Service Operations Management - XL NCR 2023
Service Operations Management - XL NCR 2023
Service Operations Management - XL NCR 2023
Management – XL NCR
2023
What is Service?
⚫ “A service is not something that is built in a
factory, put on a shelf, and then taken home by
a customer. A service is a dynamic, living
process. A service is performed. A service is
rendered. The raw materials of a service are
time and motion; not plastic or steel. A service
cannot be stored or shipped. In short, a service
is not a thing”
G. Lynn Shostack
What is a Service?
⚫ Service is an activity or a series of
activities to produce mostly an intangible
experience, usually involving the customer
as a participant
What is Service Operations
Management (SOM)
⚫ SOM involves managing (designing,
planning, directing, controlling ) the
processes of producing and providing
services and some goods to the
customers
⚫ Service organizations
⚫ Banks, hospitals, insurance, transportation,
education, software, consulting, training,
restaurants
Why Focus on Service?
⚫ Largest segment of the economy in many
countries including India
Self-service groceries
Automobile
Installed carpeting
Fast-food restaurant
Gourmet restaurant
Auto maintenance
Haircut
Consulting services
Four Distinctive Characteristics of
Services
1. Intangibility
2. Variability
3. Inseparability (simultaneous production
and consumption)
4. Perishability
5. Customer or object participation
Service Package
⚫ Five components describing a service
1. Supporting facility
2. Facilitating goods
3. Information
4. Explicit services
Benefits that are readily observable by
senses
5. Implicit services
Psychological benefits that the customer may
sense vaguely
Service Package in a Hospital
⚫ Supporting facility: Concrete building with
aesthetic design, equipment
⚫ Facilitating goods: Medicines, hospital supplies,
linen, towel, soap
⚫ Information: Medical records, registration
system
⚫ Explicit service: Improved health condition
⚫ Implicit services: Being in a reputed hospital,
safe
SERVICE PROCESS DESIGN
Why Service Design So Important?
Nordstrom,
Legal, Med
5* hotel
Fast Food
Insurance sale
Internet banking
Mail order houses
Three Contrasting Approaches to
Delivering On-Site Service
⚫ Production-Line approach
⚫ Self-Service approach
⚫ Personal-Attention approach
Production Line Approach
(Low Customer Contact)
⚫ Runs like a factory where all the
production management concepts and
automation technology are applied
⚫ Examples: McDonald, Aravind Eye Care
Arvind Eye Hospital, Madurai
(Cataract Surgery)
⚫ Arvind surgeon takes
⚫1 million cataract surgeries per year
⚫ 10 minutes for a cataract surgery against the
industry average of 15-16 minutes
⚫ Infection rate 4 per 10,000 cases as opposed
to 6 per 10,000 in UK
⚫ Doctors perform 400 surgeries per doctor per
month as opposed to 25 surgeries per doctor
per month
Self-Service approach
⚫ Customer takes a greater role in the
production of service
⚫ ATMs
⚫ Self service gas stations
⚫ E-tickets (air or train)
⚫ Paying bills online
⚫ Salad bars
⚫ Buffet Lunch
⚫ Airport kiosk check-in
Personal Attention Approach
(High Customer Contact)
⚫ Service tasks and activity levels uncertain
⚫ Poka-Yoke
⚫ Warning Poka-Yoke
⚫ Signals the existence of a problem
⚫ Control Poka-Yoke
⚫ Stops production until problem resolved
Source: Article: “Make your services fail safe,” Sloan Management Review, Spring 1994
Fail-Safing
MANUFACTURING ⚫ SERVICES
⚫ Producer’s error ⚫ Producer’s error
⚫ Customer’s error
Errors in Service
Service Error
F
Advantages of Blue Printing
⚫ Brings clarity to the service delivery process
⚫ Enables identification of critical incidents, which
contribute or damage the consumer experience
⚫ Provides insights on areas where employees
need to be trained
⚫ Enables further improvement in process
⚫ Helps to put coordination activities in
perspectives
Benchmarking
⚫ It is the process of improving processes by
constantly identifying and adapting best
practices followed inside and outside the
company
Benchmarking
⚫ Search best practices from leading
organizations in the same industry
⚫ Benefits
⚫ Helps in improving service delivery process
⚫ Facilitates in setting performance standards
⚫ Uncover emerging technologies
Toyota Production System (TPS)
⚫ A system that produces same output with
less resources
⚫ Less manpower
⚫ Less material
⚫ Less machinery
⚫ Banks
⚫ Insurance
⚫ Education
⚫ Information Technology
Customers use these five dimensions to form their judgement of service quality. The
Gap between expected and perceived service is a measure of service quality.
