
Audio By Carbonatix
It has been established that majority of the banks in and around Osu in Accra are inconsistent in the way they treat their customers.
Customers already known to bank staff or those who appear educated get better treatment.
A recent survey of some 18 banks in the Osu has revealed they have a lot more to do to meet industry specifications of customer service excellence.
The survey found that none of the banks met or exceeded the outstanding target of 90% set by the first Customer Service Academy in Ghana which conducted the survey as part of the celebration of customer service month in October.
The survey categorized the 18 banks in Osu and its environs into 5. None of the banks was ranked “A” which represented Outstanding Service.
Four (4) banks namely: CAL BANK, GT BANK, UNITED MERCHANT BANK AND UT BANK were ranked A minus representing Excellent Service
Access Bank; GCB and FIRST CAPITAL PLUS were ranked B which represents VERY GOOD whilst ECOBANK and BARCLAYS were in the C category which represented GOOD.
FIDELITY, BANK OF AFRICA, ZENITH AND STANDARD CHARTERED BANK were also ranked D – which is ABOVE AVERAGE where as ADB was the only bank in the E-category which represents AVERAGE.
Four (4) BANKS including ROYAL BANK, UNIBANK, NIB and SOCIETE GENERALE were categorized under the F class which represented BELOW AVERAGE.
The survey was based mainly on Business Environment and Service Quality as the performance criteria.
According to conductors of the research, all the Banks scored high marks for the business environment as outside of almost all the Banks was clean, with appropriate signage.
They however indicate service quality was generally low as in more than 50% of cases, there were no feed-back forms for customers’ views or suggestions.
Another observation was that name tags were missing from service providers in majority of Banks and where they existed they were not visible to the customer.
Margaret Takyi-Micah of Customer Service Academy told Joy News Banks must maintain consistency in the way they treat customers.
Banking Consultant and the Head of Osei Tutu Centre for Executive Education, Nana Otuo Acheampong says although the survey is limited it hold great lessons for banks.
Latest Stories
-
GFA urged to move for Welbeck, Nketiah amid injury concerns
7 minutes -
KGL to honour 2025 Corporate Income Tax obligations with GHC150m April payment
26 minutes -
KiDi, Kuami Eugene, Adina, others billed for Okyeame Kwame’s 50th birthday celebration
30 minutes -
Akwapim-Akropong Chieftaincy Clash: One dead after Police shoot-out
31 minutes -
Israel and Hezbollah continue strikes as US-Iran ceasefire faces collapse over Lebanon
33 minutes -
Asanko Gold supports road rehabilitation to ease transport challenges in Amansie West
34 minutes -
Drone strike hits wedding celebration in Sudan, killing at least 30 people
43 minutes -
UEW Public Lecture Series 2026: We’re preparing children for a past that no longer exists — Dr Ibn Chambas warns
49 minutes -
AMA to begin night enforcement against unscreened food vendors
51 minutes -
Nkawie Circuit Court remands 30-year-old mason over Mpasatia shop break-in
53 minutes -
Fintechs’ collaboration no longer optional – MMFL CFO
54 minutes -
KMA to prohibit other assemblies from accessing Oti landfill site over looming sanitation crisis
56 minutes -
GTA supported A Plus’ Gomoa Easter Carnival – Abeiku Aggrey
57 minutes -
GRA to tighten controls on importation of right-hand drive vehicles
1 hour -
You can’t leave a bigger legacy than Petroleum Hub project – Western Regional Chiefs tell President Mahama
1 hour