Tuesday, July 12, 2011

GHANA LAUNCHES NATIONAL CUSTOMER SERVICE WEEK







The GHANA CUSTOMER SERVICE WEEK has been launched in Accra, during the
FIRST GHANA CUSTOMER SERVICE SUMMIT, a national stakeholder’s summit on the development of customer service in Ghana, under the theme: “Sharing best practice and ideas to enhance the culture of service excellence in Ghana”.
The summit was attended by representatives of the business community, government agencies, academia, civil society, and traditional rulers as well.
Hon.Adjei-Baah, the President of the,
GHANA NATIONAL CHAMBER OF COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY, and a Member of Parliament for Nkawkaw constituency, declared the GHANA CUSTOMER SERVICE WEEK LAUNCHED.
In his inaugural speech he noted that, “People have needs, and when those needs are met, service is then provided for those whose needs are met. The fact is that you have not only saved them the hassle of looking elsewhere, but also what you offered them is unique as you treat them as cherished clients.”
Mr Joles Nartey Tokoli, a business strategist, who spoke on the topic: “Customer service in Ghana going beyond lip service”, noted that customer service in Ghana was the typical “I am doing you a favour” mentality. “It is perceived that the customer needs something and when is it done for him or her. The customer is therefore at the mercy of the whims and caprices of the customer service staff,”
Dr.Lloyed Amoah a lecturer at the Ashesi University College, and an expect in the South East Asian affairs, in his key note address indicated the need for Ghana, in pursuance of the culture of customer service excellence, to take inspiration from the level of service excellence observed in South East Asia. Adding that “in Asia ,customer service in not just a culture but a religion”
Mr. Hector Wulff, Executive Director of the Organisation for Customer Service Excellence- Ghana, organisers of the summit and the implementing body of the
GHANA CUSTOMER SERVICE WEEK , said the summit seeks provide the platform for participants to discuss the state of customer service in Ghana, challenges and the way forward towards the attainment of a national customer service culture, with special emphasis on South East Asian experience.
Mr.Wulff indicated that, the GHANA CUSTOMER SERVICE WEEK has been developed and launched in Ghana by the ORGANISATION FOR CUSTOMER SERVICE EXCELLENCE-GHANA (OCSEG)
The Customer Service Week seeks to raise the standards of Customer Service across Ghana through awareness, education and sharing of global best practice.
THE OBJECTIVE OF GHANA CUSTOMER SERVICE WEEK
1) To raise awareness of Customer Service across Ghana.
2) To identify international best practice and learn from it.
3) To remind organisations of their commitment to Customer Service.
4) To boost employee morale, motivation and promote teamwork.
5) To Reward and recognize organizations and individual contribution, and commitment.
6) To champion and entrench customer service excellence in Ghana.
7) To raise the standard of customer service in Ghana.
Who should celebrate the Ghana customer service week?
We are expecting both private and public organisations in Ghana to celebrate. Customer Service Week and attend the Customer Service programmes and events.
Participating organisations represent leading financial, healthcare, insurance, manufacturing, retailing, hospitality, communications, not-for-profit and educational organisations as well as some agencies.
Customer Service Week is not just for organisations, it's also for the public. We encourage the public to share their good and bad experiences with us and post questions for our consultants to answer. Customer Service Week is about raising the standards so the public can have a better experience, whether that experience, be with a retailer, government institution or health authority. Follow us on Twitter, or post questions on our Facebook page.
Ghana Customer Service Week.

Monday, July 4, 2011

CUSTOMER SERVICE BREWED IN GHANIAN POT



Have you ever gotten so angry that you feel your temperature rise, you start to stammer and shake like a leaf? Well, that happened to me today. I felt like I was about to explode and perhaps make the Guinness Book of Records as the first human time bomb!

Now, this might not be a big deal to many of you; but for me, with a typical phlegmatic personality; it is a big deal! Definitely unheard of, no psychology book on character traits ever mentions the quick temper of a phlegmatic. Why? Well, because it's pretty much non existant!

