Discover the core framework and unique approach behind the Customer Service Excellence (CSE) Standard. Richard and Lorna explore how Assessment Services uses the CSE to embed customer focus and continuous improvement into organisations, sharing real-world examples and insights from decades in service excellence.
Chapter 1
Richard
Hello and welcome to the first Customer Service Excellence podcast! Iâm Richard, and Iâm joined by Lorna.
Lorna
Hello Richard, and welcome everybody.
Richard
Today weâre unpicking what really sits at the core of the CSE Standardâso itâs not just a box-ticking exercise, itâs about putting customers right at the centre of everything an organisation does.
Lorna
Youâre absolutely right, Richardâcustomer journey is such a beautiful phrase, it's about understanding their needsânot just going by what you reckonâs best.
Richard
Exactly. Customer insightâs the first of the five pillars in CSE. Then youâve got the culture of the organisationâso, the idea that customer focus shouldnât just be a poster on the wall but something that runs through every decision. Information and access is the third pillarâmaking sure customers can easily find what they need, and that they actually understand it. Then deliveryâreliably and consistently providing the service. And last but not least, timeliness and quality. Not just being fast, but being fast and excellent. Itâs about meetingâand sometimes exceedingâexpectations.
Lorna
And itâs not just theory, is it? There are fifty-seven measurable elements to all thisâpractical points under each criterion that organisations can look at and say, âRight, are we really evidencing this in practice?â Itâs so much more than, âDo we smile at customers?â Itâs, âCan we demonstrate that the customerâs experience is at the core?
Richard
Exactly. We always say: show, donât just tell. The framework allows organisations to self-assessâto hold up a mirror and find where theyâre excelling and where thereâs room for development. That makes improvement so much more achievable, rather than some vague aspiration.
Chapter 2
Lorna
Which brings us to the assessment bit. This is where people sometimes get nervousââIs it an audit? Are we being caught out?ââbut actually, the CSE approach is much more developmental, isnât it?
Richard
Yes, absolutely. The last thing we want is organisations bracing for âgotchaâ moments. The journey starts with self-assessment, where the organisation takes a clear look at itselfâwarts and all. Then we, as assessors, carry out a desktop reviewâpulling together everything the organisationâs already doing. After that comes my favourite part: the interviews. We talk to staff, customers, and key partners outside the business. Itâs all about triangulating evidence and getting that full, 360-degree view.
Lorna
And itâs as much about celebrating strengths as identifying areas for improvement, isnât it? Iâve sat in sessions where people suddenly see their own progressâlike, âWow, we didnât realise we were this good in certain areas!â Or they spot opportunities to refine things. But those levels of achievementâPartial Compliance, Compliance, and Compliance Plusâcan sound a bit formal.
Richard
Rightâand just to clarify: Partial Compliance means thereâs some evidence but still work to do. Organisations can have a few of thoseâup to eleven across the fifty-seven elements. Compliance means the requirements are fully met. And Compliance Plus? Thatâs where an organisation goes above and beyondâdemonstrating excellence that others can learn from.
Lorna
And itâs not some endless slog, either. Usually, nine to twelve months is a realistic timeline to meet the standard. It gives teams a sense of focus and a clear pathway, rather than feeling like an open-ended process.
Richard
Exactly. I worked with a team last year who started off thinking it was just about âpassing the test.â But by the end, they realised it had genuinely changed how they approached their customers. It was rewardingâfor them and for us. Itâs about progress, not just perfection.
Chapter 3
Lorna
And this is where Assessment Services stands out. Instead of simply checking whether things look fine on paper, we work with our customers as partners, not outsiders with clipboards.
Lorna
Our whole ethosâWe Care. We Assess. We Add Value.âreally sums it up. Itâs cost-effective, practical, and collaborative. We use helpful tools like our online Self-Assessment Tool for tracking progress, and our networking discussions where organisations share stories and tips. Change sticks best when people learn together.
Richard
Absolutely. And with SFEDI Level 5 assessors on our team, weâre proud to be the only UK assessment body with that qualification. Plus, our independent surveys collect feedback straight from the people who matter mostâthe customers themselves. That external perspective keeps everything grounded in reality, not theory.
Lorna
Exactly. Our forums and Roundtables give organisations a space to share, learn, and grow together. Real improvement doesnât happen in isolationâit happens through collaboration, shared insight, and the willingness to keep learning.
Richard
Right, I couldnât have put it better, Lorna. That collaboration and the willingness to learn from each other, itâs what brings out the best in all of us.
Lorna
Thanks, Richardâand thanks to everyone for listening. Weâll see you in the next podcast!
Richard
Bye for now! Further podcasts will be released shortly, and we hope that you can join us.
About the podcast
An overview of the Customer Service Excellence Standard