• 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