Sunday, September 29, 2019

Service Strategy and Best Practice - Disneyland's Strategic Process

Disneyland is an organization that many service industries look to for best practice; that is, when 'Learning from Others'.

Disneyland's strategic vision is a bit different from the usual Plan, Do, Check and Act cycle around which most strategic cycles rotate, although of course, Disney's version is similar in some respects as they still have to take action and plan and so on.

However, Disney's strategic planning involves the imagination in ways that are very appealing and often not recognized quite so much in other organizations.

Their cycle 'embraces the Disney spirit' and is Dream, Believe, Do and Dare. which is a principle or value-driven strategic process. Although other organizations will not be the same as Disney, it pays to remember that values and beliefs about service culture should always underpin the strategy process so that it is not just 'business as usual' and innovation is pushed to the forefront of all activities.



Below is a diagram showing the Vision Align Process for realignment of Pleasure Island to the Disney criteria. Pleasure Island became a problem for Disney because it was more 'adult-themed' and so was not aligned with the family values the park that was central to the park's mission and values. To begin to solve the problem the Island was strictly gated. However, eventually, the entire Island was closed down because it did not align with Disney values.



Service Strategy and Learning From Others - Singapore National Library and Te Awahou Nieuwe Stroom (Foxton Library)


Below are some links to information about the NSL and also another best practice example: Te Awahou Nieuwe Stroom (Foxton Library). The Te Awahou Nieuwe Stroom (Foxton Library) provides a great local example of best practice about social and cultural innovation. The trend is for public libraries to become community information and social hubs with flexible spaces for use by both business and the community; 'living rooms of the city'.

Resources

There are a number of resources you can use to prepare for answering this case study. They include:

NSL- Best Practice

1. National Singapore Library Document - this is a long report prepared by one of the authors of your textbook

2. There is a descriptive case in your textbook of the SNL in Chapter 7.

3. Check out the SNL website. https://www.nlb.gov.sg/ Go to their research and annual reports page. Anything there of interest? There is so much information! Just skim it to see if anything looks interesting for you. 

Sources on Library Strategy

Use the three-pronged strategy for research we have been using this semester:
  1. Journal articles and research literature using search terms related to the concepts from the textbook chapter you have identified. Do a journal/research article search for issues facing the industry. What are the issues facing the public library system and libraries more generally? What are the trends? (use google scholar search and other databases)
  2. What are the challenges facing the industry and what has been the best practice response? (general google search)
  3. What is going on in the case organization you are looking at. Check out the specific organizational website and any other reports or articles you can find to tell you what is happening, including your own experience of the service, feedback sites, user social media and so on ... (HINT: See if the website has a research and information link - they often do!). Libraries are run by local councils. Is there anything on your local council site about local government strategy and how the library might fit into plans for the town/city in the future?

SNL is a Best-Practice Example. Are there Others?

The Te Awahou Nieuwe Stroom (Foxton Library) is a unique facility and showcases how a library can be much more than just an information hub, or even a 'living room'.
Their website is https://www.teawahou.com/Home. Take a look. 


There are a number of services offered. As well a providing the usual library services using the latest technology, the facility supplies:
  • exhibition spaces
  • meeting rooms and spaces that can be booked by community groups
  • two significant cultural showcases - for local Maori and for the local Dutch community 
  • Council services like paying rates and dog registrations
  • the library is designed to integrate with the Windmill attraction, a local cafe, and some immersive tourist experiences like horse-drawn vehicles, flax making (a historic industry) and so on
  • integrate into local paths and walkways in the area on the Manawatu river - a significant port and center of commerce in the past (e.g. a boom and bust flax trade)
  • gateway to the Manawatu estuary at Foxton beach, a World Wildlife Heritage site
  • cycleways

Other Aspects of Library Strategy

Libraries are capital intensive resources for cities and towns; local authorities. Libraries are usually big buildings that require large budgets and staff to provide the facility. Consequently, public libraries have been under pressure for many decades now because of cuts in public spending and in some countries have become under threat. For instance, in the USA the public library system has been eroded. 

Libraries are also under threat because according to many commentators people have stopped reading. However, although the printed book might not be as prominent as it once was, reading modes and habits are changing, they are not disappearing. People are reading more online and through their phones. They are watching more multi-media. They are learning and engaging more through gaming (what is often called gamification). 

Library design is fascinating. Libraries don't need to be boring spaces built like factories for computers. Library design is now about creating 'Living rooms in the city' and developing library concepts with users.

There has been a renaissance in prestigious library development projects across the world. Rather than the digital revolution signaling the death of libraries as was often foretold, libraries are undergoing a transformation. The contemporary library is both as a public facility and a learning space. They are places for people to place to meet, read, share and explore ideas. Check out this article on contemporary library design - http://bid.ub.edu/en/38/bonet.htm. You can see examples of libraries being built with theatres and stages; that is, places for creative collaborations.  And for children to play in. The old stereotype of the library being a place where you are shushed all the time is no longer appropriate (although it is still important to have quiet spaces where people can work quietly alone!)

Designing libraries is about investing in people, about the changing ways in which libraries are perceived and used, and about rethinking concepts of the ‘typical’ user. The library is no longer a grandiose architectural spectacle lined with acres of books, but about the exploratory nature of information seeking, and collaborative creative learning. 












Sunday, September 22, 2019

Photography Ethics and Research

There are a number of resources available about the use of photography and filming in research and these are directly adaptable by people wishing to explore any type of filming or use of visual media in their teaching and learning praxis. I recommend the InVisio site 'Inspire' which focuses specifically on visual research methods - you can find it here. The website provides resources for visual researchers but there is much of use also for teachers and students.



For most student research projects I advise common sense and avoid filming anything that might raise any ethical issues. Follow normal university protocol about ethics and don't film or photograph identifiable people (with the exception of ourselves and friends and family's doing things we don't mind sharing) or any sensitive situations. Common sense has to apply here so if you have any worries do ask your teachers and lecturers. Ask permission when filming in organizational contexts, even as a customer, if you are doing it for research purposes.

Professional guidelines are available, like for Journalism Photography, but they would not reach the level of ethical expectation expected at a university, and they have different priorities. Makes for interesting reading though. 