So, here am I this morning at the post office in town trying to post a CD to my older brother. I purchased a padded envelope but due to its rectangular nature and my square shaped CD, it only filled about 2/3 of the envelope. In order to make the package more secure, I folded the extra third over and stuck it tight with the adhesive side of the envelope and cellotape for added security.

With my package firmly closed and addressed neatly I took it to the lady at the counter for her to process it. I cheerfully greeted her with a smile and hearty 'good afternoon' and slipped her my parcel. Without even a smile in return, the lady (who didn't even acknowledge my greeting) looks up at me and in the rudest voice said (in Twi-local language);

'Who told you to seal the envelope like that?'

Me, very surprised replied (in English - for some reason when I am pissed I speak only English - lol) saying;

'What do you mean, sealed it like how?'.

Then she said;

'Who told you to seal the envelope with cellotape'.

At this point, I stood shocked. I just couldn't understand why she was talking to me like that. What did I ever do to her? - I am starting to get really pissed - I spoke back in an equally rude and sarcastic voice;

'How was I supposed to know there were particular rules for the way envelopes should be sealed'.

She went off again accusing me like I was some criminal. I looked at her and said sternly:

'Okay, I didn't know - now I know, so next time I'll know how to deal with it'.

Then -and this is the killer- she looks at me and smirks;

'Now you're talking'.

Now, that last statement was the last straw. Boy oh boy, that did my head in! I snatched my parcel from her and walked away to another lady; determined that if I got similar treatment from her I would just leave. This second lady however was very pleasant. She took the envelope and kindly told me that they needed to see what was inside before sealing it, so she would have to open up. I was like;

'Oh, ok. I didn't know that'.

She then sorted everything out for me and directed me to where I needed to drop it. At that point I told her what happened with the other lady and told her to teach her decent manners. However, I wasn't satisfied. My blood was still boiling for more action. So I went back to the first lady and told her;

'Next time learn how to talk to your customers. You can go to the other lady for lessons'.

She looks at me and says;

'What's your problem, what did i say wrong?'.

I said;

'You talked to me rudely! There is no sign anywhere in this building instructing customers on how to go about sending parcels, so you need to be patient and explain the procedure to the customer, in a pleasant manner. Not shout at them like you did'.

Then, she raises her hand and dismisses me with a wave and says in Twi;

'get lost' (fio ko).

OOooohh, that did it. I looked at her raised my hand, gesturing towards her and said disgusted;

'You are a disappointment and a big shame to this establishment. It is in your best interest to take the advice I'm giving you. As a matter of fact, you should be thanking me for my frankness. The postal service system is dying and soon it will be non existant! It is in your best interest to be nice to customers, thus encouraging them to come again so that you can continue to receive a salary'.

The other pleasant lady I went to earlier then starts calling out to me to please stop. I walked to her and she was like;

'Please, it is okay. I will talk to her'.

With that, I walked out. Everyone there looking at me. Lol. ;p

What do you think of this? What ever happened to Ghanaian hospitality? Or is it because I wasn't a foreigner and so didn't qualify for it? We copy so many things blindly from 'developed countries' - bad and good. Why can't we copy their usually excellent customer service to?

What is our problem? I have no answers, perhaps you do! Do you care to share? I would really want to know.

PS: Oh yea, by the way - I intend to go directly back to no other person but her if I ever have need to go back to the post office again. I would like to see if she has learned her lessons. If she hasn't, well; I'm surely giving her a second dose of my piece of mind. Lol

Saturday, June 4, 2011

1ST GHANA CUSTOMER SERVICE SUMMIT



GHANA CUSTOMER SERVICE SUMMIT
VENUE: BRITISH COUNCIL, ACCRA
DATE: FRIDAY JULY 8 ,2011
TIME: 8:30 AM TO 1:30 PM
THEME: SHARING BEST PRACTICE AND IDEAS TO ENHANCE SERVICE EXCELLENCE IN GHANA
ALSO AT THE SUMMIT WILL BE THE LAUNCH OF THE
ORGANISATION FOR CUSTOMER SERVICE EXCELLENCE-GHANA,A NATIONAL ORGANISATION DEDICATED TO FOSTERING CUSTOMER SERVICE EXCELLENCE .

