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Internal service – barriers, flows and assessment


Article Information:

Title:

 Internal service – barriers, flows and assessment

Author(s):

Robert Johnston

Journal:

International Journal of Service Industry Management

Year:

2008 

Volume:

19 

Issue:

2 

Page:

210 - 231


DOI:

10.1108/09564230810869748

Publisher:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited


Acknowledgements:

The author would like to acknowledge the detailed and constructive assistance provided by the anonymous reviewers and the editors in the development of this paper.

Document Access:

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Abstract:

Purpose – This exploratory paper investigates internal service from a service management perspective. The objectives were to identify the main internal barriers that are preventing improvements to external service within business-to-business (B2B) organisations, to explore the bi-directionality of internal services provided between internal functions, to assess the quality of internal services provided between functions and develop a means of testing staff and managers for their level of internal versus external focus.

Design/methodology/approach – A qualitative study was conducted involving structured interviews in two European countries with 20 staffs and managers from a large international express package delivery firm.

Findings – Five findings emerged. First, six main internal barriers to improving external quality were identified. Second, the study found that the barriers in B2B organisations were the same as those in business-to-consumer (B2C) organisations. Third, it suggested that internal service, unlike external B2C service, is bi-directional. Fourth, it demonstrated a perception gap in internal service provision suggesting some degree of arrogance or delusion. Fifth, it demonstrated that the managers and staff viewed their service from an organisational, inside-out, perspective, despite articulating a desire to provide excellent service to their business customers.

Research limitations/implications – The key limitations were that only one organisation was studied and 20 interviews conducted. The paper provides support for the total quality management approach and suggests that a dual approach combining a service, customer, perspective with an operations, efficiency, perspective might be useful in generating deeper insights to better understand and bring about improvements to the quality of services delivered.

Practical implications – From a practitioner perspective, the findings suggest that managers and supervisors need to develop a better understanding of the performance of internal services.

Originality/value – The paper contributes to the knowledge of internal service, particularly in B2B services.

Keywords:

Service improvements, Service levels, Total quality management

Article Type:

Research paper

References:

73 references

Article URL:

www.emeraldinsight.com/10.1108/09564230810869748

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