project report for customer satisfaction on ndpl (2)
TRANSCRIPT
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A PROJECT REPORT
FOR
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION ON NDPL
Submitted by
ATUL BANSAL
(04711301710)
In partial fulfillment of requirements
For the reward of the degree
OF
BACHELOR OF BUSSINESS ADMINISTRATION
Under the supervision of
MS. AMANPREET KAUR
BERI INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, TRAINING ANDRESEARCH
TIKRI KALAN, DELHI
(Affiliated to Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University)
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CERTIFICATE
This is to certify that the project entitled Customer Satisfaction submitted by Atul Bansal,
Enroll no. 04711301710 has been done under my guidance and supervision in partial fulfillment
of Bachelor of Business Administration. The working analysis mentioned in this report has been
undertaken by the candidate himself and necessary reference has been recognized.
Ms. Amampreet kaur
(Project guide)
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
We would like to take this opportunity to express my deep gratitude towards all those who have
in various ways helped me in the completion of this project. I like this opportunity to extend my
sincere thanks to Ms. Amanpreet Kaur who provided me this great opportunity to work on a
project for the company.
Once again I would like to express my sincere thanks to All Management Staff and employees of
NDPL (North Delhi Power limited), New Delhi who encourage me and provided required
helped me in completion of this project.
ATUL BANSAL
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CONTENTS
Page Number
CERTIFICATE2
ACKNOWLIDGEMENT3
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION...........................................................................................................................5
CHAPTER 2
LITERATURE REVIEW..............................................................................................................17
CHAPTER 3
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY....23
CHAPTER 4
DATA ANALYSING AND FINDINGS...26
CHAPTER 5
CONCLUSION AND SUGGESTION ...37
QUESIONNAIRE..................................................................................................................41
BIBLIOGRAPHY44
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CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
Company profile S.W.O.T Analysis of the Organization Competitor analysis
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OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY
To know about the satisfaction level of customers of NDPLand to identify the strategies of
companies to satisfy their customers and therefore analyze the satisfaction level of customers
with respect to the various service provided by the companies. The main objective is study
the differences in perception of the customers of the other companies towards various
services provided by them and identify customer satisfaction variables which lead to building
relationship with customers in the electricity providing companies.
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COMPANY PROFILE
NDPL (North Delhi power limited)
North Delhi Power Limited (NDPL) is a joint venture between Tata Power Company and the
Government of NCT of Delhi with the majority stake being held by Tata Power. It distributes
electricity in North & North West parts of Delhi and serves a populace of 50 lakh. The company
started operations on July 1,2002 post the unbundling of erstwhile Delhi Vidyut Board. With a
registered consumer base of around 10 lakh and a peak load of around 1250 MW, the companys
operations span across an area of 510 sq kms.
NDPL has been the frontrunner in implementing power distribution reforms in the capital city
and is acknowledged for its consumer friendly practices. Since privatization, the Aggregate
Technical & Commercial (AT&C) losses in NDPL areas have shown a record decline. Today
they stand at 14% ( as on March 31, 2010) which is an unprecedented reduction of over 74%
from an opening loss level of 53%.
On the power supply front too, NDPL areas have shown remarkable improvement. The company
has embarked upon an ambitious plan to implement high-tech automated systems for its entire
distribution network. Systems such as SCADA, GIS and OTS are the cornerstone of the
companys distribution automation project. To fight the menace of power theft, modern
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techniques like High Voltage Distribution (HVDS) System and LT Arial Bunch Conductor have
been adopted.
NDPL has to its credit several firsts in Delhi: SCADA controlled Grid Stations, Automatic Meter
Reading, GSM based Street Lighting system and SMS based Fault Management System. To
ensure complete transparency, the company has provided online information on billing and
payment to all its 1 million consumers. This happened in the first year of operations itself. NDPL
believes in providing more value than just electricity and is even rewarding its consumers for
timely payment.
NDPL is the first power distribution utility from India to have won the prestigious Edison Award
in the international category. The prestigious award is given annually by the Edison Electric
Institute (EEI) to honour both international and U.S. electric companies for outstanding
contributions to the advancement of the Power industry.
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SWOT ANALYSIS
Strengths
Successful public private relationship in generation, transmission and distribution: NorthDelhi Power Limited (NDPL) is a joint venture between Tata Power Company and the
Government of NCT of Delhi with the majority stake being held by Tata Power. It
distributes electricity in North & North West parts of Delhi and serves a populace of 50
lakh.