SLOGAN:FOSTERING THE CULTURE OF SERVICE EXCELLENCE IN GHANA

VISION: TO ACHIEVE A WORLD BEST SERVICE EXCELLENCE CULTURE IN GHANA.

OBJECTIVES:
1) To pursue customer service excellence through the sharing of best practice and research among stakeholders and the public at large.
2) To mark and celebrate national and international events dedicated to customer service excellence.
3) To advise the Government of Ghana on customer service issues.
4) To be a national awarding body for customer service excellence.
5) To serve as a link of communication between service providers and the public.
(read less)
VISION: TO ACHIEVE A WORLD BEST SERVICE EXCELLENCE CULTURE IN GHANA.
OUR MISSION IS TO SERVE AS A LEADING AUTHORITY DEDICATED TO FOSTERING AND PROMOTING THE CULTURE OF SERVICE EXCELLENCE IN GHANA.

Friday, March 4, 2011

ORGANIZATIONS HONOURED FOR EXCELLENCE IN CUSTOMER SERVICE




























The Founder of the GHANA CUSTOMER SERVICE AWARDS,Mr.Hector Wulff and some members of the awards team,under the auspices of the Customer Service Advocate Ghana, have payed courtesy calls to the award winners,and to present their awards with certificates to them at their business premises.This is a novelty and the first time that business awards are being presented and delivered, door to door at the work places of award winners encouraging a sense of belonging and good will, among their staff and the entire workers of the organization,instead of the usual awards ceremonies associated with dinner-dance and long speeches.
So far companies like ALLADSHAMS LIMITED,KINGS COLLEGE INTERNATIONAL, J.D RESTAURANTS,GHANA POLICE SERVICE,NATIONAL HEALTH INSURANCE AUTHORITY,BLET SERVICES LIMITED,AGBEVE HERBAL CENTRE, KRIF GHANA LIMITED, ASHANTI HOME TOUCH,CITY LIGHT GHANA LIMITED, PAPAYE FAST FOODS,T.T BROTHERS, O.A TRAVEL AND TOURS,HOLY TRINITY MEDICAL CENTRE/SPA AND HEALTH FARM, ANGE HILL HOTEL,SHOPRITE,FIRST CAPITAL PLUS LIMITED
RLG COMMUNICATIONS, ELECTROLAND GHANA LIMITED,BRITISH COUNCIL GHANA,NDK FINANCIAL SERVICE, IBURST AFRICA,IPMC,PEACE FM,PHC MOTORS,ZOOMLION LIMITED, DELCIELO OPTICAL,SPINAL CLINIC,KENYA AIRWAYS ,INCLUDING GLORYLAND FOODS, have been visited and presented with awards in recognition of their leadership in customer service and commitment to service quality, by the GHANA CUSTOMER SERVICE AWARDS TEAM.In all, the heads of these various reputable companies expressed their gratitude and and promised their support towards the sustainability of the GHANA CUSTOMER SERVICE AWARDS,towards the attainment of a national customer service culture,as the nation emerges as an oil economy and a business hub in Africa.
The Ghana Customer Service Awards has been designed to recognise, encourage and reward businesses in Ghana for their excellent treatment of, and positive attitude towards, their customers.
THE AIM OF THE GHANA CUSTOMER SERVICE AWARDS IS TO CELEBRATE EXCELLENCE AND PROFESSIONALISM IN CUSTOMER SERVICE DELIVERY. The Ghana Customer Service Awards is serving as platform showcase achievements in Customer Service delivered by a business or a service provider. Award rankings are in no way influenced by the opinion of the firms or their staff or sponsors. The awards seek to: 1) Encourage businesses in Ghana to raise their standard of customer service. 2) Reward businesses in Ghana that provide exceptional customer service.

