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A single Tweet shell kiambu rd no more
premio
#1 Posted : Friday, April 01, 2016 10:39:59 AM
Rank: Member


Joined: 5/31/2009
Posts: 226
Feeling pitty for the owner of Shell Kiambu rd in a new world of social media. A photo showing a Vivo energy employee caught scamming a clients credit card data shared on facebook and twitter brought to an end a dealership he probably fought hard to establish. Vivo Energy, fresh from a confrontation with erc ERC after 4 of its stations were named in the petrokerosene scandal moved fast closed down the station and pulled down the shell branding. Am sure had a risk manager approached him before for a review of his business he would probably have named a fire or a major theft as the biggest risks to his enterprise . Where did he go wrong the experts in wazua. Employee vetting, close supervision or exactly how could he have saved his business.
chemirocha
#2 Posted : Friday, April 01, 2016 11:21:59 AM
Rank: Member


Joined: 1/30/2016
Posts: 332
Location: Rift Valley
Makosa ni kwa management. If you have an employee handling cash transactions you have to supervise keenly to remove that temptation to steal.

If you look at local bank tellers, there is always cctv pointing directly at their work stations for this very reason.
Impunity
#3 Posted : Friday, April 01, 2016 11:49:51 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 3/2/2009
Posts: 26,328
Location: Masada
premio wrote:
Feeling pitty for the owner of Shell Kiambu rd in a new world of social media. A photo showing a Vivo energy employee caught scamming a clients credit card data brought to an end a dealership he probably fought hard to establish. Vivo fresh from a direct hit from ERC over 4 of its stations were named in the petrokerosene scandal closed down the station. Am sure had a risk manager approached him for a review of his business he would probably have name a fire or a major theft as the biggest risks to. Where did he go wrong the experts in wazua. Employee vetting, close supervision or exactly how could he have saved his business.


Its very difficult to control these people when money is concerned.
Portfolio: Sold
You know you've made it when you get a parking space for your yatcht.

streetwise
#4 Posted : Friday, April 01, 2016 12:06:00 PM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 6/23/2011
Posts: 1,740
Location: Nairobi
You start from the beginning when you are searching for suitable candidates.

Screen is a must including certificate of good conduct etc. If the guy walks to the interview room and your first impression is that he looks like a thief , whatever criteria you use to come to that conclusion even if the guy is a priest. DONT TOUCH HIM
Gathige
#5 Posted : Friday, April 01, 2016 12:50:56 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 3/29/2011
Posts: 2,242
streetwise wrote:
You start from the beginning when you are searching for suitable candidates.

Screen is a must including certificate of good conduct etc. If the guy walks to the interview room and your first impression is that he looks like a thief , whatever criteria you use to come to that conclusion even if the guy is a priest. DONT TOUCH HIM



Very true. I remember hiring someone by just observing the way they walked from the gate to the reception- the poise and steps were just right- and the person just turned to be the best! Crooks have the best papers, and you can never nab them using standard procedures.

Visited a Shell stn yest late at night to buy gas and they told me they do not have official receipts- Just returned the cylinder to them and i got my cash back. My intuition told me most likely the gas is back-street filled and the attendants sell it separately from the Station's stock.
"Things that matter most must never be at the mercy of things that matter least." Goethe
MaichBlack
#6 Posted : Friday, April 01, 2016 12:59:03 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 7/22/2009
Posts: 7,452
cancelling the dealership is too drastic!!!

It was a serious offence yes, but the punishment on the owner of the station is too harsh!!! Even if the the station owner was 110% vigilant, such a scam could still take place. Even with CCTV cameras, the thuggish employees would still know the angle to stand at to make sure the cameras don't record what is happening.Even if you put cameras all round, an employee could still pull a "tuangalie mbele" stunt etc. Or have a colleague block the line of view from the camera at the "right" time!
Never count on making a good sale. Have the purchase price be so attractive that even a mediocre sale gives good returns.
majimaji
#7 Posted : Friday, April 01, 2016 1:01:30 PM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 4/4/2007
Posts: 1,162

For Shell, Igathe had to act seeing that his petrol stations were nabbed serving motorists with petrol laced kerosene. So for this Kiambu guy, he became a sacrificial lamb (or goat if you like) to shore up the corporate image of Shell.
streetwise
#8 Posted : Friday, April 01, 2016 1:03:51 PM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 6/23/2011
Posts: 1,740
Location: Nairobi
If malpractises like corruption were handled this way i am sure other will decesit.