Distribution network: The Company has embarked upon an ambitious plan toimplement high-tech automated systems for its entire distribution network. Systems such
as SCADA, GIS and OTS are the cornerstone of the companys distribution automation
project. To fight the menace of power theft, modern techniques like High Voltage
Distribution (HVDS) System and LT Arial Bunch Conductor have been adopted.
Market share: Present registered consumer base is around 1 million and a peak load is1100 mw, the companys operation span across an area of 510 KM sq.
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Weakness
Area: Covers limited area: One of the weaknesses of NDPL is that it covers onlynorthern and north western parts of New Delhi.
Opportunities
Power Trading: India being developing country, its economy is growing at about 8% to9%. Due to rapid urbanization and change in the lifestyle of the people, the demand for
power is increasing.
Projects: The Company has created long-term sources by tying up with power projectslocated across the country and include thermal power projects based on coal and running
of hydro power plants.
Distribution Network: While India has the third largest transmission and distribution
network in the world, there is still shortfall of electricity. This is also because of private
sector does not have a major role in this segment.
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Threats
Coordination: Power sector faces challenges such as difficulties in debt collection,procedural delays and need for improved coordination between various governmental
agencies.
Distribution Sector: Pace of opening up distribution sector to private sector is slow.
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COMPETITOR ANALYSIS
1.NDMC (New Delhi Municipal Council)Delhi Set-up had recommended that a fresh law governing NDMC should be passed by the
Parliament for proper organization and functioning of the New Delhi Municipal Council.
Consequent upon enforcement of Constitution (Seventy Fourth Amendment) Act, several
provisions in Punjab Municipal Act, 1911 had to be brought in tune with Part IXA of the
Constitution before 31st May, 1994. Furthermore, there were several major differences between
various functional regimes prescribed under the old law governing NDMC in comparison to the
Delhi Municipal Corporation Act, 1957. It was generally recognized that there was need for a
greater measure of commonality in the procedure adopted by the Municipal Corporation of Delhi
and the New Delhi Municipal Council in matters relating to taxation, revenue, budgeting,
contracts, accounts and audits, streets and sanitation, public health, public safety and suppression
of nuisances etc.
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The following were the most important objectives:
To Provide New Delhi Municipal Council area with a new legislation repealing thePunjab Municipal Act, 1911.
To bring uniformity as far as possible in building regulations, audit revenue andbudgetary provisions in the Municipal Corporation of Delhi.
To harmonize the law with the Constitution (Seventy-fourth Amendment) Act, 1992 withnecessary exemptions and modifications under article 143ZB of the Constitution
wherever departure has had to be made from the constitutional provisions
2.BSES Yamuna Power Limited (BYPL)
BSES Yamuna Power Limited (BYPL), a joint venture between BSES Limited and the
government of NCT of Delhi had taken over the distribution of electric power in the area of
East & Central Delhi from Delhi Vidyut Board (DVB) on July 2002.
For administrative purpose, BYPL is split into 14 business units on the basis of number of
consumers. The various consumer touch points include Consumer Care Centers, Complaint
Centers, Consumer Call Centers to facilitate commercial process such as new connection, billing
related queries, solving the
Complaints etc,.
BYPL distributes power to an area spread over 200 sq kms with a population density of 4230
per sq km. Its 10.4lakh customers are spread over 14 districts across Central and East areas
including Chandni Chowk, Daryaganj, Paharganj, Shankar Road, Patel Nagar, G T Road,
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Karkardooma, Krishna Nagar, Laxmi Nagar, Mayur Vihar, Yamuna Vihar, Nand Nagri and
Karawal Nagar.
3.BSES Rajdhani Power Limited (BRPL)
BRPL is limited company incorporated under the companies Act 1956 and engaged in the
business of distribution of electricity within its licensed area in NCT of Delhi.
BRPL is soliciting bids for supply of energy from Inter State Sources through traders who have
been given interstate energy trading license by the CERC, State Electricity Boards, State
Electricity Utilities, States, Generators, and IPPs & CPPs to enable BRPL to meet
demand/requirement of power in Delhi.
BRPL distributes power to an area spread over 750 sq. km with a population density of 1360
per sq km. Its over 12.2 lakh customers are spread in 19 districts across South and West areas
including Alaknanda, Khanpur, Vasant Kunj, Saket, Nehru Place, Nizamuddin, Sarita Vihar,
Hauz Khas, R K Puram, Janakpuri, Najafgargh, Nangloi, Mundka, Punjabi Bagh, Tagore
Garden, Vikas Puri, Palam and Dwarka.
