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3/3/2009 10 Reasons for Service Charter for Taxi DriversWhen we were totally late for our appointments, we know that the taxi is the ultimate solution out of the situation and when we worked very late into the night, we turn to the taxi as the fastest way to bring us home. Taxis have become a part of our lives that we just cannot live without it. We know of the charges we have to fork out when we board the taxi. The price schedule is pasted on the windows. So, as passengers, we cannot claim to be unaware of our obligations. Yet, no one really knows the service obligations of a taxi driver. There is no service charter ever published or made known to the passengers at the time they board the vehicle, and this is problematic. This demonstrated either the ignorance of the passengers or the monopolistic nature of taxi industry in Singapore. Due to this lack of transparency, we are disadvantaged. We have no idea the kind of service a driver should provide as taxi fares rises. Is the driver obliged to: · Plan the route for his passenger or is it the responsibility of the passenger to tell the driver which road to use?
· Help the passenger with his luggage or the passenger has to manage them himself?
· Pick the passenger who flagged for his taxi or choose the passenger he likes?
· Contact the passenger for directions when he could not find the pick-up point or just drive off when things become a challenge?
· Contact the passenger when he is going to be late or just let the passenger wait for him?
· Go an extra mile to complete the trip when he is lost or leave it to the passenger to flip through the road directory and contact his friends to help the driver?
· Force the passenger out of his taxi when there is a disagreement or understand he is driving a business and that his passenger is his client so he needs to know how to manage his own ego?
· Drive his passenger to where he needs to be even it means the driver needs to detour several times to pick up other things or he could just refuse the passenger?
· Force his passenger to pay a deposit if the passenger needs leave the taxi to pick something up or trust the passenger to be responsible?
· Call in the police because the passenger refused to pay for failed service or alert his taxi company to let his company’s customer service officers to work with the passenger?
Without the clarity in the service obligations of the taxi driver, passengers will continue to be roughly treated. 3/2/2009 Starhub and its Service FailuresI have always supported Starhub and in doing so, I had purchased many of their services but I am disapponted by the Company and I had written to Starhub and Ms Diana Lee (diana_lee@starhub.com), the Head of Customer Service, copy the email to Ms Jeannie Ong (jeannieo@starhub.com), the Head of Corporate Communication and Investor Relations, to share my experiences with them.
Dear Diana, The problem began when I responded to Starhub's promotion on 5/11/08 and applied for the digital voice modem to replace Singtel as my current ground line provider. 1st Bad Experience The appointment was 24/2 between 6.30pm to 8.00pm. On 24/2 (was incorrectly report as 28/2), I was called out from my management meeting at about 1.00pm because my mother informed me that your staff decided to pay us a visit at 2.00pm that day 'because he was near us'. Even after I had contacted 1633 to question the decision to unilaterally change the schedule and asked them to instruct your staff to adhere to the schedule, he appeared at my home at 2.00pm and I had to take both my mother's call and your service staff's, and to manage these calls I was pulled out of the meeting three times. What is the purpose of having a schedule when it cannot be kept? 2nd Bad Experience Thinking all was well with the set up, I only began using the Internet on Sunday, 1/3. When I switched on my laptop and attempted to access my email on the Internet, I was kept being directed to your 'pay as you surf' webpage. My default home page points to Google but the IE kept referring me to your 'pay as you surf' page. I called 1633 and it took me almost 30 minutes to reach your staff. He was unable to help me and told me that he had to check with some other department to find out about what had went wrong with my modem and server. I am unsure if your staff had called me as promised but I had a 'private number' missed call. As I was rushing off for an appointment, I couldn't afford to call back. It costs me about S$8 to take a cab to catch up the lost time because of all the waiting time with Starhub. Why does it take so long to reach your support staff? Isn't there another way I could call back for an emergency? 