Service Quality

(noun)

A term which describes a comparison of a customer's expectations as it relates to a company's performance.

Related Terms

  • Virtual Online Communities
  • Service quality model

Examples of Service Quality in the following topics:

  • The RATER Model

    • RATER is a service quality framework that highlights five important business areas customers use to analyze strength or weaknesses.
    • The RATER model is a service quality framework.
    • Parasuraman, and Leonard Berry, who introduced the framework in their 1990 book Delivering Quality Service.
    • Gap 2: The quality specification gap.
    • Gap 5: The perceived service quality gap.
  • Heterogeneity

    • In other words, services are generated, rendered, and consumed at one time.
    • Given that services are heterogeneous, it is essential that each and every customer receive excellent service.
    • Heterogeneity of service quality does not imply that no two customers can receive great service, it just means that no two transactions can be repeated identically.
    • It is the quality of the service that will essentially set two competing firms with similar products and services apart.
    • However, too much customization would compromise the standard delivery of the service and adversely affect its quality.
  • Intangibility

    • Teachers provide a service that is intangible.
    • However, it is possible to give tangible proof for the quality of service, such as through state test scores.
    • To reassure the buyer and build his confidence, marketing strategists need to give tangible proof for the quality of service.
    • Service providers can inspire confidence in the service by having a clean facility that customers can see, an easy-to-navigate website that shows service offerings, and a reliable and courteous staff to help customers.
    • For example, in the case of two fast food chains serving a similar product (Pizza Hut and Domino's), it is the service quality, not the actual product, that distinguishes the two brands from each other.
  • The Quality Control Cycle

    • Quality control is used to evaluate and address the quality of the goods a business provides.
    • Quality control is a business procedure used to assess the quality of a company's products or services against benchmarks determined by the company, industry standards, or clients/customers.
    • Quality control and quality assurance have different purposes.
    • Most importantly, a quality control process should be an ongoing process.
    • Deficiency in any of these three aspects increases the risk of inferior products or services getting to market.
  • Product Quality

    • Quality refers to the ability of a product or service to consistently meet or exceed customer requirements or expectations.
    • Broadly defined, quality refers to the ability of a product or service to consistently meet or exceed customer requirements or expectations.
    • When discussing quality one must consider design, production, and service.
    • Quality of Design – intention of designers to include or exclude features in a product or service.
    • Quality of conformance – refers to the degree to which goods and services conform to the intent of the designer.
  • Quality Control

    • Quality can be thought of as the degree to which performance of a product or service meets or exceeds expectations.
    • At that time quality control evolved to quality assurance and is now better known as a Strategic Approach, a tool for improving not only products but also processes and services.
    • Quality should be measured differently for products and services, and judged by their own set of dimensions.
    • Responsibility for overall quality lies with top management.
    • Most of the time, managers aim to improve or maintain the quality of an organization as a whole; this is referred to as Total Quality Management (TQM).
  • Quality

    • Consumers place a value on quality; therefore high quality products may be able to win share and/or command a price premium.
    • When it comes to quality in product design, manufacturers might measure how well products conform to certain requirements or the level of accuracy in products and services following production.
    • Product qualities can be divided into two main categories:
    • Checking - confirming that a product or service has been produced correctly.
    • Quality Assurance – obtaining confirmation (usually from the purchaser or a third-party) that a product or service will be satisfactory.
  • Inseparability

    • Inseparability is a service characteristic that makes it impossible to disconnect the production of the service from its consumption.
    • Inseparability (also known as simultaneity) is used in marketing to describe a key quality of services that distinguishes them from goods.
    • Moreover, it is very difficult to separate a service from the service provider.
    • The concept of inseparability does not mean that the same service will be delivered to each customer; rather, it means that the same standards of quality will be applied to each service.
    • Describe inseparability in services marketing and how it distinguishes services from goods
  • Quality Inspections and Standards

    • Companies ensure the quality of products and services by adhering to ISO standards and performing quality audits to ensure compliance.
    • They were the ISO 9000:1987 series of standards, comprising ISO 9001:1987, ISO 9002:1987, and ISO 9003:1987; which were applicable in different types of industries, based on the type of activity or process (designing, production, or service delivery).
    • The Quality Management System standards created by ISO are meant to certify the processes and the system of an organization, not the product or service itself.
    • ISO 9000 standards do not certify the quality of the product or service.
    • A quality audit is the process of systematic examination of a quality system carried out by an internal or external quality auditor or audit team.
  • Quality Control and Assurance

    • Quality assurance and quality control are intended to ensure that products are created with the fewest number of defects possible.
    • Quality assurance and quality control are two methods of planning and implementing structured methods in a work process to ensure that products are created with the highest possible quality and with the smallest number of defects and problems.
    • Quality assurance (QA) refers to the planned and systematic activities implemented in a quality system to fulfill the quality requirements for a product or service It is a systematic measurement compared to a set standard, with process monitoring used to prevent errors.
    • QA includes managing the quality of raw materials, assemblies, products, components, services related to production, management processes, production processes, and inspection processes.
    • Discuss quality control (QC) and quality assurance (QA) as integral components of an effective organizational management structure
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