The course builds on both conceptual frameworks for strategic
management of service processes as well as quantitative tools and
techniques for solving complex problems of delivering services. The
course consists of lectures, workshops, case discussions, and
speakers from the industry. It requires active preparation and
participation from the students. It focuses on solving real
problems in service companies. We explore, analyze, and discuss the
complexity of services from strategic as well as managerial
perspectives.
The course focuses on various themes and problems faced by
companies. The scope of operations managementspans the entire set
of internal and external processes in order to deliver customized
solutions to customers and consumers (b2b and/or b2c).
Organizational and managerial complexity increases when operations
are performed on a global level, such as from strategic decisions
related to service/process design, capacity, technology transfer,
facility location, sourcing and infrastructure. Some of the central
issues covered in the course include:
- Designing service and service processes
- Measuring and managing quality of service
- Designing and managing the service encounter
- Improving processes
- Locating service facilities
- Managing capacity and demand
- Forecasting demand for services
- Managing waiting lines and throughput times
- Managing the service supply chain
All subjects are discussed in relation to specific
industries/sectors, such as:
- Insurance
- IT, telecommunication and high tech services
- Logistics/shipping
- Tourism/leisure
- Healthcare
As managers of service operations you will play a crucial
role in securing the success and performance of your organization.
Revenue generation depends on your customer’s perception of service
value, and at the same time, the cost of producing the service
depends on the design of the service delivery system. Being able to
excel on both venues better than the competitors is not an easy
task.
This course is about meeting this challenge by addressing the
following issues: 1) How to design service delivery systems, 2) How
to manage the relationships with customers and suppliers vis-à-vis
the performance of service operations, and 3) How to link service
design to strategic change and thereby using service as a
competitive weapon.
We will achieve this by building an understanding of the service
concept and the managerial dilemmas it raises. Using cases from
service organizations we will work with methods and tools that can
be helpful in analyzing problems and identifying solutions to meet
the above challenge.
The course’s development of personal competences:
The course will develop the students’ abilities to engage in
analytically solving problems of managing service operations.
Furthermore the course will develop the students’ abilities to
present and discuss problems and solutions through case analysis,
workshops, and presentations.
|
Fitzsimmons & Fitzsimmons, Service Management, Operations
Strategy, Information Technology, McGraw Hill, Seventh Edition,
2011
Buzacott, J. A. (2000). Service system structure. International
Journal of Production Economics, 68, 15-27.
Frandsen & Hsuan (2010) “Measuring Service Process
Modularity”, Proceedings of the 17th International Annual EurOMA
Conference in Porto, Portugal, 6-9 June 2010.
Frei, F. X. (2006). Breaking the Tradeoff Between Efficiency and
Service. Harvard Business Review, 84, 92-101.
Maglio, P. P. & Spohrer, J. (2008). Fundamentals of service
science. Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 36,
18-20.
Metters, R. & Vargas, V. (2000). Organizing Work in Service
Firms. Business Horizons, 43, 23.
Oliva, R. (2001). Tradeoffs in Responses to Work Pressure in the
Service Industry. California Management Review, 43, 26-43.
Repenning, N. P. & Sterman, J. D. (2001). Nobody ever gets
credit for fixing problems that never happened: Creating and
sustaining process improvement. California Management Review, 43,
64-+.
Sampson, S. E. & Froehle, C. M. (2006). Foundations and
implications of a proposed Unified Services Theory. Production and
Operations Management, 15, 329-343.
Voss, C. A. & Hsuan, J. (2009). Service Architecture and
Modularity. Decision Sciences, 40, 541-569
Zomerdijk, L. G. & Voss, C. A. (2010). Service Design for
Experience-Centric Services. Journal of Service Research, 13,
67-82.
|