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Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 1 Chapter 9 Balancing Demand and Productive Capacity
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Page 1: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 1

Chapter 9

Balancing Demand and Productive Capacity

Page 2: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 2

Learning Objectives - Chapter 9

Study service capacity

Consider how variations in demand can be predicted

Explore how capacity management techniques can be employed to match variations in demand

Assess how marketing strategies can smooth out fluctuations in demand

Reveal what can be done to reduce the waiting time discomfort

Uncover what makes a reservation system effective

Page 3: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 3

Fluctuations in Demand Threaten Service

Productivity

Page 4: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 4

Productive Capacity and Service Success

Services cannot be stockpiled

This is problematic for people or physical possession services due to wide swings in demand

Goal is to utilize staff, equipment, and facilities as productively as possible

Page 5: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 5

From Excess Demand to Excess Capacity

Four conditions potentially faced by fixed-capacity services:

Excess demand Too much demand relative to capacity at a given time

Demand exceeds optimum capacity Upper limit to a firm’s ability to meet demand at a given time

Optimum capacity Point beyond which service quality declines as more

customers are serviced

Excess capacity Too much capacity relative to demand at a given time

Page 6: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 6

Addressing Problem of Fluctuating Demand

Two basic approaches:

Adjust level of capacity to meet demand

Need to understand productive capacity and how it varies on an incremental basis

Manage level of demand

Page 7: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 7

Variations in Demand Relative to Capacity (Fig 9.1)

VOLUME DEMANDED

TIME CYCLE 1 TIME CYCLE 2

Maximum Available Capacity

Optimum Capacity (Demand and Supply Well Balanced)

Low Utilization (May Send Bad Signals)

Demand exceeds capacity (business is lost)

Demand exceeds optimum capacity (quality declines)

Excess capacity (wasted resources)

CAPACITY UTILIZED

Use marketing strategies to smooth out peaks, fill in valleys

Many firms use a mix of both approaches

Page 8: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 8

Many Service Organizations Are Capacity Constrained

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Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 9

Defining Productive Capacity in Services

Physical facilities to contain customers

Physical facilities to store or process goods

Physical equipment to process people, possessions, or information

Labour used for physical or mental work

Public/private infrastructure

See Best Practice In Action 9.1: Improving Check-In Service at Logan Airport

Page 10: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 10

Alternative Capacity Management Strategies

Level capacity (fixed level at all times)

Stretch and shrink

Offer inferior extra capacity at peaks (e.g., bus/train standees)

Vary seated space per customer (e.g., elbow room, leg room)

Extend/cut hours of service

Chase demand (adjust capacity to match demand)

Flexible capacity (vary mix by segment)

Page 11: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 11

Adjusting Capacity to Match Demand

Schedule downtime during periods of low demand

Use part-time employees

Rent or share extra facilities and equipment

Ask customers to share

Invite customers to perform self-service

Cross-train employees

Page 12: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 12

Patterns and Determinants of Demand

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Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 13

Predictable Demand Patterns and Their Underlying Causes (Table 9.1)

day week month year other

employment billing or tax

payments/refunds pay days school hours/holidays seasonal climate

changes public/religious

holidays natural cycles (e.g., coastal tides)

Predictable Cycles

of Demand Levels

Underlying Causes of

Cyclical Variations

Page 14: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 14

Causes of Seemingly Random Changes in Demand Levels

Weather

Health problems

Accidents, Fires, Crime

Natural disasters

Question: Which of these events can be predicted?

Page 15: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 15

Analyzing Drivers of Demand

Understand why customers from specific market segments select this service

Keep good records of transactions to analyze demand patterns

Sophisticated software can help to track customer consumption patterns

Record weather conditions and other special factors that might influence demand

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Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 16

Overall Usage Levels Comprise Demand from Different Segments

Not all demand is desirable

Keep peak demand levels within service capacity of organization

Marketing cannot smooth out random fluctuations in demand

Fluctuations caused by factors beyond organization’s control (for example: weather)

Detailed market analysis may reveal that one segment’s demand cycle is concealed within a broader, random pattern

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Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 17

Demand Levels Can Be Managed

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Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 18

Alternative Demand-Management Strategies (Table 9.2)

Take no action Let customers sort it out

Reduce demand Higher prices Communication promoting alternative times

Increase demand Lower prices Communication, including promotional incentives Vary product features to increase desirability More convenient delivery times and places

Inventory demand by reservation system

Inventory demand by formalized queuing

Page 19: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 19

Marketing Strategies CanReshape Some Demand Patterns

Use price and other costs to manage demand

Change product elements

Modify place and time of delivery

No change Vary times when service is available Offer service to customers at a new location

Promotion and education

Page 20: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 20

Hotel Room Demand Curves by Segment and Season (Fig 9.3)

Bh = business travelers in high season

Bl = business travelers in low season

Th = tourist in high season

Tl = tourist in low season

Bh

Bh

Bl

Bl

Th

Th

Tl

Tl

Price per room night

Quantity of rooms demanded at each price by travelers in each segment in each season

Note: hypothetical example

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Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 21

Inventory Demand through Waiting Lines and

Reservations

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Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 22

Waiting Is a Universal Phenomenon!

