2018 Ask Afrika Orange Index winners announced

The overall top 10 winners of South Africa's premier service excellence benchmark, as well as 29 industry category winners, were announced at the recent 2018/19 Ask Afrika Orange Index Awards.
The 29 industry winners of the 2018 Ask Afrika Orange Index. Image supplied.
The 29 industry winners of the 2018 Ask Afrika Orange Index. Image supplied.

Woolworths Food was announced as the overall winner of the 2018 Ask Afrika Orange Index.

The top 10 Ask Afrika Orange Index winners

These are the companies which achieved the highest service score overall.

CompanyIndustry category
1. Woolworths FoodFood retail stores
2. Burger KingFast food outlets
3. Woolworths ClothingClothing retail
4. BMWAutomotive
5. Clicks PharmacyPharmacies
6. AudiAutomotive
7. Mercedes-BenzAutomotive
8. BearesFurniture shops
9. CheckersFood retail stores
10. FoschiniClothing retail

Strong dominance from the retail and automotive industries

“These top 10 winners all display service excellence and are able to meet growing expectations from customers who are faced with a greater choice and display diminishing loyalty,” said Sarina de Beer, director: client experience at Ask Afrika at the awards.

“This year there was a strong dominance from the retail and automotive industries in the top 10 winners. It is interesting that the telecommunications and financial services industries are no longer winning as they used to a few years ago. The top three industries in the 2018/19 Ask Afrika Orange Index in rank order were the automotive, clothing retail and food retail industries.”

The Ask Afrika Orange Index benchmark has an 18-year history and measures best practice in service not only within, but across, different industries. This year 167 companies were measured across 29 industries. Over 12,000 interviews were conducted with South African consumers using the Target Group Index (TGI) and Ask Afrika random digit dialling sample – about 6,000 were telephonic and 6,000 face-to-face interviews. This sample is randomly selected and no credit or sample lists are used. The results are independently audited by the auditing firm, BDO, and statistical consultant and sampling specialist, Dr Ariane Neethling.

Methodological rigour

“Methodological rigour is important because it ensures the robustness of the data. The response rate for the survey was above the industry norm of 75%. If the response rate for the survey is low, the data is not representative and cannot be generalised back to the South African population. Our results are double-checked for accuracy and the entire survey takes about 12 months to conclude, which is really fast for research of this magnitude,” explained De Beer.

The 29 industry category winners in the 2018/19 Ask Afrika Orange Index:

These companies achieved the highest service score within their industry category. New winners and super winners are indicated between brackets in the table below. Super winners have won the industry category for three consecutive years.

 Industry categoryCompany
1AirlinesBritish Airways (super winner)
2AutomotiveBMW (new winner)
3Building retailBathroom Bizarre
4Car rentalAvis (super winner)
5Car trackerCartrack (new winner)
6CasinoThe Boardwalk Casino (super winner)
7Clothing retailWoolworths Clothing
8Electronics and white goodsDionWired
9EntertainmentSter-Kinekor
10Fast food outletsBurger King
11Financial institutionsFNB (new winner)
12Food retail storesWoolworths Food (super winner)
13Funeral/burial servicesAvbob Funeral Services (super winner)
14Furniture shopsBeares (new winner)
15Home and decor@home (super winner)
16HotelsProtea Hotels (super winner)
17Internet service providerMWEB/Tiscali/Global
18Long-term insurance (LT) companiesMetropolitan LT (new winner)
19Mass retailMakro
20Medical aid companiesDiscovery
21Online shoppingTakealot
22Petrol stationsEngen (new winner)
23PharmaciesClicks Pharmacy
24Private hospitalsNetcare (super winner)
25Security, armed response companiesStallion (new winner)
26Short-term insurance (ST) companiesOutsurance ST (super winner)
27Sport retailTotal Sports (super winner)
28TelecommunicationsCell C Mobile (new winner)
29Vehicle consumablesTiger Wheel & Tyre (super winner)

South Africa will lag behind if we don’t acquire knowledge

Andrea Gevers, CEO and founder of Ask Afrika, gave the opening address at the awards ceremony, which was held at The Venue in Melrose Arch on 4 October 2018.

“We have the third largest business process outsourcing (BPO) or call centre industry in the world and it is 60% cheaper than the UK but more expensive than India and Pakistan,” she said. “This is due to the cost of our telecommunications, which is too expensive to allow us to compete globally. If you put this together with the rise of artificial intelligence (AI), South Africa will lag behind if we don’t acquire knowledge. AI is not putting people out of jobs, as was first predicted – even more people are needed to programme and operate it than the jobs it replaces, but these are educated people with knowledge.”

Gevers said that if you have the right personality, if you are friendly, conscientious and empathetic, and have some degree of education, you can get a job in a call centre. In the future, because of technological advancement, this will no longer be the case, she said. “The government protects workers, but it can’t protect jobs. In order for our service industry to remain competitive, we all need to make an effort and start investing in the industry and increasing our knowledge base.”

The top two service drivers of 2018/19 are:

  • The knowledge that employees have to resolve your queries/requests
  • The professionalism of employees in dealing with you

“The service drivers this year are less complex than in the last few years, which shows that most companies are not understanding what customers want and they are not getting the basics right,” said De Beer.

Orange Index workshops

“Service levels have dropped by 1% year-on-year and emotional satisfaction has dropped by 10%. Even though we are better equipped to get the tactical dimensions right, such as net promoter score (NPS) and first-call resolution (FCR), we are not even doing that. The tactical dimensions are essential, but don’t differentiate service ratings – we are failing at authenticity, fairness and values, which affect the emotional experience of a customer. Eight out of 11 core service dimensions are based on soft skills and we need to get all the dimensions right to have a truly customer-centric industry.”

For the first time, this year Ask Afrika will conduct Orange Index workshops, which take the place of reports. These workshops will include company and industry shifts over time, ranking of companies per industry, net promoter score (NPS), customer experience (CX), customer effort score (CES), treating customers fairly (TCF), first-call resolution (FCR), emotional consistency (ESat), trust and reputation (TR), call-centre satisfaction (CCI), actionable insights and strategic recommendations.

For further information and workshop bookings, please contact Mashudu Ndopu (mashudu@askafrika.co.za) or Monique Pienaar (monique.pienaar@askafrika.co.za) on
+27 (0)11 428 7400.


 
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