DocumentCode
115575
Title
An investigation into the internal business logic required for successful strategic customer service initiatives in organisations offering clients an integrated package of products and services
Author
Mountford, Gregory A. ; Weeks, Richard V. ; Erasmus, Louwrence D.
Author_Institution
Grad. Sch. of Technol. Manage., Univ. of Pretoria, Tshwane, South Africa
fYear
2014
fDate
27-31 July 2014
Firstpage
2226
Lastpage
2234
Abstract
Purpose: This paper is directed at gaining an understanding of the internal business logic of an organisation in order to better determine the requirements for a successful customer service initiative in an organisation offering an integrated package of products and services. Problem Investigated: Customer service strategies rarely have any meaningful impact within the product development departments of service-oriented organisations. A different approach is therefore required to engender a service culture within product development. Methodology: A literature study was undertaken to gain an understanding of the concept of Service-Dominant Logic and service-transition strategies (such as servitization); the problem statement was supported and research objectives empirically achieved through a series of open-ended interviews and focus groups (qualitative, narrative-enquiry) following a purposive sampling strategy. Findings and Conclusion: The results revealed that a servicedominant environment or service culture are not natural phenomena that occur following a customer service initiative. Rather a service culture can be borne from a service-dominant environment when a complex-adaptive systems theory to organisational management is utilised. A positive impact on customer satisfaction was also identified due to the organisational culture at play within the product-development departments. Value of the Research: The results suggest that product development strategies that address the `mind of the customer´ rather than just the `voice of the customer´ can -through the use of a complex-adaptive systems management theory - engender a service-orientation which will lead to better customer satisfaction and therefore a higher degree of competitiveness for the organisation at large.
Keywords
customer services; organisational aspects; product development; sampling methods; strategic planning; complex-adaptive systems management theory; complex-adaptive systems theory; customer service strategies; focus groups; integrated products-services package; internal business logic; organisational management; product development departments; sampling strategy; service culture; service-dominant environment; service-dominant logic; service-oriented organisations; service-transition strategies; successful strategic customer service initiatives; Customer satisfaction; Customer services; Manufacturing; Organizational aspects; Product development; Production;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Management of Engineering & Technology (PICMET), 2014 Portland International Conference on
Conference_Location
Kanazawa
Type
conf
Filename
6921204
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