Unit 1 Notes BM411 2025
Unit 1 Notes BM411 2025
Concept of Services:
1. Economic Growth
o Services contribute significantly to GDP in most economies, especially in
developed and emerging markets. They often surpass agriculture and
manufacturing in their economic output.
2. Employment Generation
o The services sector creates vast employment opportunities, particularly in
areas like healthcare, education, information technology, and tourism.
3. Enhancing Productivity
o Many services, such as financial services, logistics, and telecommunications,
act as enablers for other industries by improving their efficiency and
productivity.
4. Innovation and Knowledge Creation
o The sector fosters innovation, especially in IT, digital services, and research-
driven fields. It also drives knowledge creation and dissemination through
education and media.
5. Export Earnings
o Many countries have capitalized on exporting services like software
development, BPOs (Business Process Outsourcing), and tourism,
contributing to foreign exchange earnings.
6. Improving Quality of Life
o Services such as healthcare, education, and entertainment directly enhance
societal well-being and quality of life.
Digitization: The rise of digital platforms and online services has expanded the scope
of the services sector, including e-commerce, fintech, and remote healthcare.
Automation and AI: Innovations in technology have increased efficiency and the
variety of services offered.
3. Globalization
Outsourcing and Offshoring: The globalization of trade has allowed services like IT,
customer support, and consultancy to flourish internationally.
Tourism Growth: Easier travel and increased connectivity have boosted international
and domestic tourism.
Rising Incomes: Higher disposable incomes have led to increased spending on leisure,
education, and luxury services.
Aging Populations: Aging demographics in many countries have driven demand for
healthcare, retirement planning, and related services.
Green Services: The demand for services related to renewable energy, sustainable
practices, and environmental consultancy has risen with global focus on sustainability.
1. Intangibility
Definition: Services are produced and consumed simultaneously. The service provider
and the consumer often need to be present for the service to be delivered.
Implications: Quality of the service depends heavily on the interaction between the
provider and the consumer. For instance, a haircut requires the presence of both the
hairdresser and the customer.
3. Perishability
Definition: Services cannot be stored for future use or sale. Unused service capacity at
a given time is lost forever.
Implications: Demand forecasting and capacity management are crucial. For example,
an empty hotel room or an unsold airline seat represents lost revenue.
4. Variability (Heterogeneity)
Definition: Services are often inconsistent and vary depending on who provides them,
when, where, and how.
Implications: Standardizing service quality can be challenging. For example, the
experience of dining at a restaurant may vary based on the chef, waiter, or time of
visit.
5. Lack of Ownership
Definition: Services do not result in ownership. Consumers pay for the experience or
benefit rather than a physical product.
Implications: Customers can only use or experience services temporarily. For
example, buying a gym membership gives access to facilities but not ownership of the
equipment.
6. Customer Participation
Definition: Customers often play an active role in the production and delivery of
services.
Implications: The quality and outcome of the service can depend on the customer’s
involvement. For instance, in education, the learning experience depends on the
student’s engagement.
7. Intense Human Involvement
Definition: Many services rely on the skills, attitude, and performance of people
delivering them.
Implications: The "human touch" can influence the quality of service, as seen in
healthcare, hospitality, or customer service industries.
Definition: Services are consumed at the point of delivery, and there is no inventory
or delay.
Implications: Real-time delivery requires high efficiency and coordination, such as in
public transportation or live events.
9. Personalization
Definition: Services can often be customized to meet individual customer needs and
preferences.
Implications: This creates opportunities for differentiation and customer satisfaction.
For example, financial advisory services are tailored to each client’s goals and risk
appetite.
10. Relationship-Oriented
Classification of service
a. Consumer Services
b. Business Services
Services provided to businesses to support their operations.
Examples: Consultancy, IT services, logistics, legal services, and facility
management.
a. Tangible Services
b. Intangible Services
a. People-Based Services
b. Equipment-Based Services
Services delivered through the use of technology or machinery with minimal human
intervention.
Examples: ATMs, self-checkout systems, online banking.
a. Continuous Services
b. Discrete Services
a. Essential Services
Services that enhance comfort, lifestyle, or leisure but are not critical.
Examples: Spa treatments, luxury cruises, premium club memberships.
a. Public Services
Services provided by the government or public sector for the welfare of citizens.
Examples: Police, firefighting, public education.
b. Private Services
a. Standardized Services
b. Customized Services
a. Financial Services
b. Professional Services
Legal advice, auditing, engineering, and architecture.
e. Healthcare Services
g. Entertainment Services
a. High-Contact Services
b. Low-Contact Services
a. Economic Development
b. Technological Advancements
Digitization and Automation: Technology has enabled the creation of new service
industries like e-commerce, cloud computing, and fintech.
Communication Technology: Improved connectivity has facilitated global
outsourcing and remote service delivery, such as customer support and IT consulting.
c. Globalization
d. Demographic Shifts
Aging Populations: An aging global population has increased demand for healthcare,
elder care, and retirement services.
Urbanization: Rapid urbanization has driven demand for infrastructure, public
utilities, and urban lifestyle services.
f. Policy Support
5. Future Prospects
The services sector is expected to continue its expansion, particularly in emerging markets.
