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A “scorecard” for service excellence

Christopher Ryder Jones (Chris Jones is at Manager Service Quality, Gulf Bank, Kuwait. Chris specializes in service cost and quality improvement. Technical expertise is in business process improvement and re‐engineering, total quality management, quality assurance, change management and project management with qualifications in quality management and industrial engineering. International domain experience includes retail banking, information technology, manufacturing, distribution, health care and public administration.)

Measuring Business Excellence

ISSN: 1368-3047

Article publication date: 1 December 2004

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Abstract

Gulf Bank’s service excellence “scorecard” was developed to support the Bank’s delivery of superior service in its market sector. The “scorecard” provides focus for a “service excellence” program, setting standards and measuring performance against customer focused objectives. The approach identified the “drivers” of customer satisfaction, related these to the Bank’s service delivery channels, set performance standards, and implemented measurement and reporting systems embracing external customer feedback and internal process measurements. Performance was measured against 16 key “drivers” of customer satisfaction identified independently by the local industry institute and related to the Bank’s delivery channels (branches, ATMs, telephone, Internet). Key measures were: customer satisfaction, complaints, comments and attrition, plus internal process delivery performance for critical products (consumer loans and credit card services). Reports were produced weekly and monthly with “drill downs” from bank to individual branch and/or employee levels. Reports are reviewed by management from chairman down to branch manager level. Results are incorporated in business KPIs and have become factors in employee incentive schemes. The approach adopted by the bank demonstrated that a practical, comprehensive service quality management system could be implemented and used to drive service improvement. The approach can be adopted by other banks and financial institutions and adapted to the needs of other service industries. The process implemented by Gulf Bank is believed to be unique in the Kuwait banking community and has scope for application in many similar environments outside the local area.

Keywords

Citation

Ryder Jones, C. (2004), "A “scorecard” for service excellence", Measuring Business Excellence, Vol. 8 No. 4, pp. 45-54. https://doi.org/10.1108/13683040410569406

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2004, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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