Introduction to Quality Service
Management in Tourism and
         Hospitality
Reality
 Bites
Anne and her family decided to dine out one
 night and chose to settle in a mall due to
  convenience purposes. Due to a limited
 selection because of health issues of her
family, their choices were narrowed down
  into two restaurants namely; Camiling
 Restaurant and Shery’s Diner; which are
         Filipino fusion restaurants.
Content
    Knutson (1990) reflected in his
       research that the intense
     competition in the hospitality
 industry has led many businesses to
    look for ways on how they can
      profitability differentiate
  themselves from their competition
   and capture the highest quality.
               One of the pioneers in
                “quality” research,
                 defined quality as
                  “fitness for use.”
Joseph Juran
 Service Product:
Goods and Services
 A product can be defined as anything
   that we can offer to a market for
      attention, acquisition, use, or
 consumption that could satisfy a need
or want however the definition of the
product does not only involve tangible
goods such as those that are purchased
  in restaurants like burgers, fries or
                  drinks.
Ford (2011) mentioned that the goods and
 services cannot be separated from each
  other. In the delivery of services one
 cannot be performed properly without
        the use of tangible items.
Dimensions of Quality
for Service Products
1. Performance
   This dimension of quality
     has very measurable
    attributes, that is why
    brands can usually be
     ranked objectivelyon
  their respective aspects.
2. Features
    They are secondary in
    such a way that they
    supplement the basic
   functioning of a service
          product.
3. Reliability
     This means that being
    able to provide service
   as promised is one of the
    main considerations in
   assessing this dimension.
4. Conformance
  This quality dimension means
    that a service product’s
   design and characteristics
   should meet the standard
               set.
5. Durability
     This dimension is more
      detectable in goods
    rather than in services
        and it has both
    technical and economic
          dimensions.
6. Serviceability
     The sixth dimension of
  quality, again more inclined
   toward goods rather than
  services, is serviceability or
      the speed, courtesy,
    competence, and ease of
             repair.
7. Aesthetics
    This dimension, along with
      the last dimension, are
     highly subjective. Their
  taste of course are affected
     by a variety of factors,
  including their demographic
        and psychographic
         characteristics.
8. Perceived Quality
  Guests usually do not have a
  complete guide on a service
      product’s dimension;
    unknowingly, they are
 indirectly measuring and this
 measurement is the only basis
 for them to compare brands.
Notable People in
 Service Quality
Walter A.   William Edwards
Shewhart         Deming
Joseph M.   Philip B.    Armand V.
  Juran     Crosby      Feigenbaum
  Kaoru    Genichi   James H.
Ishikawa   Taguchi   Donnelly
      A.      Valarie A.   Leonard L.
“Parsu”Parasu Zeithaml       Berry
    raman
Mary Jo   Bernard H.
 Bitner     Booms
Christopher   Theodore
 Lovelock      Levitt
Walt Disney   Bruce Laval
        Group 1
Alyannah Ysabel O. Isidro
   Regine R. Domingo