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- Only a quarter (26%) of business leaders have sent employees for customer and service excellence training in the past two years, while about a quarter (27%) say they are not planning for any training investment in this area.
- Even with over two-thirds (68%) of business leaders reporting confidence in their teams' ability to deliver customer and service excellence, nearly one in five (17%) report low confidence, highlighting a gap between expectations and workforce readiness.
- Business leaders identify proactive service that anticipates customer needs (44%) as the leading trend shaping customer and service excellence, followed by AI-enabled service delivery such as chatbots and virtual assistants (42%), and human-centric service design (38%).
SINGAPORE, Feb. 26, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- While customer expectations evolve across sectors, training adoption is low. Only about a quarter (26%) of business leaders have sent staff for relevant training in the past two years, while about one in four (27%) say they are not planning for any training investment in this area.
Organisational confidence reflects this readiness gap. Despite over two-thirds (68%) of business leaders expressing some confidence in their teams' ability to deliver customer and service excellence, nearly one in five (17%) report low confidence (16% not very confident, 1% not confident at all) in their team's current capabilities, indicating that expectations continue to outpace workforce readiness.
These are some of the key findings from NTUC LearningHub's Industry Insights Report on Customer and Service Excellence, which surveyed a total of 200 business leaders to explore the current landscape of customer and service excellence across key sectors in Singapore.
Business leaders identify proactive service that anticipates customer needs (44%) as the leading trend shaping customer and service excellence, followed by Artificial Intelligence or AI-enabled service delivery (42%), and human-centric service design (38%). Furthermore, these strategic shifts are translating into measurable benefits, with business leaders citing improved customer loyalty and retention (54%), stronger brand differentiation and reputation (46%), and attracting new customers (44%) as top benefits of improving service excellence.
Additionally, technology is widely viewed as a key enhancer of customer and service excellence. Over nine in ten business leaders rate technology as important (29% very important, 63% quite important) in strengthening their service capabilities and only a minority (8%) view technology as having little to no importance. AI-powered chatbots and virtual concierges (38%) enhance responsiveness and availability, while self-service platforms (36%) improve convenience and allow customers to resolve issues independently.
Sustainability is also regarded as an important contributor to customer and service excellence, with more than four in five business leaders rating it as very important (22%) and quite important (64%). Businesses are embedding sustainability into service delivery through digital-first processes such as paperless billing (39%) and reinforcing operational and social responsibility through sustainable technology adoption (26%), waste reduction initiatives (24%) and community sustainability programmes (24%).
However, the report underscores that technology and sustainability initiatives alone are not sufficient to deliver service excellence, as workforce capabilities are critical in customer and service excellence. Business leaders have also identified key training areas that are essential for service employees today to deliver service excellence outcomes. Effective communication (56%) is the top training priority, followed by customer experience strategy and transformation (49%), service recovery and complaint handling (47%), emotional intelligence (43%), and personalising customer experience (38%).
Encouragingly, there is strong recognition of the value of formal skills validation. Nearly nine in ten (85%) business leaders consider industry-recognised certifications in customer and service excellence to be either very important or quite important for validating employee competencies.
Commenting on the report's findings, Mr Tay Ee Learn, Assistant Chief Executive and Chief Sector Skills Officer, NTUC LearningHub, says, "Customer and service excellence today requires more than systems and technology. It depends heavily on the human capabilities, confidence and judgement of frontline and operational teams. While many organisations are investing in digital tools and sustainability initiatives, the findings show that workforce readiness has not kept pace. Without timely and structured investment in capability building, employees may struggle to deliver consistent, human-centred experiences, particularly in complex or high-value service situations. Building strong service capabilities through targeted training and industry-recognised certifications is therefore critical to strengthening employee confidence, improving service consistency, and ensuring that technology-enabled service models deliver meaningful outcomes for both customers and businesses."
To download the Industry Insights Report on Customer and Service Excellence, please visit https://www.ntuclearninghub.com/media/research-reports/2026/customer-service-excellence. To find out more about the courses, training, and grants, please contact NTUC LearningHub at www.ntuclearninghub.com.
About NTUC LearningHub
NTUC LearningHub is the leading Continuing Education and Training provider in Singapore which aims to transform the lifelong employability of working people. Since our corporatisation in 2004, we have been working with employers and individual learners to provide learning solutions in areas such as Infocomm Technology, Generative AI & Cloud, Healthcare, Retail & Food Services, Employability & Literacy, Business Excellence, Workplace Safety & Health, Security, Human Resources & Coaching and Foreign Workers Training.