Service Quality Dimensions
in US (Level of Importance)
⚫ Zeithaml, Parasuraman and Berry asked
1,900 customers of 5 nationally known
companies to allocate 100 points across
the five service quality dimensions:
⚫ Reliability:
32%
⚫ Responsiveness: 22%
⚫ Assurance: 19%
⚫ Empathy: 16%
⚫ Tangibles: 11%
Recent Research Findings on SERVQUAL in
Indian Service Sector – A 2008 study
1 2 3
⚫ Queue can be a
⚫ Physical line
⚫ Virtual line
Queuing
⚫ Queues are almost unavoidable in our lives
⚫ People spent approximately 5 years of their lives waiting in
lines according to a 1988 study by Priority Management, USA
⚫ Wait at
⚫ Traffic lights, toll booths, railway stations, bus terminus,
banks, airline check-in counters, movie theatre, medical
centers, grocery stores, airline security, educational
institutions etc.
Waiting Realities
Waiting results from variations in arrival rates
(random) and service rates (varying demands of
customers)
Renege
Queue
Arrival Departure
Discipline
Process Queue Service
Calling
Configuration Process
Population
Balk No future
need
Waiting line Models
Patient customers
Customers enter the waiting line and remain until
served
Balking
Upon arriving, decide the line is too long and decide not
to enter the line
Reneging
Waiting customers grow impatient and leave the line
Jockeying
Customers may switch to another line
Queuing System
Configurations
Phases refer to no. of sequential
Servers each customer must go through
to complete service
Take a Number
Enter
3 4 2 Foreign banks,
8 6 10 Airline security check-ins
Airline check-in counters
12 7
banks 11 9 VIRTUAL QUEUE
5
Banks
A Simple Queuing System
Trade-off Between Cost of
Providing Service and Customer
Satisfaction
Little’s Law
Ls = λ×Ws
Total Cost for a Waiting Line
Total Cost (TC) = Service Cost + Waiting Cost
TC per hour = Cs × C + Cw × Ls
= Cs×C + Cw×λ×Ws
Where C = # servers
Cs = Hourly cost per server
Cw= Hourly cost of waiting customer
Ls = Expected # in the system
(queue + service)
Ws = Average waiting time in system
Objective: Minimize total costs
Little’s Law
By Little’s Law, L = λ × W
Lq = λ × Wq
Trade-Off
In waiting line decisions, the primary trade-off is the
cost of having too many employees (cost of service
or idle time) vs. cost of not having enough
employees (cost of waiting). If the company hires
too many employees, it will have to unnecessarily
pay them to be idle most of the time. On the other
hand, if the company hires too few workers, the
company will face lost sales due to customers
leaving the store or not coming in due to an
excessively long waiting line. It is much more
difficult to estimate the cost of waiting in
comparison to cost of service.
Assumptions of Basic Single Server
Model and Multiple Server Model
Notation: A / B / C
Where, A = probability distr. of arrivals
B = probability distr. of service time
C = number of parallel servers
Example: fleet of police cars, garbage trucks, student advisor with finite no of students
assigned
Finite Queue Length
⚫ Problem Solving
Renaissance Clinic (A)
Case