FYI NZ Police on photography and the law: https://www.police.govt.nz/faq/what-are-the-rules-around-taking-photos-or-filming-in-a-public-place

Wednesday, September 11, 2019

Customer Facing Workers - Call Centre Staff in Banks



The work satisfaction of bank call centre staff was the focus of research we conducted in Auckland at three large bank call centres. Although the contexts have changed a bit since this research was published the problems that the research outlined are very common still; call centre workers are under work intensification pressures and want to do work that is meaningful; for many of the call centre workers we interviewed, this included being able to resolve customer problems from beginning to end. Staff felt invested in ensuring customer problems were resolved and if the technology didn't enable them to do this, they felt frustrated. That said, New Zealand call centre staff in banks were relatively satisfied compared to their overseas counterparts.


You can find the full paper here: Sayers, J., Barney, A., Page. C. & Naidoo, K. (2002). 'A provisional“thumbs up” to New Zealand bank call centres'.University of Auckland Business Review, 5, 1: 2-12.




Wednesday, September 4, 2019

Les Mills International - Service Case Study Part 2



The Les Mills System: the Nuts and Bolts


There are several parts to Les Mills fitness, including Les Mills Gyms, Les Mills NZ and Les Mills International. The Les Mills International system is complex and dynamic and this article merely provides some features of their system in order to help a student understand service systems generally, and especially aspects of service systems that are common to all. It is an educational resource, and may not be completely accurate as businesses are in constant flux. This article focuses on Les Mills International, but aspects of their systems are in all branches of their business. 


Education and organisational learning systems

Instruction and teaching are central to what Les Mills does. For each new release, they have about 3 months trialing and then teaching fitness classes in order to produce 'world-class’ fitness classes. The create video classes and distribute them through their system and release them in mass events such as those you can see on Youtube, and shown in Part 1 of this article of a BODYSTEP® release. The training includes producing modules to train teachers, instructor training and management training in GFM (Group Fitness Management). For extension, reading see an article about training and group fitness instructors here

Relationship with Owner of the Club and Marketing

Like all successful franchise service operations, Les Mills has tight control over its image and processes. They "write the rules on studio design, recruitment of staff, measurement of performance, marketing, and staff training" according to Phillip Mills (Go Global talk, 2005). By doing so they instill their brand through the behavior and conduct of their staff, including the vision and values that underpin their organisational culture. They produce a wide range of promotional material, and are constantly developing and thinking about ways to build 'community' for their customers, as a community, as Phillip explains in the video above, is a strong motivating factor to join and stay involved in fitness and health initiatives. For managers and instructors resources, they need to promote, manage and run classes are all available online. They can access adverts, guerrilla marketing material, as well as order popular décor items, decorative posters, clothing and so on. "Our branding is in people’s faces" said Phillip Millsin his Go Global talk.

Music as technology

Licensed music is what gives LM its competitive edge according to Phillip Mills, “With the cooperation of the NZ music industry” (although I have to say NZ music didn't feature much in the sessions I attended). In 2005 LM was the only company worldwide to have rights to distribute the top forty music tracks. "We can distribute just about anything”, and they "pay millions of dollars in royalties". Along with the music is the choreography which is centrally important to the ways that people interact with the music. Tia De Nora has written a scholarly book that includes research with group fitness participants on the ways they use music in fitness sessions (De Nora, 2000). 

Going Global

Les Mills keep calling themselves a small NZ company, although it is hard to understand how they can still call themselves that, except it is part of their origin story and culture. They were limited by capital constraints and so opted initially for an independent owner-distributor model. They considered growth through other models as there are bigger margins to be made in owning the whole business, but they couldn't afford it. In their first growth spurt internationally they did 'take over' a couple of organisations.

Their business model uses licenses. Clubs pay LM agents a monthly fee per programme, and agents are paid on a sliding scale. Percentages are also divided up according to sales of training, music merchandising, and equipment and other tangibles. One lesson learned by LM is not to undercharge for their service. They offer high-end programmes and need to charge a premium for them.

For LM agents are crucial to success. Initially LM recruited the 'best' agents in each country they expanded into and “Networked, networked, networked”. According to Phillip Mills, most agents in this initial growth phase were great but there were a few were "dodgy" ones. LM made mistakes but they learnt from those mistakes. One issue was that they learnt existing retailers did not make great agents as they could be protective and competitive. Best local agents had the commitment and local knowledge.

However, sometimes local agents did not have had the same commitment to quality or buy-in that is expected of a LM agent, and so it was sometimes necessary to remove agents. An agreement process was essential - service contracts needed to be developed and adhered to.

So, for instance, commercial contracts needed to include:
  1. performance minimums (fees that they charge; the number of clubs covered); 
  2. exclusivity in a product category (to eradicate copy-cat problems; enforceable restraints of trade; engage expert international legal advice);
  3. obligation to sell to all reputable companies (minimum number of dedicated sales staff; dedicated sales manager);
  4. Standard procedures around quality;
  5. Reporting requirements (benchmarking; monitoring compliance)
In general, according to Phillip Mills, “He who drafts wins” (the agreements that is). It was essential to politely enforce all agreements, and if waivers were given they had to be in writing. 

Living the Brand

As inferred earlier, LM requires a strong adherence to Brand values, an adherence that people that work for LM seem to fully comply with. The LM package is 'world-class', and so LM invested in the top creative agencies in NZ for sales and pitch documents. All LM representatives, affiliates and employees must represent this world-class brand. As Phillip Mills puts it, it is required that you put your “skin in the game”. Commitment comes from the investment, both in terms of dollars, but also in physical and emotional commitment.

Fitness instructors, for example, represent the brand, but they also deliver the experience. They are the most visible customer service representative for participants. It is the instructor that participants 'look up to' both literally (they are almost always on an elevated stage) and figuratively (as a model of a fit person to aspire to in looks and fitness). Instructors co-produce (see Note 1 below about what this means) with participants the group fitness experience - everyone in the class is enlisted into the same enterprise. 

LM has a strong, perhaps even alarming, brand commitment - "they would die for the cause" said Phillip at the Go Global event. Nevertheless, people buy into LM and they have an almost evangelical fervor about them. Becoming a LM licensee requires one to undergo a life-changing event. In terms of achieving this commitment to the brand LM has employed a variety of techniques: e.g. 'Life-changing staff training' using tools like theater, motivational psychology,  personal development, team building, and cultural rituals in order to create passion, enthusiasm and the commitment of staff. “We became a virus” says Phillip and took over hearts and minds of staff. "We took their attention". Its not all hard work: they also focus on having fun, delivering great conferences, and creating great teams. They also use celebrity endorsements and have a very strong NZ flavour in their brand. See the video below of their own haka performed in Stockholm in 2010 'gifted' to their participants. This is also an example of using a cultural ritual to enhance the community, a Customer Relationship Management (CRM) technique. More information on this is available here




Best Practice

How does a top fitness business stay at the top? By comparing itself to the best and learning from industries that are perceived to be the best in the world, even if they have ostensibly nothing to do with the fitness industry itself. In the video below Philip describes what he was learning during a recent study tour in the U.S.




