Letter: Customer-facing staff are bedrock of our economy

News

The issue of prestige for frontline service workers (“Want to understand 21st-century power? Look at PizzaExpress”, Opinion, April 7) is critical for the UK’s service economy.

Customer-facing staff account for 61 per cent of the nation’s workforce. They are the very bedrock of our economy, and yet, as your columnist Stephen Bush points out, very few operate in “credentialed” roles.

Failure to take seriously and professionalise service and so-called “soft skills” is now biting many industries hard and holding back our national productivity.

Recent flight cancellations, paralysis of our airports and difficulty submitting electricity readings highlight the scale of lost knowledge and capability caused by pandemic lay-offs.

There is no shortcut to replacing customer skills. There is, however, an opportunity for employers to lock in future productivity gains by showing they value their customer-facing colleagues and engaging in professional training and accreditation of their skills.

Jo Causon
Chief Executive
Institute of Customer Service
London SE1, UK

Articles You May Like

Crypto Monthly Trading Volume Drops for First Time in Seven Months to $6.58T
IRS Issues New Notice That Eases Burden for CeFi Crypto Investors
Investment Adviser Two Prime Sees $2B in Demand for Bitcoin-Backed Loans
Bitcoin Cash's Mt. Gox-Led Sell-Off Is Amplified by Poor Liquidity
'Santa Rally' Could Propel Bitcoin to $56K by Year-End, Matrixport Says