3rd Bad Experience I came back home at about 9.00pm, 1/3, and made another attempt to reach your customer service staff at 1633. The situation had turned from bad to worse. It took me almost 45 minutes to reach your staff. What is going on with Starhub? If your cost cutting strategy is to cut the number of your staff manning the phone drastically, I suggest that you shut the entire help line down. Maintaining your line open creates expectations, which cannot be met, and your suggestions of using the fax to reach your staff is just madness since how many households keeps a fax machine and when I cannot even get to the Internet, the use of your email is just wishful thinking. Your night staff was more learned and, unlike your afternoon staff, was able to immediately identify the problem. He had reactivated my old modem and now, after all the costs involved, I could write you this email using my Pacnet account. However, on thinking this a bit further, why didn't your staff told me that the old modem will be disconnected when the digital voice model has been linked up? There are a lot of things your staff did not tell me when he visited my on the last day of Feb 09. Diana, I think something is seriously very wrong with the service your company is providing and I am seriously reconsidering if I want to continue using Starhub. I need an explanation for all these. Also, I need you to compensate me for the cost for delays, reaching you and the potential loss of business. The transportation cost and phone bill is not much and a company of your size is capable of repaying me but if I loss my deal, Starhub will be responsible. I like to know when you will be free this week. I like to suggest a meeting with you on these matters and to discuss the reimbursement of the costs involved. Do let Tong Hai know of these too. I think your COO does not really know the challenges and frustrations happening at the ground. 2/12/2009 Visiting Wong Tai SinI was at Wong Tai Sin this morning. I was there to give prayers and thanks. The main temple is under renovation to expand the place so that more people could ask for their future, pray and thank the gods for making their wishes come true. This is a video clip I have taken in the morning of the 1st day of the lunar 8th month. Insert Video 33 1/11/2009 Auld Lang Syne and the Night of FireworksThe first time I heard this song by Mairi Campbell and Dave Francis was on the night I watched the New Year Day's fireworks from the windows of a suite in Peninsular Hotel with a bunch of new and old friends. Here are the lyrics to the song and I hope you enjoy it with me over a glass of wine, and sit back and appreciate what life has already given us so far……. Shid ald akwentans bee firgot,
An sheerly yil bee yur pynt-staup!
We twa hay rin aboot the braes,
We twa hay pedilt in the burn,
An thers a han, my trustee feer!
from the album - The Winnowing Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!!! 12/22/2008 The Ugly Singaporean Tourist9 Reasons for Not Wanting to be Associated with them.
I seldom travel overseas in tour groups for holidays. The free and easy approach is my preferred way. There are ten reasons for this preference:
Being Late Gleefully
1. There will always be some individuals or groups in the guided tour hell-bent at holding up the rest of the tour participants by turning up late; late for joining the tour group after the morning breakfast and late from completing their shopping. I had been held up for 30 minutes in such trips before and the culprits were not apologetic about the delay. I pitied the tour guide for worrying about their whereabouts and personal safety.
Taking More than Necessary
2. It is very typical to find a family of 4 taking up 6 seats in the coach. In this trip, a family of 5 had taken up 7 seats in the coach. Don't ask me about the mathematics. These are families with children from Raffles Girls School and Chinese High Secondary School. Maybe, their calculations were focused on their own comfort and greed than considering how they would be percieved by others.
Lack of a Sense of Responsibility
3. Sometimes, passengers would place their shopping bags at whatever space that could be found in the coach. Towards the end of the day, we had bags on, under and behind the seats. At times, there will be one or two passengers, who wanted to stretch their legs, clear some of these bags from the seats and sat on the new clearing they had created. This is usually not a problem. It is only when the occupiers do not look after the bags they had removed and begun treating them like rubbish. They don't even bother to place these bags back onto the seats when they left the coach for their pee-breaks.
Cowardly Behaviors that Ekes!
4. It is not unusual that in the rush to get the best buy from the shops, tour participants may break the items on display. I have done that before. I understand. However, what is most unforgiveable was to quietly return the broken pieces back to the shelves and pretend that nothing had happened. This is pure irresponsible but a popular behavior amongst Singaporean travelers. This happened in a recent trip. The mother accidently tripped a ceramic display over and it laid broken on the floor. Her teenage daughter came over and quietly placed the broken pieces back on to the shelf. This is bad behavior for the child and worse for the mother. At least, bring the item to the counter, apologies and offer them adequate compensation. To me, what they had done tantamount to stealing. This is a very cowardly behavior.
Turning Animals for Good Photo Opportunities
5. Photo taking is a must for most people on a holiday trip. Sometimes, I could take home about 300 to 800 photographs from a single trip. However, I notice some Singaporeans behaved like animals when come to grapping photo opportunities. They would grab the photo angle totally oblivious of others, who were also keen to capture a memorable image of the occasion for their own. I had been elbowed a few times because they were too enthusiastic about taking the angle I used for my photography.