An average person may spend up to 30 minutes/day waiting in line—equivalent to over a week per year!

Almost nobody likes to wait

It's boring, time-wasting, and sometimes physically uncomfortable

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Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 23

Why Do Waiting Lines Occur?

Not all queues take form of a physical waiting line in a single location

Because the number of arrivals at a facility exceeds capacity of system to process them at a specific point in the process

Queues are basically a symptom of unresolved capacity management problems

Page 24: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 24

Saving Customers from Burdensome Waits

Add extra capacity so that demand can be met at most times (problem: may increase costs too much)

Rethink design of queuing system to give priority to certain customers or transactions

Redesign processes to shorten transaction time

Manage customer behaviour and perceptions of wait

Install a reservations system

Page 25: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 25

Alternative Queue Configurations (Fig 9.5)

Single line, single server, single stage

Single line, single servers, sequential stages

Parallel lines to multiple servers

Designated lines to designated servers

Single line to multiple servers (“snake”)

“Take a number” (single or multiple servers)28 29

21

20

24

23

30 25

3126

2732

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Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 26

Criteria for Allocating Different Market Segments to Designated Lines

Urgency of job

Emergencies versus non-emergencies

Duration of service transaction

Number of items to transact Complexity of task

Payment of premium price

First class versus economy

Importance of customer

Frequent users/high volume purchasers versus others

Page 27: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 27

Minimize Perceptions of Waiting Time

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Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 28

Ten Propositions on Psychology of Waiting Lines (1) (Table 9.3)

Unoccupied time feels longer than occupied time

Pre- and post-process waits feel longer than in-process waits

Anxiety makes waits seem longer

Uncertain waits are longer than known, finite waits

Unexplained waits are longer than explained waits

Sources: Maister; Davis & Heineke; Jones & Peppiatt; see your Services Marketing text, page 275 for full source information.

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Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 29

6. Unfair waits are longer than equitable waiting

7. People will wait longer for more valuable services

8. Waiting alone feels longer than waiting in groups

9. Physically uncomfortable waits feel longer

10.Waits seem longer to new or occasional users

Ten Propositions on Psychology of Waiting Lines (2) (Table 9.3)

Sources: Maister; Davis & Heineke; Jones & Peppiatt; see your Services Marketing text, page 275 for full source information.

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Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 30

Create an Effective Reservation System

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Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 31

Benefits of Reservations

Controls and smoothes demand

Pre-sells service

Informs and educates customers in advance of arrival

Saves customers from having to wait in line for service (if reservation times are honored)

Data captured helps organizations

Prepare financial projections Plan operations and staffing levels

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Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 32

Characteristics of Well-Designed Reservations System

Fast and user-friendly for customers and staff

Answers customer questions

Offers options for self service (e.g., the Web)

Accommodates preferences (e.g., room with view)

Deflects demand from unavailable first choices to alternative times and locations

Includes strategies for no-shows and overbooking

Requiring deposits to discourage no-shows Canceling unpaid bookings after designated time Compensating victims of over-booking

Page 33: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 33

Setting Hotel Room Sales Targets by Segment and Time Period (Fig.9.7)

Out of commission for renovation

Loyalty Program Members

Transient guestsWeekend package

Groups and conventions

Airline contracts

100%

50%

Week 7 (Low Season)

MNights: TuTime W Th F S Su

Loyalty Program Members

Transient guests

W/Epackage

Groups (no conventions)

Airline contracts

Week 36 (High Season)

M Tu W Th F S Su

Capacity (% rooms)

Page 34: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 34

Information Needed for Demand and Capacity Management Strategies

Historical data on demand level and composition, noting responses to marketing variables

Demand forecasts by segment under specified conditions

Segment-by-segment data

Fixed and variable cost data, profitability of incremental sales

Meaningful location-by-location demand variations

Customer attitudes toward queuing

Customer opinions of quality at different levels of capacity utilization

Page 35: Cara cepat balancing demand asli

Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Services Marketing, Canadian Edition Chapter 9- 35

Summary – Chapter 9

Service capacity may face four types of demand

Service capacity can be adjusted to match demand by using temporary employees, cross-training employees etc

Variations in demand can be predicted through good record keeping and analysis

Firms have many options on how they can match capacity to variations in demand

Marketing strategies can smooth out fluctuations in demand by deploying the four traditional Ps of the marketing mix

There are five different approaches to reducing waiting time discomfort

Reservation systems are when they are customer focussed and provide actionable information