Crous, M.2007-07-262007-07-262006-08Crous, M 2006, 'Quality service delivery through customer satisfaction', Journal of Public Administration, vol. 41, no. 2.2, pp. 397-407. [http://www.saapam.co.za/]0036-0767http://hdl.handle.net/2263/3156Users of services judge the quality of services according to two criteria: firstly whether services assist them to achieve the outcomes they aspire to and secondly whether services are delivered in ways which empower them. The argument is made that for services to meet the aspirations of customers, customers themselves need to be involved in improving them. Recognising the importance of customers’ judgements of service delivery has been embraced by the Batho Pele principles of putting people first, consultation and redress, as a culmination firstly of the desired effect of services on customers and the manner in which services are provided, as well as describing what the inputprocess- relationship should be between customer views and service quality. The principle of quality is consequently examined as aspiring to meet what customers expect, as opposed to merely meeting specifications. If quality management is approached as cyclical in nature, public institutions will realise that evaluation should be based on customer expectations, if they aim to become institutions that are truly responsive to people’s needs. If public institutions in this way allow customer expectations to inform standards, the principle will be adhered to that quality is what the customer says it is.1945335 bytesapplication/pdfenSouth African Association for Public Administration and ManagementService deliveryBatho pele principlesPublic administration -- South AfricaConsumer satisfaction -- South AfricaSix sigma (Quality control standard)Total quality management in government -- South AfricaQuality service delivery through customer satisfactionArticle