NCBA’s Customer Experience Recognition Signals a Bank Listening More Closely to Its Customers

In banking, trust is not built in boardrooms alone. It is built at the branch counter, on the mobile app, through the call centre, inside the loan conversation, during complaint resolution, and in the small moments when a customer discovers whether a bank truly values them or merely counts them.
That is why NCBA’s latest recognition deserves attention. The bank has been awarded Best Tier 1 Bank in Customer Experience 2025 and Excellence in Banking Customer Experience 2025 – Best Overall. In a market where banking customers are more informed, more demanding, and less patient than ever before, these awards are more than ceremonial applause. They are a signal that service has become one of the most important battlegrounds in modern banking.
For years, banks competed mainly on size, products, branch networks, pricing, and balance-sheet strength. Those things still matter. But the Kenyan customer has moved. Today, a customer also asks: How fast can I be served? How clearly can this bank explain its products? Can I trust the digital platform? Will someone pick up when I call? When something goes wrong, will the bank resolve it or send me in circles?
Customer experience has therefore become a serious business metric. It is no longer a soft issue reserved for marketing teams. It affects loyalty, deposits, loan uptake, digital adoption, referrals, reputation, and long-term profitability. A bank that treats customers well does not just win awards. It earns repeat business.
NCBA’s recognition as Best Tier 1 Bank in Customer Experience 2025 places the bank in an important conversation about what leadership in financial services now means. Tier 1 institutions are not only expected to be financially strong. They are expected to be reliable, accessible, responsive, innovative, and human.
The second award, Excellence in Banking Customer Experience 2025 – Best Overall, carries an even broader meaning. It suggests a wider view of the customer journey: onboarding, digital access, branch experience, complaint handling, relationship management, product delivery, and the quality of everyday interaction between the bank and the people it serves.
This is important because customers do not experience a bank in fragments. They experience the whole institution. One slow process can damage the feeling created by ten good ones. One unresolved complaint can undo months of advertising. One confusing product can weaken trust built over years. In banking, experience is cumulative.
NCBA’s win also reflects the direction in which the banking sector is moving. The most competitive institutions are those that combine financial strength with convenience, technology with clarity, and scale with personal attention. Customers want digital speed, but they also want human understanding. They want innovation, but they also want accountability.
For entrepreneurs and SMEs, this matters deeply. Business owners do not only need accounts. They need partners who understand working capital pressure, delayed payments, asset financing needs, seasonal cash flow, and the daily discipline of keeping a business alive. A bank that listens well becomes more than a lender. It becomes part of the growth journey.
For ordinary customers, experience is equally critical. Whether someone is saving, borrowing, sending money, investing, buying a vehicle, financing a home, or building a business, the quality of service determines how confident they feel. Banking is emotional because money is emotional. People remember how they were treated when their money, plans, or business were on the line.
This is where NCBA’s recognition becomes a strong brand asset. It gives the bank a platform to say that customer experience is not an afterthought. It is part of the institution’s competitive identity. In an industry where many customers have grown used to long queues, unclear communication, hidden frustrations, and slow responses, being recognised for service excellence is not a small achievement.
The awards also challenge the rest of the sector. Banks can no longer assume that customers will remain loyal simply because switching feels difficult. Digital banking, mobile money, fintech platforms, SACCOs, micro-lenders, investment platforms, and alternative financial-service providers have widened customer choice. The customer now has options, and options have changed the power balance.
The modern customer silently audits every bank. They audit through social media comments. They audit through referrals. They audit through complaints. They audit by moving money. They audit by closing accounts. They audit by telling friends, family, and business networks where they felt respected and where they felt ignored.
That is why recognition in customer experience should never be treated as a public-relations line. It should be treated as evidence of internal discipline. Good customer experience requires trained staff, responsive systems, clear communication, reliable technology, quick escalation, accountable leadership, and a culture that understands the customer as the centre of the business.
For NCBA, the applause is deserved. Makofi indeed. But the bigger responsibility begins after the award. Customer experience is not a title a bank owns permanently. It must be earned repeatedly. Every transaction tests it. Every complaint tests it. Every digital interaction tests it. Every branch visit tests it. Every loan conversation tests it.
The real strength of these awards is that they point to a simple truth: banking excellence is no longer measured only by how much money a bank controls, but by how well it serves the people who trust it with that money.
NCBA has received the recognition. The market has taken note. Customers will now expect the bank to keep proving that the award was not just won on one stage, but earned in everyday service across the country.
In the end, the future of banking will belong to institutions that understand one thing clearly: products can be copied, pricing can be matched, branches can be built, and apps can be redesigned. But trust, respect, and customer confidence must be earned, one experience at a time.
Read Also: NCBA Targets Self-Build Market with EASYBUILD Solution
About Steve Biko Wafula
Steve Biko is the CEO OF Soko Directory and the founder of Hidalgo Group of Companies. Steve is currently developing his career in law, finance, entrepreneurship and digital consultancy; and has been implementing consultancy assignments for client organizations comprising of trainings besides capacity building in entrepreneurial matters.He can be reached on: +254 20 510 1124 or Email: info@sokodirectory.com
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