Other Issues


LM continuously offers its licensees techniques to help them grow their businesses. For instance, the recent announcement of the Clubcount system. This announcement says: "CLUBCOUNT™ is new web-based software that will keep track of your numbers for you. This means you will have numerous ways to report on, and evaluate, your success in Group Fitness. All you need to do is take a quick headcount for each class, grab a few moments to enter the class attendance into the software and CLUBCOUNT™ will take care of the rest..." CLUBCOUNT™ enables clubs to understand Group Fitness attendance trends over time, create timetables based on proper information, and identify top instructor performers (instructors become minor celebrities).  

Another recent innovation has been their 'Globesity' initiative, which has been launched with the publication of a book and is LM's sustainability initiative. The following video explains how this works: 



 




Other Links of Interest about Les Mills

Les Mills was recently nominated for a NZ International Business Award.

Les Mills on Facebook

Notes

Note 1: Service work production processes are different from those in manufacturing, and so the labour process itself is different. In service work, the consumer and the producer are involved in a reciprocal and instantaneous exchange of production at the same time as consumption occurs. Labour is produced with the customer – they are co-producers of its meaning or, in another way of putting it, the customer is a partial employee (Halbesleben & Buckley, 2004). The value of the labor is in its synchronicity. 

Other References


De Nora, T. (2000). Music in everyday life. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Halbesleben, J., & Buckley, R. M. (2004). Managing customers as employees of the firm: New challenges for human resource management. Personnel Review, 33(3), 351-372.

Personal notes from Phillip Mills talk on Thrive TV (http://www.thrivetv.com, now no longer operating). The presentation was given as part of the Go Global Conference held in Auckland in 2005.

Tuesday, September 3, 2019

Service Experiences - Paying to be Terrified - Haunted Houses


This post is about paying to be terrified.
Photo from Flikr

Photos from Flikr


The NZ Herald published a story on haunted house attractions recently that is worth a look - see Terror worth paying for. The article is written from a first-person perspective, where the writer experiences the 'service journey' (being terrified). The experiences he describes are quite terrifying in and of themselves - psycho-sexual abuse, water-boarding, claustrophobia, prison abuse, and so on ...

Why do people seem to find such pleasure and enjoyment in vicariously experiencing torture, or sexual abuse, and are more than willing,  even eager, to part from hundreds of dollars for it? Horror and the enjoyment of it have been around for a long time (haunted houses have been part of fairs since their inception) but terror, as large scale paid entertainment, is a relatively new phenomenon, fueled no doubt by the popularity of the horror film genre.

Horror and enjoyment intersect, and the philosophy of why this is so is interesting reading. Books like The Philosophy of horror argue that comedy and horror are closely related.  People clearly enjoy being horrified, and with the rhythm of fear and release (being frightened and then relieved) being a key to the enjoyment people get from horror.  Comedy works in a very similar way with a build-up of tension and then release. 

The type of writing in the Herald newspaper article is typical of an ethnographic approach where the writer enters the world they are writing about and describe it.  Ethnographic writing after a period of participation is a useful method for understanding customer service provision because it enables thinking about social and cultural issues instead of the narrow issue of 'service quality'. In service management, most likely the approach to understanding the 'experience' might be a mystery shop, or an emotional audit (where consumers are asked to record how they feel as they engage in a service experience). A participatory, reflective perspective such as you gain in writing an ethnographic account encourages thinking about wider issues so that the growth in these types of business could be understood more.
    
On a more technical note, photos at places like the Nightmare Fear Factory's Flickr feed tangibilise the experience making the experience of being frightened in the dark visible through flash photography.  This is a variation of the traditional memory photograph (e.g. the photograph as you go over the edge of a theme park ride), but adds a freaky-funny element, and makes the experience publicly available so that friends and family can share. The terror experience has fan sites, chat rooms and plenty of other ways that users can share their experiences, and these all work to further commodify and virally spread terror as an experience worth paying for.  

Service People - McDonald's

Below you can see a slideshow presentation about McDonald's, a USA originating fast-food company. The focus is on staff issues - HRM and in particular the way they use recruitment in their values-based service strategy. 

McDonald's is the focus of intense interest, of business people, academics and activists. McDonald's is practically worshiped in franchise and service professional circles. McDonald's have provided the template for service growth that is followed by many other services, including other food retail services like Starbucks, and seemingly unrelated services who have adopted the limited menu option format including professional services like optometrists (OPSM) and hairdressing (Justcuts). 

Note there has also been a great deal written about McDonald's in critical scholarship because McDonald's has been of tremendous significance, not only as an influence on business models and growth strategy but also as a cultural and social phenomenon. McDonalds is even credited with the spread of the worst and the best of 'American  culture' (whatever that is) more generally. McDonald's responds to the criticism - or 'relationship dialogue' - with society in a variety of ways.




The following is a video advertising McDonald's focus on job-readiness and employment for young people.



References

Gunther, Marc (May 17, 2006). 'Yoga … Soy … McDonald’s?' Fortune.
Lord, Simon (2002a). McDonald's: The myth and the magic. Retrieved from the Internet, November 25, 2002, http://franchise.co.nz/
Ritzer, G. (2004). The McDonaldization of society. Sage, London.
Sweeny, Mark (April 20, 2006) 'Fast food giant says no to 'McJobs', Fortune. 
Vignali, C. (2001). McDonald’s: “Think global, act local” – the marketing mix. British Food Journal, 103 (2), 97 – 111.

Strategic Human Resource Management - Breakers Basketball


Sports are classic service organizations, delivering an intangible experience-product. I recently published, with a colleague, a research article in the New Zealand Journal of Human Resource Management which investigated the Breakers basketball organisation's HRM strategy. The article uses concepts like co-creation, strategic co-creation of values and story-telling methodology to unpick how the Breakers use stories to help manage their values-based culture. You can find the full paper here.




