Service is a soul, not a script
Customer service is often measured by speed, efficiency, and satisfaction scores. But beneath the numbers and KPIs lies something far more human: the quiet power of being seen, heard, and understood. In a world increasingly automated, where chatbots handle questions and algorithms anticipate needs, the real heart of service isn’t just about solving problems - it’s about connection.It’s easy to think of customer service as a department, a function, or a role. But more than that, it’s a mindset: one that should live in every part of an organisation. It’s the receptionist who welcomes someone with genuine warmth, the technician who takes time to explain things clearly, the marketer who chooses words that reassure rather than confuse.
It’s how people are made to feel, especially when things go wrong. Because being helpful when everything runs smoothly is easy. Real service shows up in the messier moments: when a policy doesn’t quite cover what someone expected, when a delay causes frustration, or when a customer feels like just another number in the system.
The best service isn’t always about having all the answers. Sometimes, it’s about asking better questions; listening without rushing to respond, replying without defensiveness, and showing empathy without expecting anything in return.
Behind every query is a person with a story: a mother trying to secure her child’s future, a pensioner navigating unfamiliar digital systems, a young professional untangling confusing financial terms. These aren’t just customers, they’re people placing trust in a service, often at moments that really matter.
What makes service truly memorable isn’t perfection; it’s presence. It’s staying human in systems that often feel cold or impersonal. It’s having the courage to say, “That’s a great question. Let me find out for you.” It’s owning mistakes honestly, following through on promises, and recognising that every interaction is a chance to build or break trust.
As International Customer Service Week is celebrated, it’s worth going beyond slogans and cupcakes. It’s a chance to reflect on the culture being built, not just for customers, but for each other. Internal service is the soil where external excellence grows. When teams feel supported, they pass that feeling on. When employees are respected, they extend that respect outward. Service isn’t just a transaction, it’s a ripple effect.
So here’s to the quiet heroes of customer service: the ones who stay late to fix an issue, who write follow-up emails no one asked for, who choose kindness when it’s least convenient. This isn’t just about supporting the brand. This is the brand. And in a world hungry for authenticity, humanity is the greatest asset of all.
* Ester Kafidi is the Client Services Operations Manager at Old Mutual Namibia.