Home  | About Us  | Register  | Login

Login Password

Press  | Contact Us | Articles | Author | Blog
Submit & Search
Complaints/Appreciation
Visit
Customer Shop
Buy Books by
Avinash Narula
Buy Innovative
Coffee Mugs
Buy Creative
Posters
Buy Dissatisfied
Customer Cards
Buy Online
Training Programs
 
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
Books Resource
Products & Services Resource
Customer/Management Blog

 
Books by Avinash Narula
Posters
Innovative Gifts
Stationery
Customer Hero Awards
Complaint Cards
Campaign
Sponsorship/Business Opportunities
Customer Day
 
CUSTOMER POWER-
The Concept
Happy Customer
Unhappy Customer
Complaint Help Services
Customer Power Club
Terms & Conditions
BROWSE Complaints/Appreciation
 
Onsite Training
Online Training-Individual
Online Training-Corporate
Motivational Seminars
  International Motivational Speaker


Certificate Program- Customer Mathematics
 
CUSTOMER TALK
 

Competing Goals of the Governmentwide Purchase Card Program: Customer Satisfaction, Vendor Rotation, Fair and Reasonable Pricing


Author: n/a
Publisher: Storming Media
Pages: n/a
Language: English
ISBN: 1423560302

Description: This is a NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL MONTEREY CA report procured by the Pentagon and made available for public release. It has been reproduced in the best form available to the Pentagon. It is not spiral-bound, but rather assembled with Velobinding in a soft, white linen cover. The Storming Media report number is A467843. The abstract provided by the Pentagon follows: The rapidly developing Government wide Commercial Purchase Card (GCPC) Program primarily affects commercial procurements valued at $2,500 or less, which comprise more than 90 percent of all acquisition transactions. It is considered a major contributor to streamlining the procurement process. The program is efficient, but little research has been done on its effectiveness. This thesis analyzed the Navy/Marine Corps Purchase Card Program by modeling the purchasing process, then determining if the program goals of customer satisfaction, rotating orders among vendors, and obtaining products and services at a fair and reasonable price were effectively achieved or whether goal conflicts in any way hindered full implementation of the program. Specifically, measurements were collected on goal achievement and goal congruence at the installation level using the Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) as an example. The NPS program was effective in achieving strategic goals. While end-users anticipated a potential problem meeting the goal of vendor rotation while also achieving customer satisfaction and a fair and reasonable price, there was actually no significant problem found in achieving all three goals. There was fundamental goal congruence. The methodology presented could be used for further research, potentially streamlining the program for other installations by determining the effectiveness of goal achievement.


Price: $ 25.95

Contact:

Book Available In :


Motivational Speaker | About Us |Customer Math | Customer Satisfaction Books | Customer Satisfaction Posters | Motivational Gifts | Customer Complaint Cards | Customer Stationery | Corporate Gifts | Customer Services Awards | Customer Satisfaction Campaign | Sponsorship | Customer Day | Customer Power | Happy Customer | Unhappy Customer | Customer Complaint Help Services | Browse Customer Appreciation | Browse Customer Complaints | Customer Satisfaction Online Training | Customer Satisfaction Seminars | Customer Satisfaction-Certificate Online Programs | Customer SatisfactionArticles | Submit Customer Satisfaction Books | Submit Customer Satisfaction Products & Services | Customer Retention Book Collection | Submit Customer Complaints | Review Customer Retention Products & Services | Our Websites | Site Map | Special-service Payment

Powered By Creative Design Studio : Brochure Design and Web Design Services