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Unit 6: Service Quality
Customer psychographics: Receiving orders on the net or through the phone and Notes
delivering the merchandise to their homes gives Central Bazaar an incomparable
advantage over other retailers in customer analysis. It has access to hitherto
unavailable data on the customer, including not only his demographic profile but
also his psychographics. Central Bazaar can now track the customers purchase
patterns, know his preferences, and get a glimpse of his perceptions, personality as
well as his attitude. This would undoubtedly make him tailor and customise his
retail marketing, including merchandise and promotion offers, retail communication,
and other value-added services.
Problem for Central Bazaar
Mr. Joseph Mathew, General Manager, Central Bazaar had a problem. He wanted, with
evangelical zeal that the unique service format should succeed. He not only wanted Central
Bazaar to have a distinctive market presence and mind share but also garner revenues,
market share and market size. He fully understood that there existed a linear relationship
between customer satisfaction and profitability. He dreaded the possibility of having
dissatisfied customers; but he was more scared; by the fact that he had no way of accessing
basic data about the dissatisfied customers; such as:
Who they were
Which aspect of Central Bazaars service they were dissatisfied with
the degree of their dissatisfaction
Also, he realised, ensuring consistent service delivery implied was a way towards the
quality goal. His biggest problem was not only in measuring the quality of service delivery,
its consistency and customer satisfaction at Central Bazaar but also in finding comparable
benchmarks. He knew that customers compared stores, formats and different aspects of
the service retail-mix like merchandise, locations, layout, promotions and other
communications and the behaviour of the retail personnel. He also knew that this
comparison was crucial in building their preferences. Central Bazaar was a unique e-
tailer, with no known direct competition. He was up against retailers with different formats
- supermarkets, kirana stores and discount stores - but fighting for the same customers
share of wallet and heart share. The undeniable fact was that the shopping experience in
Central Bazaar was definitely different from that of other offline format stores. How do
you compare oranges with mangoes! he thought.
Question
Can you find ways and means to measure quality in intangible offerings like services?
Self Assessment
Fill in the blanks:
5. In a restaurant, rock music is being played but its quite possible that many people dont
like it. This might lead to Gap
6. An educational institute has by mistake printed the wrong telephone numbers on its
pamphlets. This may nonetheless lead to Gap
.
7. A Club is giving free passes for a gazal concert to all its lifetime members. This type of
promotion is called
marketing.
8. The conflict between whether to go a particular restaurant or not may lead to
gap.
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