Client Care Flashcards

1
Q

What is client care?

A

Client care is identifying all types of clients and adopting suitable behaviours to develop good relationships along with procedures to manage good quality service, all within the public interest

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2
Q

What are the principles of client care?

A
  1. Identifying different clients and their needs
  2. Identifying key drivers of the client
  3. Understanding client targets or KPIs
  4. Good communication
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3
Q

What behaviours establish good client relationships?

A
  • Active listening
  • Clear, concise communication
  • Behaviours sometimes tailored to individuals
  • Gathering feedback and implementing it
  • Asking questions to clarify client objectives
  • Professional tone/behaviours
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4
Q

What does good client care entail?

A
  1. Understanding of the client and their key drivers
  2. A professional approach/working relationship
  3. Clear, concise communication
  4. A quality assurance policy – like being aligned to ISO 9001
  5. A complaints handling procedure
  6. Professional indemnity insurance
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5
Q

Who are your clients in your role?

A

MSG but can also be MSC. When referring to MSC, their clients are 70% public sector (Department for Education or NHS) and 30% private

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6
Q

When have you collected data for clients?

A

Examples:
- Scope 3 accounting
- Collecting 10tC data

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7
Q

What is ISO 9001?

A

ISO 9001 is a globally recognised system for quality management. It helps organisations to improve their performance, meet client requirements and demonstrate a commitment to quality

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8
Q

Why do clients care about ISO 9001?

A

Benefits of ISO 9001 is customer confidence, complaints handling procedures, improved processes and ongoing optimisation

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9
Q

What is MSC’s view on ISO 9001?

A

MSC has a Quality Management Plan which aligns and is certified by ISO 9001. This is part of our wider Project Execution Plan (PEP). The Quality Management Plan defines where documents and records are kept which confirm how the project is managing quality. These are kept on SIMS. The QMP is a live document which is reviewed throughout the project

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10
Q

What is an example of a time when you have provided excellent client care?

A

Acting on feedback from CarboniCa users, I created client targets within CarboniCa. It had been requested from clients in the East that it would be good to visual their progress against carbon targets visually. After receiving this feedback, I advised my client MSG that I should create this function. They approved and I drafted the instruction for our software engineers

When setting up a project in CarboniCa The way this looked was an additional tab in CarboniCa next to the headline data where

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11
Q

How do you interact with clients?

A
  • Professionally
  • Effective listening and understanding of their objectives
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12
Q

How do you act upon feedback from a client?

A

Feedback should be manually recorded somewhere, like a client feedback questionnaire. If negative feedback, necessary action should be taken to rectify the situation. If a formal approach is required, this should follow the complaints handling procedure. An addition would be to recommend advice and polices to rectify the complaint so it does not happen again

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13
Q

How do clients pay you? How would you behave if a client wished to pay you upfront?

A

In my role clients do not pay me, however if I were to set up alone:
1. I would ensure that a client account is set up in line with the RICS Professional Standard - Handling Client Money
2. I would issue a statement of the account to the client once set up
3. I would agree with the client how monies would be drawn
4. I would issue a revised statement every time the client withdrew monies
5. Once the project was complete, I would issue a reconciliation of the account and explain to the client to reiterate every time money was drawn

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14
Q

How do MSC handle/store client money?

A
  1. MSC has a full commercial management process
  2. Typically we are paid in advance for work
  3. Projects manage their own profit and loss
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15
Q

How can you meet a clients’ requirements?

A

Work with the client to best understand their requirements, asking for clarity if unsure, debrief the team/stakeholders on the requirements

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16
Q

If you were going to set up a business as a surveyor, what insurance would I need to set up?

A

Professional indemnity – amount depends on the turnover of the business. I would choose the provider by looking at the RICS published list of approved providers

17
Q

If setting up a business and you had an office/property, what other insurance would you need?

A

Employers liability insurance. This covers employers for compensation claims against them by employees for accidents or incidents at work

18
Q

What is a client brief? What does this contain?

A

A client brief outlines a clients objectives, expectations, target audience, timeline, budget, any other specific requirements

19
Q

How do you identify stakeholders in a project?

A

Depending on the project type, I would look at stakeholders across my organisation, or they might need to be geographically located or have certain previous experience. I establish their scope with a clear and concise brief. I would then prioritise them using Mendelow’s Matrix.

20
Q

How do you refer a client to your complaints handling procedure?

A

Typically, it would be included in terms and conditions to the Client. At MSC, it would be defined in the Quality Management Plan. However, in my role, it is likely I would also brief this in an introductory call when setting up a project, especially if there are multiple stakeholders

21
Q

How can you ensure that complaints do not occur?

A
  1. Effective communication throughout the relationship – this minimises complaints
  2. We have a ‘Perfect Delivery’ framework to ensure this
22
Q

Why would you use a KPI?

A

To provide a quantitative measurement against a topic. For MSC, it is important that the client KPIs are met to the ambition as this goes into reporting. KPIs are also useful to generate healthy competition between decentralised regions

23
Q

How to set up KPIs? (Level 2 example)

A

Identify a topic which the client wishes to be improved, develop a methodology of how to track it across business units, inform the business units, collect the data, review progress against the ambition, monitor and repeat

Example of the 10tC KPI – We have challenged our businesses to complete a 10tC on 80% of our projects under PCSA or on site. Exemptions are projects under £2m, or less than 3 months. I track 10tC case studies, sense check/triangulate the data and then report them on our PST which calculates the KPI

The logic of the 10tC is linked to % of our scope 3 accounting

These KPIs are shared monthly with our business units

24
Q

An example of a time when something has been outside of my competence

A

Asked by the project manager on the Regenerative Twin to advise on complex building services and energy calculations, this is not my area of expertise as my focus however I put them in touch with a member of my team who leads on building services

25
Q

How to understand a client

A
  1. Effective listening to their demands
  2. Understand their key drivers
  3. Understand the project at completion
26
Q

How do you get feedback from clients? How do you implement this?

