1. Trang chủ
  2. » Luận Văn - Báo Cáo

Lecture The management and control of quality - Chapter 4: Focusing on customers

38 28 0

Đang tải... (xem toàn văn)

Tài liệu hạn chế xem trước, để xem đầy đủ mời bạn chọn Tải xuống

THÔNG TIN TÀI LIỆU

Thông tin cơ bản

Định dạng
Số trang 38
Dung lượng 1,18 MB

Nội dung

To create satisfied customers, the organization needs to identify customers’ needs; design the production and service systems to meet those needs, and measure the results as the basis for improvement.

Chapter 4 Focusing on  Customers   Key Idea Introduction To create satisfied customers, the  organization needs to  •identify customers’ needs,  •design the production and service  systems to meet those needs, and   •measure the results as the basis for  improvement Importance of Customer  Satisfaction and Loyalty     “Satisfaction is an attitude; loyalty is a  behavior” Loyal customers spend more, are willing to  pay higher prices, refer new clients, and are  less costly to do business with It costs five times more to find a new  customer than to keep an existing one  happy A firm cannot create loyal customers without  first creating satisfied customers Key Idea Importance of customer satisfaction Customer wants and needs drive  competitive advantage, and statistics  show that growth in market share is  strongly correlated with customer  satisfaction American Customer  Satisfaction Index     Measures customer satisfaction at national  level Introduced in 1994 by University of  Michigan and American Society for Quality Measures national index, seven industrial  sectors, 40 industries, 203 companies Continual decline in index from 1994  through 1998 with a small improvement into  2000 suggests that quality improvements  have not kept pace with consumer  expectations ACSI Model of Customer  Satisfaction Perceived quality Perceived value Customer expectations Customer complaints Customer satisfaction Customer loyalty Key Idea ACSI The econometric model used to produce  ACSI links customer satisfaction to its  determinants: customer expectations,  perceived quality, and perceived value.  Customer satisfaction, in turn, is linked to  customer loyalty, which has an impact on  profitability Customer­Driven Quality Cycle Customer needs and expectations           (expected quality) Identification of customer needs Translation into product/service specifications                         (design quality) Output (actual quality) Customer perceptions (perceived quality) measurement and feedback       PERCEIVED QUALITY is a comparison of ACTUAL  QUALITY to EXPECTED QUALITY Key Idea Creating Satisfied Customer Many organizations still focus more on  processes and products from an internal  perspective, rather than taking the  perspective of the external customer Leading Practices (1 of 2)    Define and segment key customer  groups and markets Understand the voice of the customer  (VOC)  Understand linkages between VOC and  design, production, and delivery Tools for Classifying  Customer Requirements Affinity diagram       Tree diagram Key Idea Customer Relationship Management An organization needs to build customer  loyalty by  •developing trust,  •communicating with customers, and  •effectively managing the interactions and  relationships with customers.   Moments of Truth   Every instance in which a customer comes  in contact with an employee of the  company.  Example (airline) – – – – – – – – Making a reservation Purchasing tickets Checking baggage Boarding a flight Ordering a beverage Requests a magazine Deplanes Picks up baggage Customer Relationship  Management        Accessibility and commitments Selecting and developing customer  contact employees Relevant customer contact  requirements Effective complaint management Strategic partnerships and alliances Exploiting CRM technology Key Idea Customer Contact Employees    Companies must carefully select  customer contact employees, train  them well, and empower them to meet  and exceed customer expectations Key Idea  Effective Complaint Mgmt  To improve products and processes  effectively, companies must do more than  simply fix the immediate problem. They  need a systematic process for collecting  and analyzing complaint data and then  using that information for improvements Measuring Customer  Satisfaction     Discover customer perceptions of  business effectiveness Compare company’s performance  relative to competitors Identify areas for improvement Track trends to determine if changes  result in improvements 30 Key Idea Measuring Customer Satisfaction An effective customer satisfaction  measurement system results in reliable  information about customer ratings of  specific product and service features and  about the relationship between these  ratings and the customer’s likely future  market behavior Survey Design     Identify purpose Determine who should conduct the  survey Select the appropriate survey  instrument Design questions and response scales Key Idea Survey Design The types of questions to ask in a survey  must be properly worded to achieve  actionable results. By actionable, we  mean that responses are tied directly to  key business processes, so that what  needs to be improved is clear; and  information can be translated into  cost/revenue implications to support the  setting of improvement priorities Key Idea Analyzing Customer Feedback Appropriate customer satisfaction  measurement identifies processes that  have high impact on satisfaction and  distinguishes between low performing  processes low performance and those  that are performing well Performance­Importance  Analysis Performance  Low                            High       Low Who cares? Overkill Vulnerable Strengths Importance      High Difficulties with Customer  Satisfaction Measurement       Poor measurement schemes Failure to identify appropriate quality  dimensions Failure to weight dimensions appropriately Lack of comparison with leading competitors Failure to measure potential and former  customers Confusing loyalty with satisfaction Customer Perceived Value  CPV measures how customers assess  benefits—such as product performance,  ease of use, or time savings—against  costs, such as purchase price,installation  cost or time, and so on,in making  purchase decisions Customer and Market Focus  in the Baldrige Criteria The Customer and Market Focus category examines  how an organization determines requirements,  expectations, and preferences of customers and  markets; and how it builds relationships with  customers and determines the key factors that lead to  customer acquisition, satisfaction, loyalty, and  retention, and to business expansion 3.1 Customer and Market Knowledge 3.2 Customer Relationships and Satisfaction a. Customer Relationship Building b. Customer Satisfaction Determination ... expectations,? ?and? ?preferences? ?of? ?customers? ?and? ? markets;? ?and? ?how it builds relationships with  customers? ?and? ?determines? ?the? ?key factors that lead to  customer acquisition, satisfaction, loyalty,? ?and? ?... perspective, rather than taking? ?the? ? perspective? ?of? ?the? ?external customer Leading Practices (1? ?of? ?2)    Define? ?and? ?segment key customer  groups? ?and? ?markets Understand? ?the? ?voice? ?of? ?the? ?customer  (VOC)  Understand linkages between VOC? ?and? ?... customers? ?? throughout an organization  that connect every individual? ?and? ?function  to? ?the? ?external? ?customers? ?and? ? consumers, thus characterizing? ?the? ? organization’s value chain Customer Segmentation     Demographics

Ngày đăng: 04/11/2020, 23:34

TỪ KHÓA LIÊN QUAN

TÀI LIỆU CÙNG NGƯỜI DÙNG

TÀI LIỆU LIÊN QUAN