Council directors' body ADEPT, in partnership with Amey, has launched a toolkit to help local authorities transform the customer experience of services, including roads.
The Customer Experience Toolkit for Place Leaders has been developed through ADEPT’s Excellence in Place Leadership (EiPL) programme, run in partnership with Amey.
Customer Centric Place Services was one of four key sessions in the EiPL programme and considered how place leaders could ‘emulate the very best in customer centric engagement, service design and delivery’.
According to the latest Local Government Association survey into public satisfaction with local authority services, there was a general improvement during 2020, but 'the rates were lower for some key place services, particularly highways,' ADEPT said.
The toolkit has been created to address this, and other challenges, highlighting best practice and examples of customer service across the public and private sector.
It highlights a case study from Highways England, on data-driven transformation.
Highways England has a target is to deliver 90% customer satisfaction - now on 89.5% - alongside other targets for project delivery and safety.
In the toolkit, the national roads operator states: 'The challenge has been to develop ways to actively listen and involve customers, and to understand how they feel around the regions to improve services and the network operation.
• Tools used include:
- User insights panel – an online portal of 2,000 road users providing feedback.
- Social media monitoring - to identify online influencers and analyse customer sentiment.
- Insight survey – an online quantitative survey with a robust sample size of 22,000.
- Behavioural insight in vox pops – to understand behaviours and respond to bespoke needs.
Designed specifically for place services, the toolkit provides a roadmap to improve the customer experience, including planning tools, templates, case studies and checklists alongside discussion of the values behind transformation.
The toolkit takes place leaders through the essentials of providing a better customer experience, including customer journey mapping, bringing values to life, empowering employees, using data to drive transformation and enabling cultural change.
Nigel Riglar, president of ADEPT, said: 'We all need to constantly review and improve our services and looking from the perspective of our customers gives us a different outlook on how to do that.
'The EiPL programme has sparked debate and importantly, practical outcomes for place directors to use when shaping and delivering services. It has provided the space to consider new ideas, innovate and think differently about the real life challenges we face daily.
'The experience has been so positive overall, that ADEPT and Amey have recently restarted the programme with a new group of thought leaders. I look forward to the new directions for place that will emerge from these sessions.'
ADEPT’s thought leadership programme brings together thought leaders and influencers from local authorities, corporate partners and the wider ADEPT membership to examine key issues.
David Ogden, business director at Amey, said: 'The EiPL cohort select each theme covered on the programme, so topics stay fresh and tackle current issues. They highlighted the difficulty in balancing managing customer expectations and offering leading customer experience, especially when there are many other conflicting priorities to address at the same time.
'The challenge can be daunting. Other industries react at different paces, setting a new level of customer expectation for place leaders to respond to, as well as get ahead of. The customer experience toolkit was created to break down the challenge into manageable segments and support step-by-step changes.
'We’ve enjoyed building the EiPL programme with place leaders and ADEPT, and look forward to working with the second cohort to prompt new thinking and produce outputs which support all place leaders.'