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I
I
I
B
Dislike it
R
R
R
R
Q
B: Basic E: Excitement P: Performance I: Indifferent R: Reversed Q: Questionable
Table 7.2 The Kano Evaluation Table28
A well-designed service provides a combination of basic, performance and excitement attributes to deliver an appropriate level of utility for the customer. Different customers will place different weights or importance on the same combination of attributes. Furthermore, even if a particular type of customer values a particular combination, they may not find justification to pay for additional charges. The utility of a service can be under-engineered or over-engineered for a particular type of customer.
7.2.3 Design driven by constraints
Customer needs translate into attributes of a service, which in turn determine a set of design constraints. Design constraints are of various types. Their combined effect is to define a set of solutions that are feasible in terms of meeting customer needs (Figure 7.10). The shape and size of the solutions space changes with changes in any of the constraints still in effect. A constraint is no longer in effect when another constraint nullifies it. (Graphically the constraint is no longer one of the lines forming the solution space). Solutions at the corners of the space are preferred to solutions in the middle because they tend to push a constraint to its maximum limit.
Figure 7.10 Design driven by constraints
There is no universal list of constraints for a given service. Developing the list of constraints and visualizing their combined interaction requires a team of specialists from business and technical practices to interact with customers, suppliers, partners and advisors. All five elements of the Service Lifecycle provide input for the constraints. The method is a means for Service Strategy to communicate challenges and opportunities to Service Design.
7.2.4 Pricing as a design constraint
Dissecting the customer’s business model is necessary to design, develop, package and offer services that meet the business needs of customers. Service designs are better with pricing as a key design constraint. By analysing how customers create value for their own customers it is possible to correctly identify the most important attributes of the service. This leads to better design and packaging of services. What outcomes are customers aiming to achieve? What resources and constraints do they have? What is the value customers place on the achievement of those outcomes, productivity of those resources, and the removal of those constraints? Answers to those questions are the basis for weighing the individual attributes and pricing them within a service bundle.
Take, for example, an aircraft manufacturer that designs derivative aircraft as a service for subsequent lease to specific customer segments. By utilizing price as a design constraint, and applying insight gained from customers sharing their specific industry knowledge, needs, business and revenue models, the manufacturer can decompose the final product into characteristics that can then be analysed in two ways. The first analysis focuses on what combinations of characteristics can maximize customer revenue, margins and/or excitement or satisfaction. This includes the price the customer is able and willing to pay for various characteristics, given its market positioning and economic models. The second analysis focuses on what groupings of characteristics the provider can bundle to best fulfil the needs of the customer, that also represent the best opportunity for cost reductions related to provisioning those services.
A common illustration of bundling service components in a manner that generates service cost reductions for a provider, while maximizing positive service impact for the customer, can be found in a car maintenance example. For many cars, the price of replacing a timing belt is fairly high, and is composed primarily of labour. Because the time and activities required to gain access to the timing belt are the same as those required to gain access to the water pump, mechanics will offer to replace both parts while servicing the car. By doing so, the customer can receive services for two components of great utility at a reduced rate, achieving greater piece of mind at a price substantially less than it would cost to have each component serviced separately. Conversely, while the provider sells only an incremental increase in the amount of labour, it can sell an additional piece of hardware which carries a superior margin, and increase the overall margin achieved on the service labour performed. In this example, both the provider and the customer achieve greater satisfaction from the transaction.
7.3 Strategy and transition
Service Strategy is dependent on the dynamic capabilities of service providers, which allow effective responses to challenges and opportunities with customers and market spaces. Strategies often require changes to be implemented to achieve specific objectives while minimizing costs and risks. There are no cost-free and risk-free strategic plans or initiatives. There are always costs and risks with decisions such as introducing new services, entering new market spaces, and serving new customers.
In many cases, the costs are real and in other cases, they are notional. The inability to respond quickly to a business need may have opportunity costs for the service provider. They may also have real costs in terms of penalties or contract terminations. Service transition represents one of the most important sets of service management capabilities with processes such as Change Management, Configuration Management and service deployment. The ability to drive changes rapidly in Service Portfolios and contracts is a critical success factor in certain market spaces and strategies. Therefore, Service Transition (ST) is an important capability in service management.
Service Transition systems and processes provide the decision analysis necessary to analyse, evaluate and approve strategic initiatives. They help determine the options or transition paths for changing the strategic position for a customer or market space (Figure 7.11). Service Transition evaluates the costs and risks for each path and takes into account the impact on existing contracts. Service Transition processes maintain visibility and control over service assets, configurations and current allocation of resources. To reduce risk of failures all strategic changes go through Service Transition.
Figure 7.11 Service Transition advises strategic options
Service Transition capabilities help determine good answers to the following types of questions:
What are the implications with each path in terms of costs, time and risks?
In what scenarios is one path preferable to the other?
What are the likelihoods of those scenarios?
Can existing assets support a transition path?
Are there contingency plans to contain the adverse impact changes?
Can a particular change be implemented fast enough to support the strategy?
The following are examples of tactical and operations level initiatives evaluated by ST to implement strategy:
Augment staff at call centres
Analyse business activity patterns and redefine users
Define Service level packages and revise SLA templates
Develop knowledge assets specialized for the market space
Add new service to the market space
Replicate assets and configure for fault tolerance
Offer complementary services
Implement service-oriented architecture
Re-engineer Incident Management process.
The planning and development of the ST functions and processes are dependent on the type of strategies pursued. The nature of the strategy, market spaces, services and customers will determine the type of transitions needed (Figure 7.12). ST requirements are filtered by the context of the Contract Portfolio.
Figure 7.12 Service strategies generate requirements for Service Transition
The Contract Portfolio contains all the present and future commitments made to customers with respect to specific services. These commitments and any changes in them determine requirements for Service Design and Service Operations. Those in turn determine the Transition Requirements.
7.4 Strategy and operation
Strategies are ultimately realized through Service Operation. Well-crafted strategies with great potential are pipe dreams without proper support from operations. Strategies must be mindful of operational capabilities and constraints. Operations, on the other hand, should clearly understand the outcomes necessary for a given strategy and provide adequate support with effectiveness and efficiency.
For example, some businesses have large-scale operations in several countries or regions with high levels of business activity driven by the needs of their own customers. The end-customers may be a cost-conscious but highly dependable source of revenue for the business. Many government agencies operate in similar business conditions though with different mandates. Such high-volume, low-margin, steady-stream business strategies depend on service providers being able to support them with adequate availability and capacity but at low unit costs.
7.4.1 Deployment patterns
Deploy service assets in patterns that are most effective in delivering value to customers. For example, multiple segments exist within internal and external markets. Each segment may have distinct requirements and common requirements with respect to other segments. Segments may exist within an organization such as the various user profiles and activity patterns discussed earlier in Section 5.5.3. Deployment of service assets should be in patterns that most effectively deliver the required utility and warranty in each segment across the Service Catalogue. Some segments may require dedicated capacity at one level even if they share lower levels of infrastructure with other segments (Figure 7.13). Customers are willing to pay a premium for the privilege, making it easier for such a deployment pattern to pass the requirements of Financial Management.