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CHAPTER 2
LITERATURE REVIEW
Literature review Scope of the study Methodology
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LITERATURE REVIEW
WHAT IS CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
Customer satisfaction, a term frequently used in marketing, is a measure of how products and
services supplied by a company meet or surpass customer expectation. Customer satisfaction is
defined as "the number of customers, or percentage of total customers, whose reported
experience with a firm, its products, or its services (ratings) exceeds specified satisfaction goals."
-By Giese and Cote
A DEFINITIONAL FRAMEWORK FOR CONSUMER SATISFACTION
Based on the insights provided by the literature review and interviews, we propose a framework
for developing context-specific definitions of consumer satisfaction. This framework is not a
generic definition of satisfaction. As noted above, innumerable contextual variables will affect
how satisfaction is viewed. As such, any generic definition of satisfaction will be subject to
chameleon effects. Rather than presenting a generic definition of satisfaction, we identify the
conceptual domain of satisfaction, delineate specific components necessary for any meaningful
definition of satisfaction, and outline a process for developing context-specific definitions that
can be compared across studies.
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As concluded by the literature review and validated by the group and personal interview data,
consumer satisfaction is:
A summary affective response of varying intensity. The exact type of affective response
and the level of intensity likely to be experienced must be explicitly defined by a
researcher depending on the context of interest.
With a time-specific point of determination and limited duration. The researcher should
select the point of determination most relevant for the research questions and identify the
likely duration of the summary response. It is reasonable to expect that consumers may
consciously determine their satisfaction response when asked by a researcher; therefore,
timing is most critical to ascertain the most accurate, well-formed response.
Directed toward focal aspects of product acquisition and/or consumption. The
researcher should identify the focus of interest based on the managerial or research
question they face. This may include a broad or narrow range of acquisition or
consumption activities/issues.
By fleshing out these components, researchers should be able to develop specific definitions that
are conceptually richer and empirically more useful than previous definitions. To develop
context-relevant definitions and measures, researchers must be able to identify both the questions
they are interested in answering and some basic information about the setting and consumers.
Specifically, the researcher will need to provide details about all three components of
satisfaction.
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The Literature and Consumer Views of Satisfaction
While the literature contains significant differences in the definition of satisfaction, all the
definitions share some common elements. When examined as a whole, three general components
can be identified: 1) consumer satisfaction is a response (emotional or cognitive); 2) the response
pertains to a particular focus (expectations, product, consumption experience, etc.); and 3) the
response occurs at a particular time (after consumption, after choice, based on accumulated
experience, etc). Consumer responses followed a general pattern similar to the literature.
Satisfaction was comprised of three basic components, a response pertaining to a particular focus
determined at a particular time.
Response: Type and Intensity - Consumer satisfaction has been typically conceptualized as either
an emotional or cognitive response. More recent satisfaction definitions concede an emotional
response. The emotional basis for satisfaction is confirmed by the consumer responses. 77.3% of
group interview responses specifically used affective responses to describe satisfaction and 64%
of the personal interviewees actually changed the question term "satisfaction" to more affective
terms. Both the literature and consumers also recognize that this affective response varies in
intensity depending on the situation. Response intensity refers to the strength of the satisfaction
response, ranging from strong to weak. Terms such as, "like love," "excited," "euphoria,"
"thrilled," "very satisfied," "pleasantly surprised," "relieved," "helpless," "frustrated," "cheated,"
"indifferent," "relieved," "apathy," and "neutral" reveal the range of intensity. In sum, the
literature and consumers both view satisfaction as a summary affective response of varying
intensity.
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Focus of the Response - The focus identifies the object of a consumers satisfaction and usually
entails comparing performance to some standard. This standard can vary from very specific to
more general standards. There are often multiple foci to which these various standards are
directed including the product, consumption, purchase decision, salesperson, or store/acquisition.
The determination of an appropriate focus for satisfaction varies from context to context.
However, without a clear focus, any definition of satisfaction would have little meaning since
interpretation of the construct would vary from person to person (chameleon effects).
Timing of the Response - It is generally accepted that consumer satisfaction is a postpurchase
phenomenon, yet a number of subtle differences exist in this perspective. The purchase decision
may be evaluated after choice, but prior to the actual purchase of the product. Consumer
satisfaction may occur prior to choice or even in the absence of purchase or choice (e.g.,
dissatisfied with out-of-town supermarkets, which were never patronized, because they caused a
local store to close). It has even been argued that none of the above time frames is appropriate
since satisfaction can vary dramatically over time and satisfaction is only determined at the time
the evaluation occurs. The consumer responses reinforced this varied timing aspect of
satisfaction. In addition, the consumers discussed the duration of satisfaction, which refers to
how long a particular satisfaction response lasts.