To date, NTUC LearningHub has helped over 34,000 organisations and achieved more than 3.2 million training places across more than 1,000 courses with a pool of about 1,000 certified trainers. As a Total Learning Solutions provider to organisations, we also forge partnerships to offer a wide range of relevant end-to-end training. Besides in-person training, we also offer instructor-led virtual live classes (VLCs) and asynchronous online learning. The NTUC LearningHub Learning eXperience Platform (LXP)—a one-stop online learning platform—offers timely, bite-sized and quality content for learners to upskill anytime and anywhere. Beyond learning, LXP also serves as a platform for jobs and skills development for both workers and companies.
For more information, visit www.ntuclearninghub.com.
- Only a quarter (26%) of business leaders have sent employees for customer and service excellence training in the past two years, while about a quarter (27%) say they are not planning for any training investment in this area.
- Even with over two-thirds (68%) of business leaders reporting confidence in their teams' ability to deliver customer and service excellence, nearly one in five (17%) report low confidence, highlighting a gap between expectations and workforce readiness.
- Business leaders identify proactive service that anticipates customer needs (44%) as the leading trend shaping customer and service excellence, followed by AI-enabled service delivery such as chatbots and virtual assistants (42%), and human-centric service design (38%).
SINGAPORE, Feb. 26, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- While customer expectations evolve across sectors, training adoption is low. Only about a quarter (26%) of business leaders have sent staff for relevant training in the past two years, while about one in four (27%) say they are not planning for any training investment in this area.
Organisational confidence reflects this readiness gap. Despite over two-thirds (68%) of business leaders expressing some confidence in their teams' ability to deliver customer and service excellence, nearly one in five (17%) report low confidence (16% not very confident, 1% not confident at all) in their team's current capabilities, indicating that expectations continue to outpace workforce readiness.
These are some of the key findings from NTUC LearningHub's Industry Insights Report on Customer and Service Excellence, which surveyed a total of 200 business leaders to explore the current landscape of customer and service excellence across key sectors in Singapore.
Business leaders identify proactive service that anticipates customer needs (44%) as the leading trend shaping customer and service excellence, followed by Artificial Intelligence or AI-enabled service delivery (42%), and human-centric service design (38%). Furthermore, these strategic shifts are translating into measurable benefits, with business leaders citing improved customer loyalty and retention (54%), stronger brand differentiation and reputation (46%), and attracting new customers (44%) as top benefits of improving service excellence.
Additionally, technology is widely viewed as a key enhancer of customer and service excellence. Over nine in ten business leaders rate technology as important (29% very important, 63% quite important) in strengthening their service capabilities and only a minority (8%) view technology as having little to no importance. AI-powered chatbots and virtual concierges (38%) enhance responsiveness and availability, while self-service platforms (36%) improve convenience and allow customers to resolve issues independently.
Sustainability is also regarded as an important contributor to customer and service excellence, with more than four in five business leaders rating it as very important (22%) and quite important (64%). Businesses are embedding sustainability into service delivery through digital-first processes such as paperless billing (39%) and reinforcing operational and social responsibility through sustainable technology adoption (26%), waste reduction initiatives (24%) and community sustainability programmes (24%).
However, the report underscores that technology and sustainability initiatives alone are not sufficient to deliver service excellence, as workforce capabilities are critical in customer and service excellence. Business leaders have also identified key training areas that are essential for service employees today to deliver service excellence outcomes. Effective communication (56%) is the top training priority, followed by customer experience strategy and transformation (49%), service recovery and complaint handling (47%), emotional intelligence (43%), and personalising customer experience (38%).
Encouragingly, there is strong recognition of the value of formal skills validation. Nearly nine in ten (85%) business leaders consider industry-recognised certifications in customer and service excellence to be either very important or quite important for validating employee competencies.
Commenting on the report's findings, Mr Tay Ee Learn, Assistant Chief Executive and Chief Sector Skills Officer, NTUC LearningHub, says, "Customer and service excellence today requires more than systems and technology. It depends heavily on the human capabilities, confidence and judgement of frontline and operational teams. While many organisations are investing in digital tools and sustainability initiatives, the findings show that workforce readiness has not kept pace. Without timely and structured investment in capability building, employees may struggle to deliver consistent, human-centred experiences, particularly in complex or high-value service situations. Building strong service capabilities through targeted training and industry-recognised certifications is therefore critical to strengthening employee confidence, improving service consistency, and ensuring that technology-enabled service models deliver meaningful outcomes for both customers and businesses."
