Mystery shopping: A tool to develop insight into customer service provision

Ton Van der Wiele, Martin Hesselink, Jos Van Iwaarden
2005 Total Quality Management and Business Excellence  
Reaching service excellence through a focus on the customer, demands more than just measuring customer satisfaction by means of questionnaire surveys. Nowadays, it is not sufficient anymore to have service excellence in services, processes and relationships. Now is the time to create excellence in customer experiences, as the only way to create competitive advantage in the market. Organisational change should then be driven by a broader focus on customers' expectations and multiple ways of
more » ... ring customers' satisfaction. The case of a service company in The Netherlands (a temporary employment agency) illustrates the way to service excellence as an organisational change process. The case supports the need for a broad focus on measurements in order to be able to monitor and to direct organisational changes. Customer satisfaction data based on surveys are needed, however, they will not be sufficient for continuing the change process over time. To achieve that, other measurements like mystery shopping may give more stimuli to change. Therefore, this research argues that mystery shopping can be a useful instrument in addition to the more often-used survey methods. Mission: HF 5001-6182 Programme: HF 5546-5548.6, HF 5549-5549.5 Library of Congress Classification (LCC) 10 4081284; fax +31 10 4089169. Martijn Hesselink is a PhD candidate at Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands. His research topic is about the influence of leadership on the service behaviour of frontline employees, measured by customer and candidate satisfaction. He also works since six years as a quality manager at a Dutch flex company. Jos van Iwaarden ABSTRACT Reaching service excellence through a focus on the customer, demands more than just measuring customer satisfaction by means of questionnaire surveys. Nowadays, it is not sufficient anymore to have service excellence in services, processes and relationships. Now is the time to create excellence in customer experiences, as the only way to create competitive advantage in the market. Organisational change should then be driven by a broader focus on customers' expectations and multiple ways of measuring customers' satisfaction. The case of a service company in The Netherlands (a temporary employment agency) illustrates the way to service excellence as an organisational change process. The case supports the need for a broad focus on measurements in order to be able to monitor and to direct organisational changes. Customer satisfaction data based on surveys are needed, however, they will not be sufficient for continuing the change process over time. To achieve that, other measurements like mystery shopping may give more stimuli to change. Therefore, this research argues that mystery shopping can be a useful instrument in addition to the more oftenused survey methods.
doi:10.1080/14783360500078433 fatcat:jbd5pp2t2zc4dgozfqdnj67xru