Customer and Employee Service Quality Management in the Airline Industry

Fierce competition has raised standards leading customers to expect higher standards of service, and customers are Ideal for appraising how well employees have provided quality service because they interact directly with the employees. Quality of service in the airline also depends greatly on the...

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Main Author: Petchi, Cessie Sylvia
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8172/1/GSM_2003_2_%28A%29.pdf
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spelling my-upm-ir.81722023-12-14T06:37:41Z Customer and Employee Service Quality Management in the Airline Industry 2003-12 Petchi, Cessie Sylvia Fierce competition has raised standards leading customers to expect higher standards of service, and customers are Ideal for appraising how well employees have provided quality service because they interact directly with the employees. Quality of service in the airline also depends greatly on the quality of the employees, as dissatisfied employees would not perform a service at the required level, and this would affect the service delivery This study examined the customers' perceptions and expectations of service quality, and the service-performance gap that measures the employees' Job satisfaction in Singapore Airlines (SIA) and Malaysia Airlines (MAS), to reveal the status of the level of service quality as perceived by their customers (customers' Satisfaction) as well as the level of employees job satisfaction in each company The SERVQUAL questionnaire comprising of five major service quality dimensions (tangibility, reliability, responsiveness, assurance,and empathy) was used to measure the customers' perceptions of service quality, and a total or 200 customers from each airline company were approached. The employees' perceptions of job satisfaction were measured through a service quality questionnaire developed by Parasuraman et al., (1998), that addresses the seven key contributing factors (teamwork, employee job-fit, technology job-fit, perceived control, supervisory control systems, role conflict, and role ambiguity) that affects the job performance. The total population of the employees of SIA (60 employees), and 83 employees from MAS answered the job satisfaction questionnaires. Airlines - Customer services - Malaysia Airplanes, Company - Customer services - Malaysia 2003-12 Thesis http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8172/ http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8172/1/GSM_2003_2_%28A%29.pdf text en public masters Universiti Putra Malaysia Airlines - Customer services - Malaysia Airplanes, Company - Customer services - Malaysia Graduate School of Management Che Rose, Raduan English
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
collection PSAS Institutional Repository
language English
English
advisor Che Rose, Raduan
topic Airlines - Customer services - Malaysia
Airlines - Customer services - Malaysia

spellingShingle Airlines - Customer services - Malaysia
Airlines - Customer services - Malaysia

Petchi, Cessie Sylvia
Customer and Employee Service Quality Management in the Airline Industry
description Fierce competition has raised standards leading customers to expect higher standards of service, and customers are Ideal for appraising how well employees have provided quality service because they interact directly with the employees. Quality of service in the airline also depends greatly on the quality of the employees, as dissatisfied employees would not perform a service at the required level, and this would affect the service delivery This study examined the customers' perceptions and expectations of service quality, and the service-performance gap that measures the employees' Job satisfaction in Singapore Airlines (SIA) and Malaysia Airlines (MAS), to reveal the status of the level of service quality as perceived by their customers (customers' Satisfaction) as well as the level of employees job satisfaction in each company The SERVQUAL questionnaire comprising of five major service quality dimensions (tangibility, reliability, responsiveness, assurance,and empathy) was used to measure the customers' perceptions of service quality, and a total or 200 customers from each airline company were approached. The employees' perceptions of job satisfaction were measured through a service quality questionnaire developed by Parasuraman et al., (1998), that addresses the seven key contributing factors (teamwork, employee job-fit, technology job-fit, perceived control, supervisory control systems, role conflict, and role ambiguity) that affects the job performance. The total population of the employees of SIA (60 employees), and 83 employees from MAS answered the job satisfaction questionnaires.
format Thesis
qualification_level Master's degree
author Petchi, Cessie Sylvia
author_facet Petchi, Cessie Sylvia
author_sort Petchi, Cessie Sylvia
title Customer and Employee Service Quality Management in the Airline Industry
title_short Customer and Employee Service Quality Management in the Airline Industry
title_full Customer and Employee Service Quality Management in the Airline Industry
title_fullStr Customer and Employee Service Quality Management in the Airline Industry
title_full_unstemmed Customer and Employee Service Quality Management in the Airline Industry
title_sort customer and employee service quality management in the airline industry
granting_institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
granting_department Graduate School of Management
publishDate 2003
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8172/1/GSM_2003_2_%28A%29.pdf
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