The point is shell is saying you are either good or bad. This is the way to go
sheri
#9 Posted : Friday, April 01, 2016 2:17:11 PM
Rank: Member


Joined: 4/11/2007
Posts: 694
streetwise wrote:
If malpractises like corruption were handled this way i am sure other will decesit.

The point is shell is saying you are either good or bad. This is the way to go

I believe there is a difference between corruption and an employee malpractices. The owner at this point might not be aware of the employee behavior. Anyway it is a lesson to employers to be careful when recruiting.
Mike Ock
#10 Posted : Friday, April 01, 2016 2:34:10 PM
Rank: Member


Joined: 1/22/2015
Posts: 682
MaichBlack wrote:
cancelling the dealership is too drastic!!!

It was a serious offence yes, but the punishment on the owner of the station is too harsh!!! Even if the the station owner was 110% vigilant, such a scam could still take place. Even with CCTV cameras, the thuggish employees would still know the angle to stand at to make sure the cameras don't record what is happening.Even if you put cameras all round, an employee could still pull a "tuangalie mbele" stunt etc. Or have a colleague block the line of view from the camera and the "right" time!

sacrificial lambs are a necessary evil in business. Ili iwe funzo to the other dealers.
Risasi Sufuri
#11 Posted : Friday, April 01, 2016 4:06:23 PM
Rank: Member


Joined: 12/8/2015
Posts: 166
To me that is the best you can do to protect the Brand. Otherwise the whole brand will sink and will sink with other dealers. Thus, it is a lesser evil.
Cornelius Vanderbilt
#12 Posted : Friday, April 01, 2016 4:17:09 PM
Rank: Member


Joined: 8/15/2015
Posts: 817
Impunity wrote:
premio wrote:
Feeling pitty for the owner of Shell Kiambu rd in a new world of social media. A photo showing a Vivo energy employee caught scamming a clients credit card data brought to an end a dealership he probably fought hard to establish. Vivo fresh from a direct hit from ERC over 4 of its stations were named in the petrokerosene scandal closed down the station. Am sure had a risk manager approached him for a review of his business he would probably have name a fire or a major theft as the biggest risks to. Where did he go wrong the experts in wazua. Employee vetting, close supervision or exactly how could he have saved his business.


Its very difficult to control these people when money is concerned.



nkt . wacha matusi.
FRM2011
#13 Posted : Friday, April 01, 2016 6:30:22 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 11/5/2010
Posts: 2,459
premio wrote:
Feeling pitty for the owner of Shell Kiambu rd in a new world of social media. A photo showing a Vivo energy employee caught scamming a clients credit card data brought to an end a dealership he probably fought hard to establish. Vivo fresh from a direct hit from ERC over 4 of its stations were named in the petrokerosene scandal closed down the station. Am sure had a risk manager approached him for a review of his business he would probably have name a fire or a major theft as the biggest risks to. Where did he go wrong the experts in wazua. Employee vetting, close supervision or exactly how could he have saved his business.


@premio, I like the way your approach is from a risk mgt perspective. Risk has been evolving in tandem with the ever changing world. The dealer could not have foreseen this but a professional risk manager would. In the west, the CRO is becoming the 2nd most powerful guy in a company after the ceo.

In 2007, equity survived its worst run-on-the-bank scare through the sheer ingenuity of their ceo. A mlevi in machakos started a rumour telling people that the bank was collapsing. The news spread through word of mouth and soon the bank had to call police to control the crowd outside the local branch demanding to withdraw their cash.

Predictably, the branch ran out of cash making the rumour believable. Mwangi did two things; organised for cash to be delivered so that anyone who wants to be given their money is allowed to do so, and unleashed a PR strategy by using locals (kaos) to go and talk to people in town. By the following morning, the bank opened doors and guys realised it was a lie. The bank was there to stay.