FIRST GHANA CUSTOMER SERVICE AMBASSADOR DECORATED






CHIEF YAW KUMEY HONOURED, AS GHANA'S FIRST CUSTOMER SERVICE AMBASSADOR.
Mr Yaw Kumey, Group Chief Executive Officer of Y. Kumey International Group of Companies,last Thursday, the 3rd of February 2011,was decorated and honoured as Ghana's first Customer Service Ambassador,the highest award category in the Ghana Customer Service Awards , for an individual in the private sector in pursuance of excellence in customer service in Ghana.
Chief Kumey was decorated and honoured for his commitment and selfless contribution towards the development of customer service in Ghana,in pursuit a national customer service culture,as the nation emerges as an oil economy and a business hub in Africa.
In his acceptance remark, Chief Yaw Kumey said he thought he had been working in vain but has now realised that his efforts have been recognised with the award. He impressed on the youth not to undermine their ability, since he is confident that the next generation will produce the country’s first billionaire and make it less dependent on foreign assistance.
This awards is an initiative of the CUSTOMER SERVICE ADVOCATE under the auspices of THE GHANA WRITERS AND NEWSPAPERS SOCIETY(GWANSO)
Headed by Mr. HECTOR WULFF, as the founder.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

MEET MR.CUSTOMER SERVICE




His name is Hector Wulff,popularly known as MR.CUSTOMER SERVICE, a consumer affairs journalist and a consultant who has been training customer service and business communications for five years,a prolific writer,marketer and great thinker who fears GOD.

MR. WULFF,indeed is the true face of customer service in Ghana,a leading authority on customer service,an advocate and campaigner of a national customer service culture.

He has written several articles on effective customer communications in several journals and of various websites both nationally and internationally,with most popular titles known to global customer service practitioners and communicators,as

THE POWER OF CUSTOMER SERVICE SERIES and

THE HIDDEN MAGIC IN SERVICE QUALITY.

Currently,MR,WULFF, is the FOUNDER of the CUSTOMER SERVICE ADVOCATE and the EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF the GHANA WRITERS AND NEWSPAPERS SOCIETY,initiators of the GHANA CUSTOMER SERVICE AWARDS in consultation with GHANA'S MINISTRY OF TRADE AND INDUSTRY.

Hector Wulff is a member of national consumer protection stakeholders promulgating and advising government on the Ghana Consumer Protection Policy.

He is currently working on the

GHANA CUSTOMER SERVICE EXCELLENCE PROJECT,which is a national customer service standardization initiative for both private and public sector service providers in Ghana towards the attainment of a

NATIONAL CUSTOMER SERVICE CULTURE.

Early this year Mr.Wulff and his team will host the first

GHANA CUSTOMER SERVICE SUMMIT and to launch the

GHANA CUSTOMER SERVICE EXCELLENCE PROJECT.

THE CULTURE OF POOR COSTOMER SERVICE IN GTHANA --THE WAY FORWARD



Except those who donate blood voluntarily, one is either selling a service or a product for a living. Politicians, bankers, clerks, messengers, bus conductors, mortuary attendant, ticket agents, market women and everyone who provides a trade or service has a customer. So how do your customers think about your service?

As customers, have you been amazed by a service provider who gave you an outstanding service beyond and above his or her call of duty? I don't think so! If there was an Oscar or national Award for unfriendliness and customer dissatisfaction, it should go to the former Ghana airways, Ghana's vehicle licensing authority and hotel employees and every other service provider in Ghana. You can not find real customer service from these people. It is not part of their psyche to serve,they find no joy in it. Most of our service providers in Ghana behave as if they are doing their customers favors instead of rendering a service which is promised and paid for. Customer service has lost its impetus, for it is no longer an index measuring success of service providers. Customers have been pushed to the wall to accept the fact that as far Ghana is concerned the customer has no choice or voice other than to survive at the mercy of halfhearted service providers. Poor customer service is gradually becoming an accepted norm in our society.