Abstract: Strategic Human Resource Management (SHRM) is often described as the alignment of internal human resources to external threats and opportunities. Values-driven goals have been increasingly interwoven into SHRM practices. If there is a disconnect between values-driven SHRM and staff enactment of values then strategic goal achievement is less likely. Research is underdeveloped as to how values-based SHRM is implemented at the micro-process level; the level at which people within the organisation engage with SHRM. Research examining the successful implementation of values-based approaches assists understanding of best-practice. The research question is, ‘How has a successful values-based SHRM approach been enacted? We investigated values-driven SHRM in the New Zealand SKYCITY Breakers’ basketball franchise, using a narrative methodology. The preliminary stage of the study involved content analysis of secondary sources and interviews, which highlighted the Breakers are a 'storytelling' organisation. The second main stage involved narrative analysis of 250 shared stories identified from 16 in-depth interviews with organisational members. Findings are that the Breakers use a monomyth story-sharing process to embed value-driven behaviour. The key contribution is to show how values-based SHRM is embedded by the organisation’s monomyth story-telling process. Practice-based implications are discussed. 

Leadership


Leadership is a vast area of scholarship and an industry in itself. It has probably generated more research than any other management field in recent times, attesting to the intense focus on it, and the belief that it is leaders that will solve many of humanities organizational, environmental and other problems. I recently wrote a module on Leadership Practice which I had the privilege to deliver in Montpellier Business School in France. I developed a resource in a book form you can find and download in any format you read on.

The 'Leadership Practice' book presents an introduction to the topic of Leadership. A feature of this book is its focus on leadership self-development. Study questions are provided throughout the book. Topics covered include definitions of different approaches to leadership, and contemporary leadership dilemmas including leadership and the rise of social media, women in leadership, and practical wisdom. This book is accompanied by a Quiz at Quizlet to help students learn basic concepts about leadership.



Sunday, September 1, 2019

Service Work - Chaplin's Modern Times

One of the most important film texts about work is Charlie Chaplin’s masterpiece ‘Modern Times’ (1936). Many recognize the iconic image of Chaplin, caught in the cogs of the machines of the factory, which symbolizes a central message of his film; organic human life as processed and crushed by technological progress. Fewer people realize, however, that Chaplin included in his film an inspired critique on service work, as well as factory work, which still resonates today.



Modern Times is often interpreted as being an allegorical statement about the effect of automation on the individual. The film is a political critique of industrialism but it is also a personal allegorical statement regarding Chaplin’s situation vis-à-vis developments in the film industry. At the time of the distribution of Modern Times, ‘the talkies’ – movies with soundtracks – had been in production for ten years. Chaplin’s most successful invention, the character of the Little Tramp as a silent film figure and so could not survive the era of sound. Looking at the image above, of The Little Tramp being ground through the wheels of the factory, is to see Charlie Chaplin himself being ground through the cogs of a film projector.

I have written a couple of papers on Charlie Chaplin now as I have been fascinated by him as a silent comedian; a comedian who communicates without words, and so has universal appeal that transcends cultural and international boundaries. He was also a man with deeply held political beliefs. One paper is in a book on service work. Read the book! but if you can't then a previous version delivered at a conference is available here

An encyclopedia entry I wrote about Chaplin is here (Chapter 272) which is in the Encyclopedia of Creativity. 



References

Bolton, S. C., & Boyd, C. (2003). Trolley dolly or skilled emotion manager? Moving on from Hochschild's Managed Heart. Work, Employment and Society, 17(2), 289-308.

Chaplin, C. (1964). My auto-biography. London: The Bodley Head.

Collinson, D. L. (2002). Managing humor. Journal of Management Studies, 39(3), 269 — 288.

Fineman, S. (Ed.). (2000). Emotion in organizations. London: Sage.

Goffman, E. (1959). The presentation of self in everyday life. London: Penguin.

Hochschild, A. (1983). The managed heart: Commercialization of human feeling. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Keat, R., Whiteley, N., & Abercrombie, A. (Eds.). (1994). The authority of the consumer. London: Routledge.


Sewell, G., & Wilkinson, B. (1992). ‘Someone to watch over me’: Surveillance, discipline, and the Just-in-Time labour process. Sociology, 26(2), 271 — 289.

Van Maanen, J. (1991). The smile factory: Work at Disneyland. In P. J. Frost, L. Moore, C. C. Lundberg & J. Martin (Eds.), Reframing organizational culture (pp. 58—76). London: Sage.

Witz, A., Warhurst, C., & Nickson, D. (2003). The labour of aesthetics and the aesthetics of organization. Organization, 10(1), 33—54.

Wednesday, August 28, 2019

Service People - Effects of Mergers in the Tertiary Polytechnic Sector

Organizational change is experienced in a subjective way. When a merger or acquisition happens, as is currently happening on a large scale in the Polytechnic sector in New Zealand, the human impact is huge. Many staff struggle to cope with the change.



Vikki Roadley is both an experienced polytechnic senior manager and a student at Massey University studying leadership for her Masters. Whilst she was researching polytech staff's stories of mergers, she also did an art project as part of her methodology. Photographs of the mannequin-head sculptures she created were included in an Appendices to her research report. In 2019 the School of Management enabled us to engage a professional photographer to take good quality images of Vikki's sculptures and these were published in the journal Organisational Aesthetics along with an explanation of how they came about and some text explaining their significance.  The sculptures communicate in a visceral way the personal costs of mergers. In a forthcoming paper, we explore stories the participants told about mergers they had experienced. Our intention is to help staff re-story their stories of change so they are more hopeful. You can see all of the awesome sculptures here.




https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/oa/vol8/iss1/4/




Sales and Service - Pharmacy Retail


Service people often feel tensions between the need to sell (sales) and the need to serve (service). This theme is explored in a paper Janet Sayers recently wrote with colleagues and a post-graduate student which was published in the Journal of Pharmacy Practice and Research. The context of pharmacy is shifting towards a bigger emphasis on sales (e.g. pharmacy superstores like Chemist Warehouse, now opening up in New Zealand).


https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/jppr.1410

Click here to take you to this paper. 


Demographic Change and the Customer-Centric View - Squash

Stephen Hodges, who was the Development Manager at Squash Auckland,  gave this presentation in class. The presentation focused on how Auckland Squash is trying to get more women and girls involved in the game of squash. The presentation covers the challenges for squash, the rationale for the programs, the programs that they have introduced, and some statistics showing how successful the program has been. In essence, this initiative shows a customer-centric change initiative. The process involved incremental innovation. The culture of traditional club squash is centered around competition - women and girls might want to get involved and stay in the game of squash for fun, social reasons, and enjoyment, as well as fitness, and then maybe competition. Taking a customer-centric view of groups that don't even use your organization yet (or as much as they could) enables innovative thinking and the development of new programmes.



