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Customer survey 2024: How RECALO was rated

By 20. January 2025 January 31st, 2025 Headquarter, NEWS

Customer satisfaction as top priority

As a reliable partner and provider of international pooling and asset management services, the satisfaction of our customers is our top priority.

For this reason, we at RECALO once again conducted a customer satisfaction survey at the end of 2024 in order to use the feedback we received to better understand the needs and wishes of our customers and incorporate them into our daily work.

Results of the survey

For a better overview, the average results of all complete responses are listed below.

Rating scale: 1 (dissatisfied or complicated) to 10 (very satisfied or very simple).

8,9
Quality of our products
8,8
Handling of our products
8,8
Quality of our services
8,4
Security of our
supply
8,6
Processing of the orders

For a better overview, the average results of all complete responses are listed below.

Rating scale: 1 (dissatisfied) to 10 (very satisfied).

8,5
Response time
8,8
Service in sales
8,7
Customer service
8,5
Complaints management
8,6
Service of logistics
8,6
Overall satisfaction with RECALO

The overall satisfaction with the collaboration with RECALO was assessed separately; range: 1 (very low) to 10 (very high).

49,45
Net Promoter Score (NPS)

The Net-Promoter-Score (NPS) was calculated using the question about the likelihood of recommending RECALO to others. With an NPS of +49.45 percent, we achieved a very good score.

NPS calculation

NPS = (%promoters) – (%distractors); possible NPS range: -100% (negative maximum) to +100% (positive maximum).

Fill in the survey and do good

15
per survey participation

Your participation in our customer survey has a direct positive impact: in cooperation with Eden: People+Planet (formerly Eden Reforestation Projects), we are planting 15 trees for every complete survey participation and thus supporting reforestation at the “Lamu” project site in Kenya. This campaign harmonizes with our sustainable and continuous CO₂-reducing corporate orientation at RECALO.

Your feedback not only plants ideas but also forms the roots of a growing forest!

© Eden: People+Planet; Kenya, mangrove planting.

For people and nature: How Eden creates sustainable ecosystems

 

Eden is a non-profit organization that aims to rebuild destroyed natural landscapes in developing countries. The aim is to restore nature destroyed by deforestation in the long term and thus create a sustainable future. The organization is supported by essential partners such as governments, non-profit organizations, NGOs and private companies.

Various methods are used to restore the ecosystems, such as growing seedlings, planting diverse native species, promoting natural regeneration, agroforestry, protected seed cultivation, fire monitoring and control measures and planting to control erosion. Particular emphasis is placed on avoiding land conversion, using native plant species of high quality, promoting biodiversity and actively involving the local population in the projects.

Reforestation, "Lamu" site (Kenya)

The “Lamu County” reforestation project

 

The Lamu County Restoration Project is an initiative to restore and conserve an important coastal ecosystem and its climate resilience in Kenya. Lamu Island is located on the north coast and has a long history of trade with Indian Ocean countries. The aim of the project is to reforest the mangrove forest.

Mangroves are so-called climate miracles, as they can store greenhouse gases such as CO₂ much more effectively than other trees. They are considered one of the most productive ecosystems on earth and, in addition to providing a habitat for many animals, they also provide an important livelihood for communities as they support natural fisheries, provide natural products from the forest and reduce the impact of storm surges and erosion.

Mangrove forests are considered particularly vulnerable as they are being decimated by agricultural expansion, charcoal production and fires. Mangroves feed many families in Lamu through fishing and agriculture. Due to the loss of vital economic sectors as a result of deforestation and climate change, a large proportion of the population of Lamu County lives in poverty.

In order to support the local population and restore the mangrove landscape in Lamu County, Eden supports the Lamu County Restoration Project in cooperation with other organizations and associations.

 

Find out more: https://www.eden-plus.org/our-work/lamu-kenya

Reforestation, "Chimanimani" site (Mozambique)

The “Chimanimani” reforestation project

 

The Chimanimani Landscape Restoration Project is an initiative that aims to restore and conserve the essential ecosystem services of the Chimanimani landscape by caring for the degraded nature on site.

The project covers an area of 206,000 hectares and is located in western Mozambique, south-east Africa. A buffer zone has been established around the Chimanimani National Park to protect its cultural heritage and ecosystem services.

The background to this is the local deforestation, which continues to progress due to slash-and-burn agriculture and uncontrolled fires. In addition to forest restoration and community land use planning in and around the buffer zone, the initiative is also involved in agroforestry, a land use system that improves soil fertility and water quality, for example.

 

Find out more: https://www.eden-plus.org/our-work/chimanimani-mozambique

Reforestation, "Cinturón Verde" site (Honduras)

Cinturón Verde reforestation project, Honduras

 

Cinturón Verde is a large-scale project to restore the landscape in the water catchment area of the capital Tegucigalpa in Honduras. The aims of the project include protecting the local water resources, improving climate resilience and combating the increasing number of forest fires.

The reliability of the urban water supply has declined rapidly in recent years, with some areas having to go without water for days on end. To make matters worse, many households cannot afford water storage systems and therefore have no way of adapting to the increasing water shortage. This makes the local water crisis very complex.

To counteract the water shortage, Eden supports vital reforestation. This is because the local inhabitants depend on the water supply from the forests and hills, which is increasingly suffering due to uncontrolled deforestation and degradation, as well as the spread of the pine bark beetle in the important pine-oak forests.

Forests are of fundamental importance for the groundwater supply, as they store large quantities of rainwater and also purify it through certain mechanisms.

 

See: https://www.eden-plus.org/our-work/cinturon-verde-honduras

Download a brief overview now,
including a statement from our CEO,
Arash Ranjbar.

Summary & outlook

With anticipation and enthusiasm, we look to the future and strive to convince through innovative approaches, highest quality, and excellent service.

Our goal is to maintain these good results in the future and to further enhance our already high standards in product handling, complaints management, and supply security.