Lights on, nobody in!
I contacted the Institute of Customer Service (ICS) on 7 January 2026 after experiencing significant service failures, procedural barriers, and a lack of engagement with evidence in a case involving disability‑related detriment handled by an ICS‑accredited organisation.
Given the seriousness of those issues, I asked the ICS to clarify:
whether the Energy Ombudsman is currently an accredited organisational member of the Institute of Customer Service
whether accredited organisations are required to meet defined standards of complaint handling, accessibility, and customer engagement
whether there is a process for raising concerns when an accredited organisation appears not to meet those standards
As of today, I am still waiting for a reply — from an organisation whose homepage loudly proclaims: “SET THE PACE FOR CUSTOMER SERVICE.”
It’s a pace that clearly falls short of the Institute’s own expectations, and instead mirrors the growing trend of hollow award schemes: glossy badges that look impressive on a website but offer no meaningful assurance to the public. In this case, the accreditation feels less like a mark of excellence and more like a badge of shame.








