Why Improving Quality Doesnt Improve Quality (Or Whatever Happened to Marketing) Harvard Case Solution & Analysis

Too often, the quality of the programs fail to improve quality, because they focus on the internal processes that do not affect customers. This is at least partly due to the exclusion of marketing on the quality of the movement, a situation for which both sides partly to blame. Ideally, marketing should be the eyes and ears of the organization, linking external customer management processes. One way to do this is to organize the collection of measures of customer satisfaction throughout the management process. This forms a natural bridge from the client to manage and allows management to monitor the impact of improving the quality all the way from the internal process measures overall customer satisfaction and market share. "Hide
by Raymond E. Kordupleski, Roland T. Rust, Anthony J. Zahorik Source: California Management Review 14 pages. Publication Date: April 1, 1993. Prod. #: CMR043-PDF-ENG

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