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Secondly, an array of methods was described when it came to measuring customer
satisfaction. One interesting trend that came up was that of the four participating
hotels only one of the hotels use an online questionnaire to determine the factors of
customer satisfaction whereas the others mainly rely on verbal conformation, written
confirmation on comment cards and then others had a service index. This is where the
service is measured by standards and procedures. More like a mystery audit.
However, participant two explained
that from his perspective, spontaneous feedback
from guests such as comment cards, are irrelevant because the guest would only
provide feedback when they are satisfied with the service and not when they aren’t
satisfied. Yet this is not the interesting part, the interesting part is the fact that
customer satisfaction is only measured once a year. It was not explained what this
measurement entailed but it doesn’t seem that feasibly
to measure customer
satisfaction and the factors that influence this only once a year.
Furthermore, mention of using word of mouth and social media was really interesting.
It shows the importance of customer feedback, it also shows initiative of interacting
with customers even when they stay has ended.
In addition, it was mentioned that the
use of these, were proposed to better understand customer
expectations and so by
better understanding the expectations, these could be met during service delivery.
With an answer from participant 3 such as:
“After this there is social media. We follow people that like or talk about our hotel. We even answer
sometimes as it acts as a tool that we can use to understand what we can improve.”
Indicates the importance of using tools to reach out to your customers and better
understand them so to provide a better service for them.
This relates to Gap 4 of the Gap model by Parasuraman et al. (1985).
The gap exists when there is a lack of insufficient coordination between marketing and
operations departments but also promises are made which cannot be met.
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And this issue addressed the importance of following what is being communicated to
guest even when there is no interaction with other departments. If management can be
aware that their website already provides significant information for guest to create and
expectation from, then they would consolidate using more tools to
better understand
customer expectations for the sake of service quality.
Last but not least, three cases were mentioned were feedback was given and was used
to improve business. Interesting enough the participant who did not provide this
information was the same participant that doubted the validity of customer feedback as
well as their establishment measuring customer satisfaction only once a year.
The others presented clear examples where feedback was given,
passed on to upper
management and then a solution was implemented.
This shows how far you can improve if you have the commitment of management.
Management commitment to service quality is one of the factors determining gap
number 2 or in other words from management perception of customer expectations to
the translation of these into specifications. Without management commitment, there
will be no planning, no goal, and no motivation. In addition, the involvement of
management in service quality is imperative to closing this gap. (Grönroos, 1990, 61)
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