Competitive Clustering

Competitive clustering occurs when groups of similar and related firms cluster in a defined geographic area. So, for example, the furniture stores in Wairau Park in Auckland, or a restaurant district in a city.

Competitive clustering is a concept of use when considering positioning the 'Service Facility'.

The following animated video from TED talks provides a helpful explanation of the science behind why similar services cluster together.




Sunday, August 18, 2019

Service Blueprinting - Class Exercise on Cinema Queuing

On a Saturday night, I went to see Oblivion at Event Cinema in Albany. The movie was scheduled to start at 6.25 pm. We arrived at a bottleneck on the entranceway to the theatres (up the escalators) at 6.20pm. There was already a large number of people milling about, standing, in the entrance area, a large floor area with no seats or signage.  



No-one seemed to know why there was a delay in the screening. One couple were quite anxious as their movie started at 6.15pm and they were already late. Another couple also asked us what was happening as they arrived and we could not tell them as we did not know. The area looked like the diagram below:


The reason given for the delay (I asked the one attendant) was that the previous screening had not yet finished and theaters were not yet ready for use.

Draw a process diagram from buying your ticket to entering the screening of a movie.
Identify some techniques Event Cinemas could use to manage the waiting experience in this bottleneck. 

Servicescape - Istanbul Grand Bazaar


During 2011 Janet Sayers went to Istanbul for a conference and, with the help a friend, local Istanbuli Umut, and two friends from Auckland Uni, Rachel and Denise, we embarked on a shopping expedition to buy a leather jacket for Rachel's father. 

Rachel wanted to buy a leather jacket for her father, and the presentation records the interaction with the aim of describing the service-scape aspect of the encounter. Theories about place-scape and tourist-scapes are also relevant to interpreting this encounter, but this presentation is aimed at a general introduction to the service-scape concept and its relationship to service logic.

Thursday, August 15, 2019

Managing Employees - Aesthetic Labour - Hale and Pace on 'Yorkshire Airlines'


Aesthetic labour is the labour people do through the way they look and behave. Managers and organisations actively manage this aspect of people's looks and behaviour. Airlines are a good example to illustrate this e.g. Air New Zealand, as national airlines are not only selling seats but also their country. 

The following Youtube video is a skit about 'Yorkshire Airlines' from the British 'Hale and Pace' television comedy series. This is an inspired skit about the fictitious Yorkshire Airlines 'style' of service. It pokes gentle fun at all things Yorkshire whilst at the same time parodying the trend for airlines to style their brand with the cultural features of their nation of origin. Parody works by exaggerating characteristics of its target, thereby enabling them to be seen more clearly by an audience. Note the features of Yorkshire airline's style that are the target of Hale and Pace's humour; greetings, look, accents and mannerisms of the cabin crew, onboard entertainment in first-class and economy class (that is a weasel the captain is pulling out of his pants as economy class entertainment), pilot preoccupations, toilet facilities, food service and so on. 


  

Moment of Truth - Illustrated with Toys for Surgical Visit

A Moment of Truth is a significant interaction point in a process where a customer makes a judgment as to the quality of the service they are experiencing.

Below you can see the result of a brief fun classroom activity where students* use toys to stand in for people (a patient, a doctor, a radiographer, and a receptionist). The five process points or Moments of Truth in this example are:
1. Arrival at reception
2. Wait
3. Radiographer
4. Doctor Consult
5. Payment at Reception


* Thanks to Connor and his team

Sunday, August 11, 2019

Checklist - Quality as Conformance to Specification - Hotels and Japanese Trains


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A Checklist is a simple method for checking that a process conforms to specifications. Checklists exist throughout service systems and are a common way to make sure there is conformance to a process. A checklist can also be seen as a simple 'job list' whose function is to reduce failure. The checklist is an aid for human memory and compensates for the human likelihood of attention drift.  Checklists help to ensure consistency and completeness in carrying out a task. A basic example is the 'to do list'.



For instance, below you can see a simple checklist for a cleaner cleaning a hotel room. The checklist ensures the hotel room is always clean and looks consistent with the hotel's requirements.

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When I was in Japan recently I noticed that Japanese Train drivers always point at the instrument panel when they are driving. I was intrigued as to why this was. I learned that this practice has spread from Japan to other countries and is now an important method of preventing accidents and errors in a process. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pointing_and_calling and https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2008/10/21/reference/jr-gestures/#.XVDxNOgzZaQ
Here you can see the pointing (also sometimes accompanied by calling) in action. 


Pareto Principle - Airlines


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The Pareto Principle in business is an axiom of business management:  80% of sales come from 20% of clients.  An axiom is a statement that is taken to be true - and is the base of further arguments, although beware as it may not always be true! Generally speaking, the Pareto Principle is used in business to help managers understand that 20% of their clients are the most profitable. These are the repeat customers that use the higher end of a service - and so more attention needs to be paid to them. For instance, airlines recognize this principle by focusing resources on business customers by offering special services such as faster boarding, better seats, and lounges. This helps these customers remain loyal and impedes switching behavior.  

Pain Points




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Pain points are another way of describing problems that prospective customers experience, or in other words, places in service where customers are dissatisfied. Pain points = dissatisfaction.  Like any problem, customer pain points are diverse and varied. Pain points are a useful alternative descriptor for dissatisfaction as they make it clear that dissatisfaction causes emotional and physical distress, and is not just an intellectual or psychological state of the customer. Calling dissatisfaction pain makes the necessity to resolve the pain more acute, urgent and critical to the health of the service organization. 

Scenario and Option Planning

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Service managers need to consider options as part of what they do. This involves strategic thinking. One useful technique for strategic planning, especially when it involves creating options, is Scenario Planning.

If you follow this link it will take you to Adobe Connect where you can watch a brief 10 minute talk about Simplified Scenario or Option Planning, which can be used to analyze Case Studies, a common method of learning in business studies courses.

 To view the presentation click here. 

Sunday, July 28, 2019

Reason's Swiss Cheese Model - Health

From  Perneger, T.V (2005). The Swiss cheese model of safety accidents: Are there holes in this metaphor? BMC Health Sciences Research, 5: 71 online here

Reason's Swiss Cheese model is often used to help organisations manage risk and errors in their operations.

All service organisations are to some extent managing risk. Service managers can learn from disasters and mistakes that occur in other businesses and organisations. Service organisations can also learn how important it is to have a culture of trust as an essential part of any safety culture.

