Jamaica Gleaner

OUR’s mystery shopping points to utilities’ customer service deficienci­es

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THE FINDINGS of a mystery shopping exercise conducted by the Office of Utilities Regulation (OUR) has revealed that none of the utility service providers are delivering an above- average in-store customer experience and that there was a significan­t 30 per cent customer satisfacti­on gap.

The survey was carried out across four utility service providers – the Jamaica Public Service Company Limited (JPS), the National Water Commission (NWC), Digicel and FLOW, by Market Research Services Limited. Among the objectives of the study were to ascer tain the levels of customer satisfac tion, the major areas of satisfacti­on and dissatisfa­ction with customer service, and to determine the level of satisfacti­on with the customer service offered by the operators.

Utility companies were scored on the physical space in their stores, the quality of customer service, and customer service representa­tives’ knowledge of specific services that the company provided.

Telecommun­ications provider FLOW topped the overall scores with 71 per cent, with JPS coming in at a close second with 70 per cent. Digicel garnered a combined total of 69 per cent, and NWC got 67 per cent. JPS topped the utility companies on the issue of customer service, with a score of 80 per cent; followed by NWC, which scored 77 per cent; FLOW, 71 per cent; and Digicel 68 per cent. JPS got top marks for its physical space with a score of 97 per cent, followed by FLOW at 76 per cent; Digicel, 71 per cent; and NWC, 64 per cent.

WEAKNESSES

Service above expectatio­ns and acknowledg­ing customers upon entry were consistent­ly featured among the weaknesses identified across nearly all service providers. The utility service providers were encouraged to place more emphasis on customer experience in terms of individual attention given to customers, as well as the acknowledg­ement customers receive upon entry into the retail spaces.

Ser vice providers were also urged to work extensivel­y on consistenc­y in how they addressed customers’ access to service terms and conditions, code of practice, and customer charter, as well as informatio­n regarding their products, particular­ly telecoms produc ts DigiPlay and Triple Play. Attention to these areas are likely to have a positive impact on the scores obtained moving from average performanc­es, the research noted.

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