Growth areas include:
1. Intangibility
Services: Intangible; they cannot be seen, touched, or stored. For example, a haircut
or legal consultation is an experience or benefit rather than a physical object.
Products: Tangible; they can be seen, touched, and stored. For instance, a car or a
book is a physical item.
2. Perishability
Services: Perishable; they cannot be stored for future use. Once a service is delivered,
the opportunity to sell it is gone (e.g., an unsold airline seat).
Products: Non-perishable; they can often be stored and used later, depending on the
product's shelf life.
3. Inseparability
Services: Simultaneous production and consumption. The provider and the consumer
often need to interact for the service to be delivered (e.g., a doctor's consultation).
Products: Produced and consumed separately. A product is manufactured, distributed,
and then consumed by the buyer.
4. Variability (Heterogeneity)
Services: Highly variable; the quality can differ based on who provides the service,
when, and where (e.g., the experience at a restaurant depends on the chef and staff).
Products: Standardized; the quality is consistent, especially in mass-produced items
(e.g., a smartphone model).
5. Ownership
Services: No transfer of ownership; customers pay for the right to access or use a
service temporarily (e.g., renting a car, attending a concert).
Products: Ownership is transferred to the buyer upon purchase (e.g., buying a
television or furniture).
6. Measurability
Services: Often require customer participation during the delivery process (e.g., a
fitness class).
Products: Generally do not require customer involvement in the production process.
8. Customization
9. Delivery Mode
Services: Delivered in real-time and cannot be transported (e.g., online tutoring or in-
person medical services).
Products: Transportable; they can be delivered to the consumer at a later time.
10. Examples
Summary Table
The service continuum is a conceptual framework that illustrates the spectrum of offerings
between pure products (tangible goods) and pure services (intangible activities). Most
offerings in the market fall somewhere in between, as they combine elements of both goods
and services.
Pure Goods: Entirely tangible, physical items with no associated service (e.g., raw
materials, groceries).
Pure Services: Entirely intangible offerings with no physical product component (e.g.,
psychotherapy, live performances).
Hybrid Offerings: Most market offerings combine both tangible and intangible
elements, such as a smartphone (product) with warranty and customer support
(services).
The continuum moves from pure goods to pure services, with examples at each stage:
1. Pure Goods
o Example: Salt, sugar, raw materials.
o Characteristics: Fully tangible, no service component.
2. Goods with Minor Services
o Example: A car with basic warranty or manual.
o Characteristics: Tangible product with minimal service integration.
3. Hybrid Offerings (Goods with Significant Services)
o Example: Smartphones with after-sales support, restaurants (food + service).
o Characteristics: Equal emphasis on product and service components.
4. Services with Supporting Goods
o Example: Airline travel (service) with complementary in-flight meals (goods).
o Characteristics: Core service with tangible elements to enhance the
experience.
5. Pure Services
o Example: Therapy, consultancy, live performances.
o Characteristics: Entirely intangible, no physical goods involved.
a. Marketing Strategy
Offerings closer to the product end require strategies emphasizing quality, durability,
and physical attributes.
Offerings closer to the service end focus on trust, experience, and customer
relationships.
b. Customer Expectations
c. Value Addition
Combining goods and services can enhance customer satisfaction and loyalty (e.g.,
bundling a product with installation or maintenance).
Service marketing plays a vital role in promoting intangible offerings and ensuring their
successful delivery to the target audience. Its importance arises from the unique
characteristics of services and the growing dominance of the service sector in global
economies.
1. Economic Significance
3. Differentiation
4. Intangible Nature
Since services cannot be seen or touched, marketing creates a sense of value and
builds customer confidence through branding, testimonials, and tangible cues.
7. Global Reach
The unique nature of services requires specialized marketing approaches. Below are the
defining features of service marketing:
1. Intangibility
2. Inseparability
Description: Services are produced and consumed simultaneously, often requiring the
provider and customer to interact.
Implication: Emphasizing the quality of the interaction between staff and customers is
crucial (e.g., training employees in customer service skills).
3. Perishability
Description: Services cannot be stored for future use; unused capacity is lost (e.g., an
empty hotel room).
Implication: Service marketing strategies focus on demand forecasting, promotions,
and pricing to optimize capacity utilization.
4. Variability (Heterogeneity)
Description: Service quality can vary based on who provides it, when, and where.
Implication: Standardizing processes and maintaining quality consistency through
training and feedback systems is key.
5. Lack of Ownership
Description: Customers pay for access to or the use of a service but do not own it
(e.g., streaming subscriptions).
Implication: Marketers emphasize the benefits, convenience, and experience
associated with the service rather than ownership.
6. Relationship-Oriented
7. Tangible Cues
Description: Customers often play an active role in service delivery (e.g., choosing
options in a self-service kiosk).
Implication: Marketing must ensure a user-friendly and engaging experience for
customers during service delivery.
9. People-Centric
Description: The quality of services depends heavily on the people delivering them.
Implication: Training staff and maintaining high service standards are essential for
successful service marketing.