'Me' Attitude All Way Round
6. There is one scene that has never fail to demonstrate the ugly side of Singaporeans. At the end of the day, luggage will need to be removed from the coach. It is wishful and dangerous thinking to believe that someone will look after your luggage because you are the last one to disembark from the vehicle. I had once stood next to the coach to observe what happened during the off loading of luggage, and I was shocked. The passengers were helping to off-loading luggage not because for the larger good but to get to their bags. Once their bags are off the coach and on the road, they will rush to the hotel. No one bothers about what happen to those bags their off loaded earlier anymore. It is just a 'me' attitude.
Queuing is not Unique in Singapore
7. It seems that some tour participants had forgotten that queuing is a universal thing. This is not something unique in Singapore. However, once they crossed the national border, it is totally forgotten. Do ask if people in front of you if they are in the queue. Don't just squeeze into the queue as if being a tourist you have a right. Singaporeans need to be gracious both inside and outside our borders. I hate to be associated with some of these animals during the tour.
Difference Between Greed and Genuine Buy
8. We had just visited an outlet that merchandise different types of nuts and dried fruits. We were allowed to sample them to help us decide about our purchase. I usually am able to identify those who genuinely want to buy and those who do not. Those who are not buying usually overstayed their privilege and welcome. Also, there is little EQ amongst this kind of people. We need to know when you are filling your stomach and when is not, and please observe hygiene. It is disgusting to see individuals picking the samples with their bare-hands where there were thongs around and the tour guide warned against doing so.
Maids are Needed During their Holidays
9. Maybe Singaporeans are used to having their maids and cleaners picking up their rubbish. The floor of the coach is always littered which brochures, tissue paper, sweet wrappers and other indescribable stuffs. Plastic bags were hung around as rubbish collectors but were not used. The coach driver had to clean up each evening.
Being a Singaporean, many times I feel very embarrassed being seen associated with this kind of Singaporeans. I hope these are only my unique experiences and only a few Singaporeans behave like this.
On behalf of these Singaporeans, I like to apologise to the people of the host nation for their un-cool behaviors.
9/21/2008 Measuring Singapore's National Sports Associations for the Wrong ThingsI was reading Low Lin Fhoong’s article on ‘Olympic Report Card – No Excuses, SailingSailing; Chef-de-mission Tan feels NSA should own up after poor performance in Qingdao’ (Sports Section, Today, Wednesday, 17 September 2008). I want to share my views about Dr Tan Eng Liang’s comments. I know that Dr Tan was displease with SingaporeSailing’s report but being a sailor myself, I know we faces challenges in our physical make-up, experience and luck in the sport. Unlike those who were competing in a controlled environment, our sailors had no control over wind, wave and current at the sailing arena. These create new dimensions in the sport and the sailors had to work hard to win given these constraints. While we could discount these as excuses but they are there and should be acknowledged, and I think this was what the sports association attempted to do. By saying ‘but if you come in 42 out of 43, what is there to argue?’ he has discounted the years of efforts these sailors and SingaporeSailing have given to Singapore in bringing sailing to where it is today. Dr Tan should have checked the time the 42nd boat had taken to cross the finishing line at each race before making that remark. Maybe he was elated with what he brought back for Singapore that he had forgotten himself. As Chef-de-mission, Tan has to exercise extreme care in the words he used to avoid sending the wrong messages to the public and hurt those who had worked very hard to represent Singapore. In this aspect, I am very pleased and gratified with what has happened in the sailing community. Each year, hundreds of sailors, from as young as 8, learn sailing from their school and at their sailing clubs. They are grouped into squads with dedicated coaches working with them on their techniques. Regularly, there are in-house races and national competitions where they hone their skills and measure themselves with their peers. SingaporeSailing maintains a table of national ranking for all competing sailors, and the top few get to join the national team for further development. We work our way up, and our coaches and clubs have tirelessly providing and facilitating our progression. In this home grown thriving and competitive environment, we have answers to the question of who are going to succeed the current patch Olympian sailors when they retire. Yes, I am disappointed with the performance of our sailors, unlike the biggest winner in this year’s Olympic, I am very proud of them. Our peddlers deserved to be applauded for bringing in the medals but this is transactional in nature because it was set up this way when they came to Singapore. This has