Bovis Homes has set aside £7m to
compensate customers who were sold houses that were unfinished and had
electrical and plumbing faults.
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The house builder said the recent
experiences of a significant number of customers "fell below the high
standards they rightly expected".
To tackle the problem Bovis is introducing a series of measures to improve customer service.
It announced a 3% fall in pre-tax profits for last year to £154.7m.
However, revenue was up 11% to £1,1bn and the number of homes completed rose 1% to 3,977.
Shares slid more than 8% to 772p.
In its results statement
Bovis said its "ambitious growth strategy" over the past five years had
led to "progressively developing operational challenges".
"Our
customer service standards have been declining for some time and
combined with the delays to production towards the year end, we have
entered 2017 with a high level of customer service issues," said interim
chief executive Earl Sibley.
"Our customer service proposition
has failed to ensure that all of our customers receive the expected high
standard of care," he added.
The company said its production
processes had not been "sufficiently robust" to cope with its growth
strategy and resources shortages in the industry.
Also it said it
had not designed and resourced its customers service proposition and
process appropriately to "deliver a 'customer first' culture".
Chairman
Ian Tyler said the measures the group was introducing to tackle the
customer service problems meant Bovis would complete 10% to 15% fewer
houses in 2017 compared with last year, before returning to normal
levels.
"The fundamentals of the business remain strong, with our
market positioning reflected in our high quality southern biased land
bank," he said.
In January David Ritchie stepped down as chief executive after eight years in the role, weeks after warning over profits.
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