By the end of this topic you will be able to:
- Deliver a professional greeting to every customer who arrives on the forecourt.
- Apply the elements of a service greeting: acknowledge, smile, greet, ask.
- Adapt your greeting appropriately for different types of customers.
- Understand why the first 10 seconds of a customer interaction determine the entire experience.
Why the Greeting Matters
Research consistently shows that customers form an impression of a business within the first 7–10 seconds of arriving. At a petrol station, the petrol attendant is the face of the brand. A warm, professional greeting:
- Makes the customer feel welcome and valued.
- Sets the tone for a smooth, positive transaction.
- Differentiates a station from competitors — it is a key reason customers return.
- Increases the likelihood of upselling (e.g. “Can I check your oil today?”).
The ASGA Greeting Framework
A consistent professional greeting follows four elements:
| Letter | Element | Example |
|---|---|---|
| A | Acknowledge | Make eye contact and move towards the vehicle as it arrives — don’t wait. |
| S | Smile | A genuine smile — not forced. Open, friendly, approachable body language. |
| G | Greet | “Good morning! / Good afternoon! Welcome to [Station Name].” |
| A | Ask | “How can I help you today? / What will it be — petrol or diesel?” |
Full Greeting Script — Example
[Attendant moves promptly to vehicle, makes eye contact, smiles]
“Good morning! Welcome to [Station]. How can I assist you today?”
[Customer: “Fill up with 95 please.”]
“Certainly! ULP 95, fill it up. Will that be cash or card today?”
[Customer responds. Attendant begins fuelling]
“While your tank is filling, may I check your oil and water for you?”
Common Greeting Mistakes to Avoid
| Poor Practice | Why It’s a Problem | Better Alternative |
|---|---|---|
| Ignoring the customer until they call out | Makes customer feel invisible; creates frustration | Acknowledge the vehicle the moment it pulls in |
| Monotone, robotic greeting | Feels insincere; no connection made | Vary tone; show genuine interest |
| Chatting to colleagues while customer waits | Signals that the customer is not a priority | Always prioritise the customer over personal conversation |
| Using slang or informal language | Can seem disrespectful; not universally understood | Use clear, respectful, professional language |
Adapting to Different Customers
- Regular customers: Use their name if you know it. “Morning Mr Dlamini, the usual?”
- Elderly customers: Speak clearly; offer extra assistance with the window, checking under bonnet, etc.
- Customers in a hurry: Acknowledge their urgency: “I’ll get this done quickly for you.”
- Foreign or non-English speaking customers: Use simple, clear language; hand signals if needed; remain patient.
- Unhappy customers: Maintain your smile and professional tone — do not match negative energy.
- What do the four letters A-S-G-A stand for in the greeting framework?
- How should you greet a customer who appears to be in a hurry?
- Why is the first 10 seconds of a customer interaction so important?
📚 Additional Resources
📖 Further Reading
🎬 Watch: How to Greet Customers in Retail
Learn the right way to greet customers in a retail environment — techniques that put customers at ease and create a positive first impression.

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