The most common industry to hear about Reason's model is the airline industry as airlines understand safety culture and have highly developed techniques and processes for investigating air accidents so they can continuously improve safety in the airline industry more generally. They derived Reason's Swiss Cheese Model to explain accidents, and Reason's model is now widely used in other industries like health. Arguably all service industries need to have a safety culture in place and so can learn from the Swiss Cheese Model.

The Swiss Cheese analogy is pictured graphically above. Imagine a series of Swiss cheese slices lined up on top of each other. Each slice has a few holes in it. Each of the layers of the cheese represents some aspect of organisational practice. So for example, in a service industry like medicine (let's use the example of a hip replacement operation) where an error can cause catastrophic impact (death) then layers might represent screening patients, personnel factors, facility factors, and process factors. For a surgery screening factors could include checking patients are not allergic to medication and are healthy enough to cope with the operation, personnel factors would include aspects like proper staff training, facility factors might include appropriate equipment and cleanliness, and process factors would include triple checks that the person going into theater is, in fact, the correct person and is getting a hip operation. If the holes line up, then you may get an error. The aim of the service manager (or risk manager) is to ensure that the holes are as small as possible and that there are enough layers in the cheese that the holes have less likelihood of lining up.

It's really important to develop 'no blame' cultures in service organisations. Most airlines have a 'No blame' culture attached to any error that involves a safety issue. What this means is that if for example, a mechanic drops a screw into an engine, he or she should immediately report their mistake even if it means holding up a flight at the cost of hundreds of thousands of dollars. The mechanic has done the right thing and should not be punished or castigated for his or her error. In fact, this staff member should be celebrated as a 'Safety Champion' because his or her actions are to be encouraged, not discouraged (note the word 'courage' in encourage because this does take bravery).

The model represents the actual existence of unavoidable mistakes/errors in any process. Equipment will malfunction. People do make mistakes. Patients lie about their health. Surgeons have bad days. The idea is to manage and mitigate risk.

Saturday, July 27, 2019

Blockchain

The following explanatory Youtube video provides a nice introduction to blockchain technology at different levels.


Service Concept - Manage my Health

Manage My Health is an example of how self-service technology shifts a service concept towards co-creation of process. Note that the patients using Manage my Heath feel more in control of their health process.


Customer Problem - DLink


Thursday, July 25, 2019

Bottleneck Problem - Deep Creek Brewery


Deep Creek Brewery and Process Flow from Janet Sayers on Vimeo.

A bottleneck is an impediment to process flow. The above short film is by Minesh Pillay and is a response to an assignment to look at a bottleneck issue in a service business. The film was accompanied by a brief essay which identified the bottleneck problem (caused by a structural feature in the bar) discussed in relation to relevant service concepts. The film provides a lovely insight into a new bar in Browns Bay which has been very popular since it opened.  The film features the owner/manager and the bar manager speaking about the bottleneck problem which is caused by a structural feature in the bar area, and the ways they deal with the problem, as well as some footage of staff working around the structural challenge. Thanks so much to Minesh, Jarred Mclacahlan and Tom for their permission to publish Minesh's film. You can also get a very good impression of the vibrancy of the venue and I do recommend you go there for the beer, the food and the great atmosphere :o) I particular enjoy the  branding referencing to landmarks from Browns Bay itself where the bar is located and  I lived for many years  - Deep Creek Road and Deep Creek itself. Best of luck to Jarred and all the staff involved in this venture.  

Service Innovation - IT and Banks

Barras (1986, 1990) argues that service innovation involving IT  involves three phases he called the Reverse Product Cycle (RPC). The phases are: Improved Efficiency, Improved Quality, and New Services.

IT was first introduced to improve existing processes, and only later became the basis for service product innovation, reversing the “product cycle” model of manufacturing innovation popularized by Abernathy and Utterback (1978). For technologically sophisticated service sectors like financial services these phases roughly transpose to the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. So, "insurance services moved from computerization of policy records, to providing online policy quotations, and then to supplying complete online services during these three decades" (Miles, 2011, p. 440).

Miles says about the banking industry:
"Uchupalanan (1998, 2000) mounted a systematic critique of the RPC approach, tracing the history of five IT innovations through all firms in the banking services sector in Thailand. He uncovered a diverse range of innovation strategies and trajectories that were far richer than the RPC account. The banks were influenced by the strategies of competitors with respect to each given innovation, by their experiences with earlier innovations (and their plans for others), and by pressures from regulators and the market. The interrelation of market competition, firm circumstances and innovation dynamics meant that the RPC “story” of innovation processes was rarely applicable in this context. At best it was one of a number of possible patterns of development" (p. 441).
The RPC approach is often used in service innovation analysis even though it clearly does not explain all service innovation. For instance, it completely neglects non-IT innovations, but it does at least provide a framework which enables the recognition and legitimation of service innovation and its study and development as a field worthy of more attention.

Service innovations in banking include new service products (such as new types of bank accounts more closely tailored to the circumstances of individual clients) and delivery innovations (e.g. online banking and cash machines). Innovation has also been introduced in other customer-facing functions, for example in targeted marketing and in computer-assisted helplines, etc.


References

Miles, I. (2006). Innovation in services [Electronic Version]. The Oxford handbook of innovation, 433—458. http://www.oxfordhandbooks.com/oso/public/content/oho_business/9780199286805/toc.html.


Script - Equip Retail

This post is an essay by Natalie Mitchell, a student in an undergraduate class 'Managing Services' on scripting at Equip, a retail outlet selling mainly jewelry. Thanks to Natalie for permission to publish her essay on this blog. Natalie's essay provides a good example of writing that uses her own experience in combination with service management theory to  provide some reflections on a service management topic.   

The essay topic was:   
"Scripting is an important technique for managing service people and the processes they deliver. Using an organisation with which you are familiar critically discuss how scripting is used, and its advantages and disadvantages". Approx 2000 words. Use at least four journal references. 

Scripting is "the precise specification of actions to be taken by service staff, in particular situations" (Clark & Johnston, 2008, p. 251) and is an essential technique for managing in today’s globalized service environment. In a constantly changing competitive environment the use of scripting in mass service organisations ultimately provides consistency, efficiency and security for customers and employees alike (Clark & Johnston, 2008). This essay will first briefly outline the nature of scripting. Second, this essay will examine the organisation ‘Equip’ and investigate how scripting is used. Using real examples of scripting at Equip it is possible to analyse the disadvantages and advantages of this technique. Overall, this essay will argue that scripting is definitely a vital technique for managing service people and processes. However it has to be approached in a manner that does not offset the autonomy of employees and customers to an extent where the service experience is unpleasant. 