Consequently, the Ghanaian business culture has created a class of people whose only creativity is to invent ways and means of milking the customer to the bone.

These service providers are afraid of responsibility and commitment to whatever business activity they are engaged in because being responsible and committed to their products or services call for a little bit of work they do not really want to do. They have designed their system to suit the convenience of the management and not the customer. Does the defunct Ghana Airways ring a bell? Take a trip to Ghana's ministries and you will have a feel of the how civil servants respond to duties. You will get a total picture of why it takes that long to clear your shipment from the ports. The response to emergency by nurses in our hospitals speaks for this issue. You will realize the attitude of most our nurses to duty is no different from boys scoutism or girls guideism. You will get to know that the Ghanaian nurse does not work with any urgency.Everything done by the nurse is at her own time.
A hairdresser fixes hair, isn't it? Increasingly, most businesses in Ghana do not even know what class of business they are engaged in, let alone to identify their customers and how to cultivate them. In fact, the next time you go into a saloon to get a hair cut ask the barber what business does him or she engage in. I promise you he or she would answer with something like this: I cut hair, or I do hair. From a customer point of view, a hairdresser is in the business of making his customers feel good and look good. In other words, he is selling beauty and good looks. The customers love to be showered with compliment.

Those in hospitality industry are not only supposed to sell comfort but to pamper their guests. A hotel room has to be the guest's most favorite place away from home. Therefore, it should bring him or her some amount of gratification and tranquility and all the comfort left at home. Anything less than these expectations are just a scheme to get something for nothing.

People have needs, and when you meet those needs you provide service for those who needs are met. The fact is that you have not only saved them the hassle of looking else where, but also what you offer them is unique as you treat them as cherished clients. Once you are able to do this the cost of your service or fees become irrelevant. Most customers are less concern about the price of goods and service instead the customer is very much cautious of what he or she gets in place of the amount paid. What they want is good service.

The upwardly mobile people are usually very busy. They want things done quickly and efficiently. The value of the service is not a major decision factor for the customer--- most especially those in the middle and upper classes of the social strata.

Anyone who works for a living has a customer. So regardless of the nature of your work, you have a customer. Lawyers call their customers clients, doctors call theirs patients, authors have readers and Actors call them the audience. The police officer may call his suspect or complainant/witness or both; I can guess that you are laughing! It does not matter what we call them, we must understand that customers are the most important aspects of any business because they can single-handedly determine the longevity and vitality of any business. The customer has the money. On the other hand, businesses are to provide services or offer their products of sale so that they can have a share of the customers money.

The customers decide whether you and your business will survive and how much money you can make. Customers also decide when to go to work and when to go home. So my question is this: Why does the Ghanaian business community pay so little attention and respect to this group of people which has so much power?

When was the last time a store attendant or a restaurant waitress asked for your cell phone number so that she could call you and thank you for the last patronage or the birth dates of your spouse and children for the purpose of having you come back? When was the last time a taxi driver in Ghana offered you his cell phone to make a quick phone call to a member of your family on your arrival at Kotoka Airport? When was the last time a taxi driver bought copies of the latest CD and gave them out to his passengers? How many times have you been in a hotel room in Ghana and the lousy and arrogant attendant knocked on your door to give you a toilet roll or a bed sheet? I wonder if he or she ever checked the room prior to your arrival. Why does he or she have to wait until you locked your door before you are offered the essentials that you are entitled to?

What will be your reaction if you picked your car from your mechanic and it is spotless-- waxed and polished? If you think that is too much for the Ghanaian mechanics what about receiving thank- you text message from a shop from which you bought your last new furniture? In any business little stuff matter. These little things should be taken care of if one wants to satisfy the customers.

A satisfied customer becomes a raving fan because he would become so excited about the way you treat him or her such that he or she becomes part of your sale force by telling everyone about your company.