Dissatisfaction - The literature has taken two approaches to conceptualizing and operationalizing
the dissatisfaction construct. Consumer dissatisfaction is portrayed as the bipolar opposite of
satisfaction; or consumer satisfaction and dissatisfaction are viewed as two different dimensions.
Since the literature does not provide a clear conceptualization of dissatisfaction, we turned to
consumer perceptions. Consumers suggest that dissatisfaction is still comprised of the three
components of the definitional framework: affective response; focus; and timing. However, the
consumer data did not help resolve the dimensionality issue. We speculate that the apparent
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dimensionality of satisfaction might be understood by examining the focus of satisfaction and
dissatisfaction. Consumers were sometimes satisfied with one aspect of the choice/consumption
experience, but dissatisfied with another aspect. In this case, satisfaction and dissatisfaction can
be viewed as different dimensions.
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CHAPTER 3
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
Scope of the study Research methodology
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SCOPE OF THE STUDY
To find out the satisfaction level of customers towards the quality services provided by NDPL.
Methods of data collection
SOURCES OF DATA
The sources of data may be classified into (a) primary sources and (b) secondary sources.
Primary Sources
Primary sources are original sources from which the researcher directly collects data that have
not been previously collected, e.g., collection of data directly by the researcher on brand
awareness, brand preference, brand loyalty and other aspects of consumer behaviour from a
sample of consumers by interviewing them.
Secondary Sources
These are sources containing data that have been collected and compiled for another purpose.
The secondary sources consist of readily available compendia and already compiled statistical
statements
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The primary source of data collection
Through QUESTIONAIRES. The questionnaire was filled by the respondents.
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CHAPTER 4
DATA ANALYSIS AND FINDINGS
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Data Analysis
Q1 who is your electricity service provider
Options No. of respondents
NDPL 10
BSES rajdhani 4
BSES Yamuna 4
NDMC 7
TOTAL 25
0
510
15
20
25
30
35
40
NDPLBSES rajdhani
BSES yamunaNDMC
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Q2 Overall quality rating
Options No. of respondents
Excellent 6
Very good 3
Average 7
Poor 4
Dont know 5
TOTAL 25
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Excellent Very good Average Poor Don't know
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Q4 How many power cuts in a day
Options No. of respondents
1 per day 12
2-3 per day 8
More than 3 per day 3
Dont know 2
Total 25
1 per day
2-3 per day
More than 3 per day
Dont know
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Q5 how much load of electricity are you using and how much you need
Options No. of respondents
0-2 KW 6
2-4 KW 5
4-6 KW 9
More than 6 KW 5
TOTAL 25
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
0-2 KW 2-4 KW 4-6 KW more than 6 KW
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Q6 Average duration of a power cut
Options No. of respondents
Less than hour 11
-1 hour 8
1-2 hour 3
2-6 hour 3
TOTAL 25
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
less than 1/2 hour 1/2-1 hour 1-2 hour 2-6 hour
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Q7 What is the average hour of Outage Experienced in a Month
Options No. of respondents
0-15 hours 18
15-30 hpurs 4
30-90 hours 3
More than 90 hours 0
TOTAL 25
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
0-15 hours 15-30 hours 30-90 hours more than 90
hours
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Q8 How much are you paying for electricity per unit in approx
Options No. of respondents
Rs 1to2 4
Rs 2to4 17
Rs 4to6 3
Rs 6to8 1
TOTAL 25
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
Rs 1-2 Rs 2-4 Rs 4-6 Rs 6-8
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Q9 Would you still continue with your current service provider
Options No. of respondents
Yes 8
No 17
Total 25
yes
no
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A) Perception about NDPL service
Options No. of respondents
Excellent 6
Very good 1
Average 1
Poor 0
Dont know 0
TOTAL 8
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
Excellent Very good Average Poor Don't know
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B) Will you be willing to sign a long term contract with NDPL
Options No. of respondents
Yes 6
No 2
TOTAL 8
yes
no
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CHAPTER 5
CONCLUSION AND SUGGESTION
Conclusion Finding and Conclusion
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Conclusion
The present report was an attempt to study the choice of people in Delhi with regard to the
Electricity services used by them. The chief objective was to study the customer satisfaction.
In order to achieve targets, collected a sample of 25 persons. The primary data is collected
through a structured questionnaire.
Analysis of data revealed that mostly the customers are satisfied with the electricity services they
are using and 32% people are willing to change the service provider if they get an option to
change it.
