Marketing Strategy and Competitive Positioning pdf ebook


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hooley graham et al marketing strategy and competitive posit

Figure 13.11 
Quality gap analysis
Source: Adapted from Parasuraman, Zeithaml and Berry (1985).
Market
intelligence gap
Satisfaction
gap
Perceptual
gap
Production
gap
Design gap
Supplier perceptions
of customer
expectations 
Customer
expectations and
needs
Customer evaluations
of the offer
Delivered offer
Offer specification


380
CHAPTER 13 COMPETING THROUGH SUPERIOR SERVICE AND CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIPS
believes the customers expect and the service specification. This could typically be caused 
by resource constraints, where a service provider is too stretched to provide the service he 
or she knows the customer expects. Rather than increase the resource, or admit that the 
expected service cannot be provided, the service provider attempts to get as close as possible 
to customer expectations. 
Even where the service specification is closely aligned to customer expectations, there 
is a possibility that the actual service delivered falls short. The production gap is the dif-
ference between the service specification and the service that is actually delivered to the 
customer. There are a number of reasons why there may be a gap here. First, the service 
design might be so complex as to make accurate delivery unlikely. Service promises may 
be unrealistic given the resources put into them. Response times planned for telephone 
enquiries, for example, may be unrealistic given the number of staff available to answer 
the phone or the number of lines available to take the calls. Second, staff may not have the 
skills or the systems back-up to deliver the service as specified. Poor employee training, poor 
technology provision or even inadequate internal communications can result in frustrated 
employees unable to deliver the service as specified to the customer. Third, a major problem 
in service provision is the very heterogeneity of services. The quality of service can vary 
from employee to employee, and from time to time for the same employee. Quality control 
systems are more difficult to implement in services than in manufacturing; they can be no 
less important, however. 
The final gap that can lead to a satisfaction gap is the perceptual gap. Here it may be 
that the service has been delivered to specification and that the specification was in tune 
with customer expectations, but that the client, for one reason or another, does not believe 
the service has been delivered as expected. This could be brought about through poor use 
of tangible cues, lack of reinforcement of delivery, poor delivery manner or through the 
intercession of external influencers. In many ways, a perceptual gap is the easiest to rectify. 
It requires the service provider to demonstrate to the client that the service really has been 
delivered to original expectations.
Summary 
There is growing controversy surrounding conventional prescriptions of high customer 
service and relationship-building investments that executives should consider. Nonethe-
less, this chapter focuses on the idea that, for many companies, successful competitive 
positioning is about creating ongoing relationships with selected target customers, rather 
than relying on more sporadic transactions. However, an important strategic choice exists 
regarding the appropriate or ‘right service’ level and quantity for a specific firm. In general 
terms, relationship marketing seeks to build longer-term relationships with selected cus-
tomers, moving them up the relationship marketing ladder from customers to clients to 
supporters to advocates and ultimately, where applicable, to partners. A major factor in 
creating longer-term relationships is often the provision of superior service, beyond original 
customer expectations. 
Customer satisfaction monitoring is a means of assessing the quality of the service 
offered. Where there is a gap between expectations and customer evaluations of the ser-
vice provided, a systematic gap analysis can be used to identify and eliminate the causes. 
Renewed attention is being given to service quality and customer satisfaction issues in the 
context of online trading and the mix between ‘bricks-and-mortar’ and online offers in new 
types of value chain.
Summary 


381
CASE STUDY
Case study
Even the most established sites have sold only 
a few thousand homes so far; in total there are 1m 
properties for sale or rent every day on Rightmove.
But in recent months there has been a flurry of 
activity in the online agency sector – spurred in part 
by rising house prices and transaction volumes – that 
is creating more business for all parts of the estate 
agency industry.
This week veteran fund manager Neil Woodford 
backed start-up Purplebricks with a £7m investment. 
And next month entrepreneur Stelios Haji-Ioannou 
will launch his new site, easyProperty.
‘Traditional agents have got to wake up to the 
modern world – it’s adapt or die,’ says Robert Ellice, 
chief executive of easyProperty.
‘The portals have enabled people to know as 
much about a property as the owner does, before 
they even view it. Sellers are better-educated than 
ever before and they want flexibility but the existing 
agents don’t allow that. The industry is absolutely 
ripe for disruption, it’s a model that hasn’t changed 
in 30 years.’
Traditional estate agents argue that the new 
brand of online disrupters do not offer the same lev-
els of customer service. Ed Mead, a director of Lon-
don chain Douglas & Gordon, says ‘selling a property 
is not like selling a car’.
‘Eighty per cent of the work done in selling is after 
an offer is agreed, and involves a lot of hand-holding 
and time,’ he says. ‘The internet provides many 
things, a personal service is not one of them.’
More than a third of all deals fall through before 
completion and it takes agents three months on aver-
age to close a sale, Mr Mead adds.
In an important test case last year, Country 
Properties, a high street agent, complained to the 
Advertising Standards Authority about Hatched.
co.uk, alleging that it was misleading advertising for 
Hatched to claim to offer ‘a complete estate agency 
service at a fraction of the cost’.
Hatched won that case, with the ASA ruling that 
the online agent did provide a complete service that 
was comparable to high street agents.
Adam Day, director of Hatched, says its model 
fuses the best of the old with technology to custom-
ise services.
‘We offer everything a high street agent does, if 
the client wants it,’ he says. ‘But it is a waste of a 

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