Now replay the same scenario today with whatsapp. Within 30 minutes customers would be flooding all their branches. And yet only 20% of customer deposits are held in liquid cash.
sparkly
#14 Posted : Friday, April 01, 2016 6:43:31 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 9/23/2009
Posts: 8,083
Location: Enk are Nyirobi
Risasi Sufuri wrote:
To me that is the best you can do to protect the Brand. Otherwise the whole brand will sink and will sink with other dealers. Thus, it is a lesser evil.


Reputation is like virginity, one lost it cannot be recovered. Shell did the right thing to throw away the Rotten apple rather be known as the the OMC that fraudulently swipes customers cards.
Life is short. Live passionately.
premio
#15 Posted : Friday, April 01, 2016 9:33:51 PM
Rank: Member


Joined: 5/31/2009
Posts: 226
FRM2011 wrote:
premio wrote:
Feeling pitty for the owner of Shell Kiambu rd in a new world of social media. A photo showing a Vivo energy employee caught scamming a clients credit card data brought to an end a dealership he probably fought hard to establish. Vivo fresh from a direct hit from ERC over 4 of its stations were named in the petrokerosene scandal closed down the station. Am sure had a risk manager approached him for a review of his business he would probably have name a fire or a major theft as the biggest risks to. Where did he go wrong the experts in wazua. Employee vetting, close supervision or exactly how could he have saved his business.


@premio, I like the way your approach is from a risk mgt perspective. Risk has been evolving in tandem with the ever changing world. The dealer could not have foreseen this but a professional risk manager would. In the west, the CRO is becoming the 2nd most powerful guy in a company after the ceo.

In 2007, equity survived its worst run-on-the-bank scare through the sheer ingenuity of their ceo. A mlevi in machakos started a rumour telling people that the bank was collapsing. The news spread through word of mouth and soon the bank had to call police to control the crowd outside the local branch demanding to withdraw their cash.

Predictably, the branch ran out of cash making the rumour believable. Mwangi did two things; organised for cash to be delivered so that anyone who wants to be given their money is allowed to do so, and unleashed a PR strategy by using locals (kaos) to go and talk to people in town. By the following morning, the bank opened doors and guys realised it was a lie. The bank was there to stay.

Now replay the same scenario today with whatsapp. Within 30 minutes customers would be flooding all their branches. And yet only 20% of customer deposits are held in liquid cash.


@FRM2011 yes i remember the Equity scare was quite scarry. I beleive in as much as shell had its rights to protect its brand, the guy could have recourse if he hires a top notch lawyers to study what the dealership agreement provides as ground for Total termination. Risk management should now be over and above all other aspects of the business.
Cornelius Vanderbilt
#16 Posted : Saturday, April 02, 2016 1:49:43 AM
Rank: Member


Joined: 8/15/2015
Posts: 817
MaichBlack wrote:
cancelling the dealership is too drastic!!!

It was a serious offence yes, but the punishment on the owner of the station is too harsh!!! Even if the the station owner was 110% vigilant, such a scam could still take place. Even with CCTV cameras, the thuggish employees would still know the angle to stand at to make sure the cameras don't record what is happening.Even if you put cameras all round, an employee could still pull a "tuangalie mbele" stunt etc. Or have a colleague block the line of view from the camera at the "right" time!


its called damage control. if that petrol station was left to continue running people would start associating shell with thieves and thugs and it would affect their brand name and all their other petrol stations
wazuaguest
#17 Posted : Saturday, April 02, 2016 8:17:42 AM
Rank: Member


Joined: 2/9/2012
Posts: 576
Two things.Whatever Vivo did to that guy was too punitive.But the guy was just unlucky,the event happened as Vivo were being accused of lacing their fuels so any business person(Vivo) would have done exactly that to control further damage to the brand.
In Kenya close supervision of staff is the way to go.If you leave your staff for long periods they will become creative.Its better you employ a manager pay him well with clear instructions on what to do.
Africa belongs to Africans.
MaichBlack
#18 Posted : Saturday, April 02, 2016 8:45:16 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 7/22/2009
Posts: 7,452
Professional Thieves at Shell Petrol Station
Never count on making a good sale. Have the purchase price be so attractive that even a mediocre sale gives good returns.
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