Service Equals Performance Equals Service

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Service can be described as a performance of some kind involving two parties whereby one party is the benefactor and the other party is the performing party receiving some type of monetary payment. The value of the Service depends on the personal experience of the benefactor.

When I looked it up in Websters, there it was #11 out of 31 definitions. The payment part was not included, but the key word mentioned was performance.

As I relate this to restaurants, its so easy to see why dining room service is excellent training for actors, since theyre performing all of the time. There might be days when their energy level is low, yet they are still expected to perform on the show stage at night. It is not much different for dining room service staff whose livelihood depends quite a bit on how they look and act before many people per night. The word performance makes a lot of sense when relating it to other Service fields such as medical, legal, financial and armed, even in religion theyre called prayer services.

With increased human knowledge and modern inventions, the term Customer Service has evolved over time. Whenever a new technology is invented, an array of services develops making it accessible to the general public with success depending on product performance and the product related Services performance. Whether it is a bulb to make a room bright or a flying machine that sends people around the world faster, the need for developed services attached to new technologies does create jobs.

Even at the computer, we dial up our Internet Service Provider to gain access to the information highway. The instantaneous delivery of sorted out information within seconds is now the norm. Proper navigation performance (that word again) allow us to surf the World Wide Web streamlining information at our fingertips. With improved search engine technology, the return of consumer searches has become more categorically specific-once again proving better performance results in better service

Take a look around, and you will notice service performances touch every part of our daily lives-many of which are taken for granted.


About the Author:
Richard Saporito has over 25yrs. of restaurant servic eexperience in many profitable establishments. His e-book-How to Improve Dining Room Service-is used as a guide for setting up restaurant dining room service systems. Richard Saporito, President http://www.topserveconsulting.com888-276-4808



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