Brown, S. (Eds), Advances in Services Marketing and Management, Vol. 5, JAI Press, Greenwich, CT, pp. 127-51. Ettorre, B. (1994), Phenomenal promises that mean business, Management Review, March, pp. 18-23. Fitzsimmons, J. A. and Fitzsimmons, M. J. (1998), Service Management Operations Strategy and IT, Irwin/McGraw-Hill, New York, NY. ? Gronroos, C. (1987), An applied service marketing theory, Working Paper, No. 57, Swedish School of Economics and Business Administration, Helsingfors. ? Gronroos, C. 1988a), Service quality the six criteria of good perceived service quality, Review of Business, Vol. 9 No. 3, pp. 10-13. ? Gronroos, C. (1988b), Assessing competitive edge in the new competition of the service economy the ? ve rules of service, Working Paper, No. 9, March, First Interstate Centre for Service Marketing, Arizona State University, T empe, AZ. Hamill, B. and Davies, R. (1986), Quality in British Airways Are You Being Served? , Phillip Alan, Oxford, pp. 77-87. Hart, C. W. L. , Heskett, J. L. and Sasser, W. E. (1990), The pro? table art of service recovery, Harvard Business Review, Vol. 8 No. 4, July-August, pp. 148-56. Heskett, J. L. , Sasser, W. E. Jr and Schlesinger, L. A. (1997), The Service Pro? t Chain, Free Press, New York, NY. Heskett, J. L. , Jones, T. O. , Loveman, G. W. , Sasser, W. E. Jr and Schlesinger, L. A. (1994), Putting the service-pro? t chain to work, Harvard Business Review, Vol. 72, March-April, pp. 164-74. Johnson, R. L. , Tsiros, M. and Lancioni, R. A. (1995), Measuring service quality a systems approach, Journal of Services Marketing, Vol. 9 No. 5, pp. 6-19. Kotler, P. and Connor, R. A. (1977), Marketing professional services, Journal of Marketing, Vol. 1 No. 1, January, pp. 71-6. McCollough, M. A. and Bharadwaj, S. G. (1992), The recovery paradox an examination of consumer satisfaction in relation to discon? rmation, service quality, and attribution-based theories, in Allen, C. T. , et al. (Eds), Marketing hypothesis and Application, American Marketing Association, Chicago, IL, pp. 102-7. Mason, J. B. (1993), The art of service recovery, Retailing Issues Newsletter, Vol. 5 No. 1, pp. 1-4. Moore, N. (1999), How to Do Research The Complete Guide to Designing and Managing Research Projects, Library Association Publishing, London.Mulconrey, B. G. (1986), High-tech that create high touch, Bests Review, October, pp. 28-33. Of? ce of Fair Trading (1990), Consumer Loyalty, OFT, London. Parasuraman, A. , Zeithaml, V. and Berry, L. (1985), A conceptual model of service quality and its implications for future research, Journal of Marketing, Vol. 49, pp. 41-50. Piercy, N. F. (1995), Customer satisfaction and the internal market marketing our customers to our employees, Journal of Marketing Practice Applied Marketing Science, Vol. 1 No. 1, pp. 22-44. A case of service failure a nd recovery 321 MSQ 15,3 322Reichheld, F. F. (1993), Loyalty-based management, Harvard Business Review, Vol. 71, March-April, pp. 64-74. Remenyi, D. , Williams, B. , Money, A. and Swartz, E. (1998), Doing Research in Business and Management, Sage Publications, London. Rust, R. T. and Oliver, R. L. (1994), Service quality insights and managerial implications from the margin, in Rust, R. T. and Oliver, R. L. (Eds), Service Quality New Directions in Theory and Practice, Sage Publications, Beverly Hills, CA. Rust, R. T. , Zahorik, A. J. and Keiningham, T. L. (1995), Return on quality making service quality ? ancially accountable, Journal of Marketing, Vol. 59 No. 2, pp. 58-70. Schlesinger, L. A. and Heskett, J. L. (1991), Breaking the cycle of failure in services, Sloan Management Review, Vol. 32, Spring, pp. 17-29. Singh, J. (1990), A typology of consumer dissatisfaction response styles, Journal of Retailing, Vol. 66 No. 1, pp. 57-99. Tax, S. S. and Brown, S. W. (1998), Recovering and learning from service failure, Management Review, Vol. 40 No. 1, pp. 75-88. US Department of Transportation (1989), Federal melodic line Administration Airport Capacity Enhancement Plan, US Government Printing Of? e, Washington, DC, p. 3. Van der Wiele, T. , Boselie, B. and Hesselin, M. (2002), Customer satisfaction and business performance, Managing Service Quality, Vol. 12 No. 3, pp. 184-93. Verma, R. (2000), An empirical analysis of management challenges in service factories, service shops, mass services and professional services, International Journal of Service Industry Management, Vol. 11 No. 1, pp. 8-25. Wirtz, J. and Johnston, R. (2003), Singapore Airlines what it takes to sustain service excellence a senior management perspective, Managing Service Quality, Vol. 3 No. 1, pp. 10-19. Wirtz, J. and Tomlin, M. (2000), Institutionalising customer-driven learning through fully integrated customer feedback systems, Managing Service Quality, Vol. 30 No. 4, pp. 205-15. Zeithaml, V . A. (2000), Service quality, pro? tability and the economic worth of customers what we know and what we need to learn, Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, Vol. 28 No. 1, pp. 67-85. Zeithaml, V. , Berry, L. L. and Parasuraman, A. (1993), The nature and determinants of customer expectations of service, Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, Vol. 1, pp. 1-12. Zemke, R. and Bell, C. R. (1989), Service firmness Creating and Maintaining the Customer Service Edge, 2nd ed. , Lakewood Books, Minneapolis, MN. Zhu, Z. , Sivakumar, K. and Parasuraman, A. (2004), A mathematical model of service failure and recovery strategies, decision Sciences, Vol. 35 No. 3, p. 493. Further reading Zeithaml, V. , Berry, L. L. and Parasuraman, A. (1988), Communication and control processes in the delivery of service quality, Journal of Marketing, Vol. 52, April, pp. 35-48.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment