Singapore
ComfortDelGro adds 1,100 London drivers to fleet on UK expansion
ComfortDelGro adds 1,100 London drivers to fleet on UK expansion
It bought a London taxi circuit operator Dial-a-Cab for $2.2m.
Why it's vital to regularly spring clean your customer relationships
For most Singaporeans, our homes will be one of the biggest expenses we'll ever take on in our lives, whether it's a resale/BTO flat, condo or landed property. We want to treat it well, look after it and make sure it’s the best place to live it can possibly be. However – and my family can be guilty of this from time to time – the hectic pace of life can get in the way and suddenly you find objects in the wrong place, items that haven’t been useful for years taking up precious space and so much clutter that it can be almost impossible to determine your most important belongings. A customer base can become a lot like a house that needs a thorough spring clean. How many businesses, for example, can say they’re happy with the way their customer data is organised or that they can quickly find the answers they’re looking for when planning CRM strategy? Customer data is probably every business’s most prized possession, but without organisation, you miss growth opportunities, and chances to cross and upsell. Worse, not knowing what your customers want can mean they’ll leave for someone who does. Taking the time to “spring clean” those relationships can have real benefit to the bottom line. For one, it’ll help you understand your customers better, and maybe allow you to offer something more bespoke and personal. This is vital, especially when you consider the finding from an Edelman Earned Brand 2016 study which revealed Singapore’s consumer-brand relationship score fell short of the full potential (39 points out of a 100). Just as tidying up your homes before Chinese New Year visitations can help you feel ready to host your family and friends, giving your customer base a deep and thorough clean can have that same transformative effect. Not all customers are equal Without clarity and organisation, businesses can end up giving the wrong kind of client the same amount of time and attention as their most high-value – or the ones with the greatest potential to be high value. A customer spring clean, for example, could help identify who’s joined you as part of a promotional special offer. Those that have arrived looking for a deal are more likely to go somewhere else quickly, similar to how discount-hunter shoppers in Singapore behave during 11/11 or the Great Singapore Sale. So should your team be spending too much time and money on accounts that probably aren't going to stick around? Indeed, according to an Accenture study, 80% of Singapore consumers are withdrawing their loyalty to brands, and close to two-thirds have switched providers of goods and services in the last 12 months – which means it’s vital to build a real connection with those that have initially had a positive experience. Sprucing up your customer data allows you to identify the most important clients and devise bespoke communications and contact strategies that can extract more growth. It’s only by getting rid of the clutter that you can get a sense of where you might be wasting time and energy and, more importantly, where you should focus your energies better. Smarter segmentation Of course, all businesses segment their customers to some extent, but a proper spring clean will allow this to become more sophisticated, especially when aided with the right technology. Our research showed that 88% of business and IT decision-makers in Singapore are most likely to invest in technology to boost customer retention, so it’s clear that most businesses will be open to adopting innovation that helps them better retain their customers.
Pinsent Masons MPillay to launch 'flexible' legal consultancy in Singapore
It will add 30 new legal consultants in the next six months.
Goldilocks rejects Noble's director nominees for re-election
It attacked the points made by chairman Paul Brough in a letter to shareholders.
Daily Markets Briefing: STI up 1.7%
Expect muted gains today.
Chart of the Day: Private condo prices in districts 1 and 2 hit historical highs in Q1
The average price in both districts rose to $2,653 psf.
Chinese banks may ramp up lending amidst $63.62b additional liquidity
Reserve requirement ratio for big commercial banks will be lowered from 17% to 16%.
Daily Briefing: Sembawang Shopping Centre sold for $248m; Ambassador says Singapore could have lost appetite for TPP revival
And here's how you could be hit by the Fed's higher interest rates.
Singapore's industrial property market is bottoming out
Overall industrial leasing activity jumped 35% YoY in the first two months of 2018, the strongest since 2013.
Sheng Siong's 'bad' store locations are growth areas: RHB Research
Analysts see opportunities in outlets located away from malls such as Fernvale Street and Edgedale Plains.
Keppel REIT Q1 net property income down 0.6% to $31.22m
Its property income from 275 George Street crashed 26.5% to $3.74m.
Singapore on track to expand home and day care spaces for elders
It aims to add 10,000 local home care and 6,200 day care spaces by 2020.
Tax managers' median salary hits $130,000 amidst high demand
Moreover, 99% of CFOs are willing to award pay rises to an average of 25% to their finance staff.
Google Home launched in Singapore
It also launched a developer platform so brands can build services related to Google Assistant.
En bloc sale of Choon Kim House in Upper Serangoon Road launched at $55m
It can support 35 residential and 22 commercial units, assuming it gets a 60:40 mix.
Home prices of districts 1 & 2 beat other high-end districts
The average price of private condos in the two districts rose 9.3%, faster than the historical high of 6.2% in Core Central Region.
Economists worry over 4-month drop of Singapore's electronics exports
Singapore's non-oil domestic exports fell by 2.7% in March due to lower electronics exports.
Commentary
‘Tokenmaxxing’ – The wrong AI race to run in Singapore
To outsmart modern fraud, we must first know the enemy
Why Singapore SMEs cannot wait for quantum cyber risk to arrive before securing data
Is Singapore's emphasis on long-term security and stability hindering purpose-driven employees?
When Singapore's agentic AI ‘chefs’ arrive, will the kitchen be ready for them?
What Singapore’s app store rules reveal about the future of online trust
Faster hiring alone will not fix construction’s productivity problem
Beyond policy: How Singapore's service sector can win at the frontline
Solving the production problem behind Singapore’s ‘pilot purgatory’
Transformation without disruption: Your Existing ERP is an accelerant to business innovation