The term, ‘script’ is a "commonly used tool to design and manage the encounter between frontline service employees and customers" (Victorino, Verma & Wardell, 2008, p. 36). Scripting is often discussed in the context of understanding the service encounter as a performance, much like in the theatre, and so the script provides the lines and actions that employees (as actors) should play when they interact with a customer (Harris et al. 2003).  Scripting is also defined as a "design tool used to exert a degree of control over employee-customer interactions that may take place where there is no direct supervision or oversight" (Tansik & Smith, 1991, p.36). The use of scripting in service organisations aims to ensure a consistent level of service quality by creating procedures that assist employees in their daily tasks (Clark & Johnston, 2008). These procedures are typically a "predetermined set of specific words, phrases, and gestures, as well as other expectations for the employee to use during each step of the service process" (Victorino et al, p. 6). 

Equip, an Australian-owned organisation, is chain of affordable jewellery stores, targeting females of all ages. EquipYourself Online claim "join our fast growing team ... working in a fun, young team environment’. Many organisations, Equip included, not only hire young workers that can relate to their predominantly young customers, but also hire young people as they are assumed to be more compliant. Scholosser (2002) suggests the word ‘young’ used in the context of a service workforce often indicates an underlying belief that younger staff will be more flexible and conform to specific organisational procedures. This certainly appeared to be the case in the store where I worked, from the period of November 2010 till May 2011.  Equip's employee ages ranged from 17-23, with the store manager being 23. With such a young workforce employees may be more likely to respond to control mechanisms like scripts. 

There are ‘six steps’ to Equip's encounter script which guides the daily operations of its staff. First an employee must greet the customer with an initial smile or verbal welcome within the first thirty seconds upon entering the store. The employee must then initiate conversation with an opening line by asking a question that requires an interactive answer and not a simple 'yes' or 'no' reply. The third step determines the customer's wants and needs. The employee is required to ask whether they wear gold or silver, or ask "what in particular are you looking for today?" The employee must then suggest an ‘add on’: for example the matching bracelet to the necklace they have chosen. The employee should  then encourage the customer to touch the additional piece of jewellery to persuade the customer it is the right thing to do. Touching merchandise increases the likelihood of sales (Underhill, 2008). The fifth step is directly linked to the fourth: the employee must be able to handle any possible objections. This step is explained in more detail below. The final stage of the encounter is closing the sale which involves putting the item(s) through the PlatyPOS transaction system, placing the item in an Equip bag, and fare-welling the customer with a statement that will welcome them back again, such as ‘See you later!’ 

Equip further incorporates scripting for employees by guiding their interactions with customers when   answering the telephone. From my personal experience the phone has to be answered in a specific way with an initial warm welcome, stating the organisation and store location, and who is speaking. In addition to scripting answering the phone, scripting in Equip also extend to telling  employees where they are to be positioned in store, and what to expect and say in each of the areas they are responsible for. During the busiest time of the shopping season, primarily the Christmas period, an employee will stand at the front of the store and ask every customer possible that is leaving to open their bag to be checked. It is the organisation’s policy that the customer has a right to decline a bag check and that the employee must not physically touch the customer’s bag. 

Equip is successful in that they have avoided heavy amounts of scripting in a rather customised service delivery. Although guidelines are specific employees may deviate from the scripted ‘six steps’ if needed in order to please and meet the customers’ expectations. This stance towards scripting is encouraged by  management. Thus, scripting is not approached in a way that offsets the autonomy of employees and customers to the extent where the service experience is unpleasant. This plays to Equips advantage as customers tend to take a dim view of heavy scripting. Employees themselves take pride in their ability to create a positive, smooth delivery service, meeting and exceeding customer’s expectations and using their discretion when needed to respond to customers mood, body language and requirements (Chase & Dasu, 2001). 

Scripting is incorporated into Equips’ operations due to the vast advantages for their employees, customers and the organisation as a whole. With a clear set of rules and guidelines in place, employees are able to work more effectively as they have a clear understanding of their responsibilities and role (Johnston & Clark, 2008). Consequently a consistent, smooth work flow is generally established (Dilworth, 1986). This creates an environment with minimal stress and a "sense of security to behaviour" (Johnston & Clark, 2008, p. 251) for both the customer and the employee. Employees at Equip benefit from scripting as they can rely on the content of the ‘six steps’ in a service encounter to know exactly what to say, and in what manner they should approach each customer. Thus scripting is ideal for those employees who do not necessarily find it natural to strike up a conversation with an unknown customer. The employee's overall anxiety is reduced.   In turn, this set of scripting guidelines followed by Equip employees means customers can relax because they understand the rules by which the encounter will be played out, especially if they are repeat customers. Customers typically expect an opening line after the initial ‘warm welcome’ during the service encounter. Thus, customers anticipate the type of question that will be asked and this reduces the overall pressure they may feel as there "exists a good understanding of what will happen and what is required of the customer at each stage" (Johnston & Clark, 2008, p. 253). As Chase and Dasu (2001, p. 84) state "ultimately, only one thing matters in a service encounter—the customer’s perceptions of what occurred". 

Further, according to Tansik and Smith’s (2000) ‘functions for using scripting’, a main advantage of this technique is being able to accurately diagnose customers’ needs and wants. This is achieved through the ‘six steps’ that employees perform during the encounter stage. After greeting the customer and using an opening line that encourages he/she to ‘open’ up to the employee the employee will then ask about what in particular they are looking for. Equip needs this information in order to operationalize their brand values: they state this purpose in strong language: "…our complete devotion to help customers find that sought after latest accessory is what will continue to make the Equip brand so successful" (Equip Online, 2010). Understanding the customer   means that Equip can maximise their profits and growth. Thus by providing a step in the script that asks customers what they want and need, they provide a service for the customer, but also ensure Equip is enacting their brand purpose. 

