An exploration of customers’ satisfaction with water and wastewater services in the UK

Date

2023-02-03

Authors

Tian, Kang
Goodwin, Daniel
Gallagher, Elaine
Smith, Heather M.

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

World Scientific

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

2382-624X

Format

Free to read from

Citation

Tian K, Goodwin D, Gallagher E, Smith HM. (2023) An exploration of customers’ satisfaction with water and wastewater services in the UK, Water Economics and Policy, Volume 9, Issue 2, June 2023, Article number 2350001

Abstract

In this research, we examine the relationship between customer satisfaction with water and wastewater services, demographic factors, communication with the utility, and perceived trustworthiness. Through a survey of the UK public (n = 760), we found that 77% of the respondents stated they were satisfied with their water and wastewater services. Statistical analysis highlighted significant demographic differences in the level of satisfaction, particularly by age, with higher satisfaction in older respondents. We found that the degree to which respondents think their water utility can be trusted to provide accurate information predicted satisfaction, as did more frequent engagement with a water utility’s social media. More frequently contacting a water utility or discussing water services with friends and family both negatively predicted satisfaction. Meeting the public’s expectations for accurate and timely information is coupled with their perceptions of a water utility’s trustworthiness and their satisfaction with water and wastewater services. Water utilities may increase the satisfaction of their customers through strategies and initiatives that are attentive to the credibility of the information they provide and the means through which they provide it. In summary, our research indicates that the water sector’s ambition to develop more diverse (and inclusive) customer engagement experiences, including through online platforms and social media, may deliver benefits (particularly with the less engaged and younger age groups across varying regional water governance contexts) that complement overall efforts to build trust and satisfaction, but we acknowledge that these are complex long-term processes.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

public perceptions, water and wastewater services, customer satisfaction, communication, trust

DOI

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

Relationships

Relationships

Supplements

Funder/s

European Union funding: 689450