A

Typically, a client satisfaction survey. Feedback can be shared with the team and aspects can be implemented into best practice

27
Q

Tell us about a time you identified a conflict of interest?

A

Working on the Innovate UK funded ICCE project, I was interacting with Circular Ecology who were our data experts on the project. They needed the Excel version of CarboniCa to examine the databases. However they mentioned they were having their own carbon tool verified as IMPACT Compliant. This is an R&D process we had already undertaken and our calculations would be visible to CE. I advised MSC/MSG to only share the web application as the aspects of data they needed would still be visible, but they would not see how we got IMPACT compliance. I also advised for CE to sign an NDA. I explained this on a Teams call to CE who understood. I would define this as a ‘confidential information conflict’.

28
Q

Provide an example of when you have given reasoned advice to a client?

A

After researching the industry, I advised the Client that there should be a retrofit capacity within CarboniCa. This idea was triangulated by the fact that our retrofit projects were growing to roughly 20% of all projects and had an upwards trajectory

This ties into advising MSC to create a decarbonisation offer for the market where we have a ‘build new’ and a ‘retrofit’ approach. This is an example of a proposal which is linked to business strategy

I also acted on qualitative feedback from champions and suggested a compare button so users can compare data and different revisions – this was so their clients could visualise optioneering data changes

28
Q

What is IMPACT Compliance?

A

IMPACT Compliance means a WLCA has integrated the BRE’s IMPACT database into their dataset. This means that WLCA can complete BREEAM projects and has Mat 01 reporting functionality.

29
Q

What does the RICS guide on Conflict of Interests state?

A

RICS defines a conflict of interest as existing between two parties when a member or firm’s impartiality is threatened due to the existence of a conflict. Examples include financial or personal conflicts. The RICS guide to either avoid the conflict of manage the conflict appropriately. Types include party conflict, personal or confidential.

RICS encourage members and firms to follow 3 steps:
i. Conflict avoidance
ii. Written advice to both parties, might need written consent
iii. Conflict management

30
Q

What does the RICS complaints note state?

A

The RICS compliant handling procedure 2016 states that:
i. a RICS firm must have a complaints handling procedure approved by RICS
ii. the CHP details should always be presented to the client
iii. complaints logs should be maintained
iv. RICS firms must have an alternative dispute resolution approved by RICS
v. PI insurers should be notified as soon as there is a possible claim

The standard procedure is 3 steps:
i. Stage one is in-house
1. Quick CHP procedure, details in writing, a timeline
ii. Stage two (ADR)
1. If unhappy after stage one, readdress the complaint, use the relevant redress mechanism
iii. Stage three (unlikely)
1. Escalated to the RICS if ADR is disputed or ignored

31
Q

What is the MSC complaints handling procedure?

A

MSC have an internal and external route
i. Internal there are two: raising concerns which is a hotline and then the HR Policy 08 which states that complaints need to be made in writing, investigation, request a full grievance meeting if not resolved internally
ii. Externally, as a decentralised business, this is left up to the regions to govern. This framework is laid out in our ‘Quality Management Plan’ whereby the project team must explain how they will monitor, resolve, and respond to customer complaints. This is written into contract documents. If a complaint is made, a client is informed to contact the PM, contracts manager or AD, depending on the nature of the complaint. If serious, it is immediately sent to the AD.

32
Q

What is an example where you have made a lower carbon recommendation to a client using CarboniCa?

A

An example of where I have made a lower carbon recommendation is on the Regenerative Twin project. I looked at the embodied carbon graphs with project teams and clients where we can identify ‘carbon hotspots’. Using CarboniCa, I can optioneered and suggested to replace UK brick for local reclaimed brick which was lower in embodied carbon. Roughly 30kgCO2e/m2 surface area can be saved for using reclaimed > new

33
Q

What logic do you use to advise your client on CarboniCa’s strategy?

A

a. Industry research (where the industry is going e.g. retrofit, RICS PS, client targets, use of nature based materials)
b. Looking at other WLCAs and their functionalities e.g. OneClick
c. Maintain that construction users can complete WLCAs

34
Q

What is PAS 2038? What are the 13 steps?

A

PAS 2038 is the set of guidelines for the retrofit of commercial buildings in England and Wales. It explains the process and roles required

35
Q

What are the 6 steps of the decarbonisation offer you created? Why these steps?

A
  1. Review options to adapt or retrofit existing building
  2. Define ambitions and targets
  3. Option evaluation
  4. ‘Retrofit in a day’
  5. Model cost & carbon
  6. Delivery, training, POE
    These steps were necessary to encompass the whole journey. They broadly align with PAS 2038.
36
Q

How did you identify the conflict of interest with CE?

A

Identified this on a Teams call and immediately organised to notify both parties

37
Q

How did you brief CE about the conflict?

A

On a Teams call in clear, concise language. I laid out the alternative steps to avoid the conflict to which they agreed

38
Q

What would have happened if there was a dispute with CE over IP/compliance?

A

If there was an IP dispute, depending on the severity, there could be legal action in civil courts or an injunction or a claim for damages.