Nevertheless it must be acknowledged that there can be a tension between 'service' and 'sales', and it can be difficult to get the balance right between serving the customer and making sure their needs and wants are met, and on-selling to them in a way that they do not find overly aggressive and pushy. Scripting, in the form of the ‘six steps’ used by Equip is clearly a way to control both the employee and the customer. Control is a major purpose of scripting (Tansik & Smith, 2000). Equip employees who base their interactions on the ‘six steps’ are advantaged if they use the steps along with an upbeat personality to encourage and subconsciously manipulate customers into purchasing jewelry item(s) the customer believes they ‘need’. Using an opening line such as "what a nice dress you have, where did you get it from?" ideally aims to initiate a positive relationship between the employee and customer. Therefore, this increases the chance that the customer will ‘add on’ to the jewelry they have already chosen, or make the customer more inclined to purchase at all. Employees’ that successfully achieve target objections, which means having  more than 45% multi sales, are rewarded with material goods, such as movie tickets and body wash. This practice encourages employees to add-on sales. However, employees can only succeed with multi sales if they create a positive and enjoyable service experience for the customer, and if their interactions do not feel false and inauthentic (Ashforth & Tomiuk, 2000). Employees can use the script to enhance the customer's experience and this adds value for them, which increases the profit that Equip can make, and can lead to rewards for the employee. Although some people  may see the script as requiring 'hard selling' for employees it can be very rewarding to use the script, coupled with knowledge of 'what looks good with what', to enhance the appearance of the customer, and generate sales. 

Another positive aspect of the way that employees can use a script to their advantage is through using Step Five well; the step involving service recovery. Step Five requires the employee to handle any objections effectively. For an example from my own personal experience, a customer wanted an exchange for the same handbag in another colour. The Equip store where I worked did not have the colour she wanted in stock, and only Equip at another outlet did. She refused to drive to the other store to do the exchange as asked by the employee. The employee handled the objection by phoning the other store to ask if they could transfer the handbag to our Equip store. This suited the customer and this assistance actually exceeded her expectations. Thus, by positively engaging the customer through service recovery the customer, who was more than happy to exchange the item, then also purchased additional items. Therefore, by enacting Step Five well, Equip benefited as this ultimately lead to multiple items being sold. This process helped retain the customer, and so overall the process may provide a higher customer lifetime value resulting in an overall growth in profits (Samson & Daft, 2005). 

Although Equip is growing in profit and claim that their brand’s success is due to their devotion to "help customers find that sought after latest accessory" (Equip Online, 2010) the use of scripting to achieve this is not entirely flawless, and does have its drawbacks if not approached in an appropriate manner. Again, from  my personal experience, mystery shopping, which is regularly used to assess quality at Equip, can backfire and actually cause poor performance. Mystery shoppers might assess an Equip store every 2 months to ‘monitor employees’ adherence to organisational scripts (Scharf, 2003). In one case where a mystery shop was conducted the result sheet was faxed to our Equip store. The report detailed how one identifiable employee had not met the six steps precisely. The mystery shopper had recorded that the employee did not greet them in the first 30 seconds of the store and used an opening line that could not be answered. The employee consequently failed the test with comments of too much deviation from the ‘six steps’. This resulted in the employee adopting a heavier approach to scripting, as she conformed exactly to the criteria of the ‘six steps’. Consequently, the employee’s multi sales dropped below the target of 45%. According to Johnston and Clark (2008) this is likely due to customers’ perception of ‘robot-like behaviour’. Greeting a customer within 30 seconds and initiating the six steps may be viewed as too interrogative, and viewed as ‘going through the motions’ of service delivery without any real sincerity (Lawrence & Weber, 2010). 

Another factor than may  create unintended negative consequences is Equips’ performance objective criteria which sometimes require employees to meet 45% multi sales. Each employee is sometimes given targets for each day depending on the hours they will work. During the busy shopping day periods these are appropriate targets. However, during quiet periods requirements to meet 45% multi sales can act as an organisational pressure for employees, resulting in unnecessary stress, and potentially requiring a more forceful service delivery and therefore a more unpleasant service experience for the customer (and the employee), and a feeling of constant competition between employees to ‘get a sale’. This can lead to poor morale and high staff attrition rates.  

Overall, this essay confirms that scripting is a vital technique for managing service people and processes. By briefly outlining the nature of scripting it is evident that it is indeed used in Equips’ management strategy. The use of specific guidelines for the ‘six steps’, telephone communication and employee positioning within the store portray how this technique is incorporated into Equips’ daily operations. Equip use scripting to create a clear understanding of roles, resulting in a consistent and efficient work flow, and overall reduced stress for  both customer and employee. This organisation further benefits from the technique through accurately diagnosing customers’ needs and wants and controlling the customer to an extent. Employees can reap rewards for high productivity and customers can experience a pleasurable service delivery, meaning  Equip  can maximise their profits. It is evident that scripting, used moderately and with common sense, is useful, especially  if managers  allow employees to deviate if necessary in order to maximise customer satisfaction. Generally, at Equip in my experience, scripting does not offset the autonomy of either the customer or employee to the extent where the service experience is unpleasant. Sensible approaches to scripting can be beneficial and Equip is an example of a successful organisation that has benefited from the use of scripting. 

References


Ashforth, B. & Tomiuk, M. (2000). Emotional labour and authenticity: Views from service agents. In S. Fineman (ed.) Emotion in organizations, London: Sage: pp. 184 — 203.


Dilworth, J. B. (1986) Production and operations management, (3rd ed.). New York: Random House 

EquipYourself Online. (2011) Work at Equip. Retrieved September 21, 2011, from http://www.equipyourself.com.au/equip_careers/positions.php

Harris, R., Harris, K., and Baron, S. (2003). Theatrical service experiences: Dramatic script development with employees. International Journal of Service Industry Management, 14 (2): 184-199.

Johnston, R. & Clark, G. (2008) Service operations management: Improving service delivery (3rd ed.). Essex: Pearson 

Lawrence, A. & Weber, J. (2010) Business and society: Stakeholders, ethics, public policy. New York: McGraw- Hill 

Samson, D. A. & Daft, R. L. (2005) Management (2nd ed.). Southbank, Victoria: Thomson. 

Scharf, A. (2003). 'Scripted talk'. From “Welcome to McDonalds” to “Paper or plastic?”: Employers control the speech of service workers. Dollars and sense: The Magazine of Economic Justice. Retrieved on September 20, 2011, from http://www.dollarsandsense.org/archives/2003/0903scharf.html

Scholosser, E. (2002). Fast food nation: The dark side of the all-American meal.  New York: Houghton Mifflin. 


Victorino, L. Verma, R. & Wardell, D. G. (2008) Service scripting: A customer’s perspective of quality and performance. Cornell Hospitality Report, 20 (8), 1-17. 

Underhill, P. (2008). The science of shopping. Why we buy. Simon and Schuster: New York. 

Notes on group fitness regimes and music as organisational technology

Photo license:   Flickr image by cooyutsing at http://www.flickr.com/photos/25802865@N08/6853984341/      Introduction The purpose of this a...