nothing to do with whether they are locals or otherwise. It is about the nature of the agreement and the corresponding national expectations they produce.. The outcome has proven that this arrangement does provide good returns. However, it has long term impact. We do not who are going to succeed these peddlers in the future. I will be vexed if their NSA brings in another batch of imported players at the expense of sacrificing talents that could be found in the local community. It is good to give each sportsman and sports association have performance indicators, and I agree that what gets measured gets done but it is more important that they are doing the right things when meeting these national expectations. I am seeing that the sailing community is doing the right things. I definitely prefer we do not win any medals and do the right things than to do the wrong things in order to bluff ourselves of our sporting power. Our sailors were called on to represent Singapore at the Games. They had considered and took on the challenge. This was an agreement they made with their sporting community and the nation. They could choose not to but they did not and they do it out of their love for the sport. This is most honorable. When they do not perform as expected, they and their sports association are chilled. There is something very wrong in this equation. I hope that in the process of hunting the witch we do not end up frightening aspiring sportsmen and women from taking up the challenge for representing the country called Singapore. I hope the next Olympic Chef-de-mission will be more enlightened when he is preparing his report after the 2012's Game. 8/23/2008 Singapore Fireworks Celebrations 2008 - Korean EditionI was at the Marina Bay Floating Gallery tonight to watch the Korean edition of the Singapore Fireworks Celebration 2008. Although the fireworks were to begin at 9PM, the gates were opened from 5.30PM onwards.
As usual, there was crowding, and this year, there was rain too. Here were some activities held under the gallery to entertain early arrivals.
This is how the floating platform looks like at night.
There was a performance of fire stick throws which I think was the only highlight at the makeshift stage tonight. I am going to show you four numbers of the Korean edition of the Singapore Firework Celebrations 2008. The dramatic opening number, which is my favorite. Here is a slow number of the fireworks performance. This is another dramatic performance at the beginning of this segment. I don't like the ending part though. Here is the final movement, which is a disappointment. Maybe the rain dimmed the fire and the finale was not as bright as could be. As usual, Singaporeans do what they know best; leaving rubbish behind after the show:
8/11/2008 Sea Food Market RestaurantWe went to the biggest sea food market restaurant in Bangkok this evening and what we found is very impressive. This restaurant is located at Sukhumvit Soi 24. It is about 500 metres or 10 minutes' walk from the Emporium Shopping Centre. These are the landmarks along this road. The front facade of the restaurant. This is how the inside of this restaurant looks like. It is big. It is about three times the size of the event hall at the basement of Ngee Ann City. The way this place work is to have the customers pick up the sea food, most of it is alive, from the display counters and place them on the trolley. The staff there will help them with the selection (so smart) and wheel the food to the checkout counters. However, this is not all. After selecting and paying the food, the trolley is wheeled to our table and another staff will ask us how we like the food to be prepared. There are cooking charges involved, and the order is sent to the kitchen that is manned by over 40 cooks. Among the two of us, we selected and ordered several dishes and the highlight of the dinner is the 4,200 Baht Maine Lobster. There are other dishes. These are big dishes for two of us. Of course, watermelon is a must for all my meals. If you are keen to give this place a visit, here is the detail. Siam Square and Siam ParagonWe went to Siam Paragon today. We were told that it occupied 23 football fields! There is one particular restaurant we usually visit when we were at the shopping centre and this is Vanilla. Vanilla presents itself as two stories and it is well know for its Vanilla House Tea. Its cakes are okay but pasta is good. Just a bit peppery. We had our tea there. For dinner, we went to the 'haunted' Thai Ban Khun Mae Restaurant, which is located at Siam Square.
Regularly, when we were there, we will order Tung Hoon in Clay Pot, Spring Roll, Phad Thai and Stir-fried Beef in Basil. And we have all these over traditional Thai music performed by two lovely ladies. The quality of the food has deteriorated. So much so that the Tung Hoon was so dry and the Phad Thai so hard that we decided not to go there again. Like Watson, Boots is a chain of stores selling toiletries. In Bangkok, Brand's Chicken of Essence is sold in individual bottles and positioned just any other beverages, and are sold from the chillers. Just outside of Siam Square, there are road side stores selling different things. There is something I think very enterprising. |
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