To download the Industry Insights Report on Customer and Service Excellence, please visit https://www.ntuclearninghub.com/media/research-reports/2026/customer-service-excellence. To find out more about the courses, training, and grants, please contact NTUC LearningHub at www.ntuclearninghub.com.
About NTUC LearningHub
NTUC LearningHub is the leading Continuing Education and Training provider in Singapore which aims to transform the lifelong employability of working people. Since our corporatisation in 2004, we have been working with employers and individual learners to provide learning solutions in areas such as Infocomm Technology, Generative AI & Cloud, Healthcare, Retail & Food Services, Employability & Literacy, Business Excellence, Workplace Safety & Health, Security, Human Resources & Coaching and Foreign Workers Training.
To date, NTUC LearningHub has helped over 34,000 organisations and achieved more than 3.2 million training places across more than 1,000 courses with a pool of about 1,000 certified trainers. As a Total Learning Solutions provider to organisations, we also forge partnerships to offer a wide range of relevant end-to-end training. Besides in-person training, we also offer instructor-led virtual live classes (VLCs) and asynchronous online learning. The NTUC LearningHub Learning eXperience Platform (LXP)—a one-stop online learning platform—offers timely, bite-sized and quality content for learners to upskill anytime and anywhere. Beyond learning, LXP also serves as a platform for jobs and skills development for both workers and companies.
For more information, visit www.ntuclearninghub.com.
** The press release content is from PR Newswire. Bastille Post is not involved in its creation. **
Customer and Service Training Falls Behind as only 1 in 4 Companies Have Trained Their Workforce
SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 27, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Following its breakout success at NRF 2026 in New York this past January, NXN Labs is proving that the future of retail AI has shifted from the "experimental" phase into core enterprise infrastructure.
The San Francisco and Seoul-based startup was officially named to the Innovators' Showcase Top 50—a selection curated by the National Retail Federation and leading venture investors to highlight the most disruptive retail technologies. Adding to this momentum, NXN Labs was also recognized as one of FashionUnited's Top 5 Retail Tech Startups during the showcase.
From NRF Recognition to European Luxury Expansion
The accolades in New York have rapidly translated into commercial success. NXN Labs confirmed it has secured paid contracts with several premier European luxury brands. For these prestigious houses, the value proposition lies in NXN's ability to automate high-volume visual production without compromising the uncompromising aesthetic standards inherent to luxury retail.
"Creative wasn't the constraint; production bandwidth was," says Jen Rhi, Founder and CEO of NXN Labs.
A Stanford alumna and former McKinsey consultant, Rhi founded the company in 2024 after witnessing the friction of D2C scaling firsthand. While the market is currently saturated with prompt-based "text-to-image" tools, NXN Labs distinguishes itself with a proprietary multimodal diffusion model. Their "Image-to-Infrastructure" approach allows brands to automate the entire production pipeline—from model shoots to visual A/B testing of PDP and campaign assets—directly within their digital production OS workflow.
The Road Ahead: Shoptalk Spring 2026
Building on its NRF momentum, NXN Labs is now heading to Shoptalk Spring 2026 in Las Vegas to further its expansion into the global premium retail sector.
As retailers face mounting pressure to refresh digital content across global marketplaces and social commerce, NXN's "Production OS" is emerging as the essential backbone for the next generation of visual commerce. In an era where content demand has multiplied across channels, NXN Labs' thesis remains clear: In modern commerce, visual production—not design—is the ultimate scaling constraint. By solving this bottleneck, the startup is helping the world's most prestigious brands transition legacy studio workflows into a digital-first future.
About NXN Labs
NXN Labs develops a virtual try-on solution using fashion-specialized generative AI (image-to-image diffusion) technology, enabling automatic generation of images that appear as if models are wearing products without actual photoshoots. By automating fashion content production processes, the company supports brands in focusing on creative capabilities while driving digital transformation and ESG innovation in the fashion industry. Currently, the company is partnering with Shinsegae International, KREAM, and several global fashion brands on various projects.
For more information, visit https://nxn.ai/
** The press release content is from PR Newswire. Bastille Post is not involved in its creation. **
NRF 2026: NXN Labs Named to 'Innovators' Showcase Top 50' Following European Luxury Wins