And in the case of paying extra or signing a long term contract for better service some are
willing to do that and some are not.
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Findings and Recommendations
FINDINGS
Some findings which we observed after conducting the survey are:
1. As more than 60 % consumers are satisfied with their service provider so, only32% are willing to change their service provider if they get an option to do it.
2. Not much consumers are willing to pay extra or sign a contract for a better servicethey prefer to get a better service at a lower or same price.
3. Almost every consumer uses an inverter as an alternative source of energy andfew use Generators as an alternative.
4. The average load which is required by an individual is 5KW and almost 87% ofthe total sample do not want increase their load in the future.
5. We also found that more than 87% of customers do not require more load in thecoming future
6. 75% of customers rated excellent for quality of electricity service provided by NDPL.
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RECOMMENDATION
As our main objective was to find out the customers who are willing to change their service
provider, we have analyzed that more than 30% customers are willing to do that. And as there
are potential customers company needs to make the people aware about the quality of services
and tariff in so that the customers choose their company and they can do this by:
1. Doing promotions in area where they are not providing service
2. Advertising about their company through print media and TV advertisements
3. Putting up banners in different areas
4. Promoting the company services through Radio.
The company can also make people more aware about the benefits which they can avail if they
are willing to pay premium for a better electricity service and use this as a promotion tool. And
the can also get a better reliability.
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QUESTIONNAIRE
Name:________________________ Address:_______________________________________
City:_________________________ Occupation:____________________________________
Pin No:______________________ Post: _______________________________________
Age: _________________________ Ph No: _______________________________________
1) Who is your electricity service provider? (Please Tick)1) NDPL 2) BSES Rajdhani
3) BSES Yamuna 4) NDMC
2) Let us consider the overall quality of services offered by your electricity
company.please tell how you would rate the overall quality of the services offered.
(Please Tick)
1) Excellent 2) Very Good 3) Average
4) Poor 5) Dont know
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3) How many power cuts/outages do you experience? (Please Tick)1) 1 per day 2) 2 to 3 per day
3) More than 3 per day 4) Dont know/Cant say
4) How much load of electricity are you using?1) 02 KW 2) 24 KW
3) 46 KW 4) more than 6 KW
5) Could you tell me the average duration of a power cut? (Please Tick)1) Less than hour 2) - 1 hours
3) 12 hours 4) 26 hours
6) From what alternative source do you avail power backup during power cuts/outages?(Please Tick)
1) DG (Diesel Generator) 2) Inverter
3) UPS 4) Others (Specify)_______
7) What is the average cost of electricity you think you pay based on your electricitytariff and running of DG sets per month? (Please Tick)
1) 2 to 3 Rs 2) 4 to 5 Rs
3) 6 to 7 Rs 4) Greater than 7 Rs
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8) What is the average hour of Outage Experienced in a Month? (Please Tick)1) 0 to 15 hours 2) 15 to 30 hours
3) 30 to 90 hours 4) more than 90 hours
9) How much are you paying for electricity per Unit in approx?1) Rs 1 to 2 2) Rs 2 to 4
3) Rs 4 to 6 4) Rs 6 to 8
10)If you have an option of having more than one electricity company to choose from,Would you still continue with your current service provider?
1) Yes 2) No
If your answer is no to previous question than continue
A) What is your perception about the quality of electricity service provided by NDPL?1) Excellent 2) Very Good 3) Average
4) Poor 5) Dont know
B) If you are to pay a premium for higher reliability of power, will you take thatoption? (Please Tick)
1) Yes 2) No
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C) Will you be willing to sign a long term contract with NDPL for improvingreliability of a person? (Please Tick)
1) Yes 2) No
D) What is the price you would be willing to pay on an average for 100% reliablepower?
(Please express in Rs.) ? _____________________________
E) Do you plan add new units/increase load within the next two years? (Please Tick)1) Yes 2) No
F) If answer to above is yes, what is the increase expected
MW Addition_____________
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
BOOKS AND REFERENCE AUTHOR
Marketing management T N CHABRA(1999)
NEWSPAPER:
Hindustan times Times of India Economic Times
INTERNET:
http://www.ndpl.com/ http://www.bsesdelhi.com/ http://www.pgvcl.com/ http://www.derc.gov.in/
http://www.ndpl.com/http://www.pgvcl.com/http://www.pgvcl.com/http://www.derc.gov.in/http://www.derc.gov.in/http://www.derc.gov.in/http://www.pgvcl.com/http://www.ndpl.com/