Given our priorities customer service is not an important item on the Ghanaian national agenda. I wonder if we can honestly develop our indigenous resources if our most important resources people's needs -- are ignored. The tomb of the late Ghana Airways is littered with wreaths of curses from badly treated passengers. I wonder if the dissatisfied- customers pushed it down the cliff. You see, customers are always right. If you do not listen to them you would be forced to go into extinction.
Even the world's best most unique product cannot survive at a giveaway price, if that company or firm has no regard for its customers. Customers will gladly pay more for less when they have the confidence that they will be served well in the process.

Great customer- service is about:
1. Figuring out what your customers want
2. Getting it for them accurately, politely and enthusiastically with a smile.
3. Going extra mile and say hank you and be courteous.
Ghanaians are used to poor service why the need for great service?
Clues:
1. Ghanaian businesses need customers far more than the customers need them.
2. Great service is a sound marketing tool.
You don't have to get an MBA to know that the best advertising is done by mouth and that is free. Your customers would share the great service experience with their friends, neighbors and children.

3. Great service keeps customers coming back and when they come they don't come by themselves.

4. The company's finances look good if it provides great service because great service is directly linked to the company's bottom-line.

5. It makes for a better place to work. If a company provides great service it is almost guaranteed to produce a more enjoyable work place. It is amazing how the spirit of giving your customers a great service can be carried over into the way your employees relate to each other.

6. It helps the company to attract better people to work with because creating a better working environment through offering great service makes it attractive to quality job applicants.

7. It is easier to provide better service than trying to make things right to unhappy customers. It takes more time, energy and money to fix things than simply have them taken care of up front.

8. On practical and spiritual level, giving great service to your guests or customers makes you feel like you are making some small contribution to their lives .Yes; it will not cure the world and its pains. But if your service can put a smile in their lives that means you have contributed to make the world a better place, and that is not a small thing to sneeze at.

Also, acknowledging, apologizing and taking action to handle the customers complaints immediately are all very important parts of the customer service equation.

Causes of poor customer- service in Ghana:
a) We do not teach it in our schools and business world...
b) It is not respected by employers and co-workers to be customer service -oriented employee.
c) One need to go extra mile in cultivating customer service, unfortunately most employers and employees are lazy.
d) Great customer service requires different social skills like: humility, concern, empathy, thoughtfulness and ability to predict the needs of others and most people don't want to go through the trouble of acquiring all those skills they do not have.
e) Most people do not want to put their ego away and serve.
f) Employees are poorly treated. It is a well-known fact that employees will never treat their customers any better than their employers do. Customer service suffers when leadership forgets the need of its employees. Customer service only flourishes when employees have a degree of trust and respect for the management and the company.
g) There is no reward system to reinforce great customer service
h) Most companies fail to define what 'customer service' is because they don't even know the needs of their customers let alone to provide the needed service.
i) Arrogance, which is usually stems from delusion the belief that one is indispensable.

The case of a taxi driver:
If I were a taxi driver, I would always arm myself with maps of interesting places on my route so that I can give them to my passengers. I would be well-versed in quality service of the local hotels and restaurants that would suit my passengers budgets. On the hot days, I would make sure I have stocked my ice chest with cold bottled water in the trunk of my car in order to give them out to my thirsty passengers. It sounds very expensive but, I can guarantee its dividend is thousand fold. It would be a gesture my passengers arriving at the airport will not forget. We have to put originality into customer service. Alternatively, I will ask my passengers the music they want to hear, instead of playing what I like.

As a politician, a mortuary attendant, a chop- bar owner, a teacher, a carpenter or a musician, how much can you amaze your customers?
Speaking of customer- care, I hope am able to meet your customer - care expectations. However, as my good friend Kwame, who read the hardcopy of this article, jokes,the intended audience of this Gospel doesn't read from the net. I think he was right, so I urge you to spread it around like a disease so as not to make my crusade to inject some amount of customer-care into the system to be in vain.
Kwaku Adu-Gyamfi
NJ, USA
* The writer is a social commentator and the founder of Adu-Gyamfi Youth Empowerment, Educational and Apprenticeship Foundation, to help the youth of Asuom, in the Kwaebibrim district, E/R.