Pressure public agencies to improve culture of customer service

The final part of improving public services concerns itself with cultural and behavioral concerns, which are generally beyond the scope of service requests and analyzing standard performance metrics. These concerns are often best highlighted by anecdotes that highlight cultural practices that need to be changed and other examples of the ideal behavior (Behn, 2006). As such, identifying formal and informal channels for documenting Òcustomer serviceÓ-oriented complaints and bringing them to the attention of decision makers capable of taking action (either disciplining employees or pursuing other efforts of redress) are extremely important. Each documented issue creates more momentum for change. Neighborhood actors who were more willing to pursue these alternative avenues were more successful in making their concerns held.

Informal and Formal Channels for ÒCustomer ServiceÓ Complaints (Table)

Behn–The Theory Behind Baltimore’s CitiStat

Bibliography

Behn, R. D. (2006). The Theory Behind Baltimore’s CitiStat (Vol. 4). Presented at the twenty-eighth Annual Research Conference of the Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management, Madison, Wisconsin.

Date Published or Accessed: 2006-11-00 November, 2006

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