Evaluating Customer Satisfaction for Training Provider: A case study in Johor Bahru

Similar documents
The Relationship between Perceived Service Quality and Fishermen Satisfaction

Impact of Service Quality of Internet Banking on Customer Satisfaction in Kegalle District

ROLE OF CUSTOMER SERVICE QUALITY IN CUSTOMER SATISFACTION: AN EMPIRICAL STUDY OF SELECT TELECOM SERVICE PROVIDERS IN NCR

Service Quality in Post Office Saving Banks

Customer Satisfaction: A Comparative Study of Public and Private Sector Banks in Bangladesh

[POM 8] CUSTOMER SATISFACTION ON BANK ISLAM SERVICES AMONG UUM STUDENTS

Service Quality in Restaurants: a case study in a Portuguese resort

THE PRACTICAL APPROACH FOR TESTING MEASUREMENT INVARIANCE ACROSS GENDER ISSUE FOR THE EMPATHY ITEMS IN SERVQUAL SCALE

Examining the Impact of Perceived Service Quality Dimensions on Repurchase Intentions and Word Of Mouth: A Case from Software Industry of Pakistan

Study on Service Satisfaction of Rotary Club Members by Importance-Satisfaction Model

The Relationship Between Service Quality and Customer Satisfaction in the Telecommunication Industry: Evidence From Nigeria

AN EVALUATION OF SERVICE QUALITY AND CUSTOMER S SATISFACTION OF GENERAL INSURANCE COMPANIES IN SURAT CITY: A STUDY BASED ON SERVQUAL GAP MODEL

Service Quality in Malaysian Higher Education: Adult Learners Perspective

STUDY ON CUSTOMER SERVICE QUALITY OF COMMERCIAL BANKS IN CHENNAI CITY

APPLICATION OF THE PSYCHOLOGICAL CONTINUUM MODEL TO UNDERSTAND CUSTOMERS INVOLVEMENT AND SATISFACTION IN A FITNESS CENTER

CUSTOMER SATISFACTION INDEX IN MULTI BRAND CAR SERVICE CENTRE ACROSS KARNATAKA

Job Satisfaction of Knowledge Workers in Croatian Companies

A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS ON THE SERVICE QUALITY PERCEPTIONS OF PHILIPPINE COMMERCIAL BANKS

International Journal of Current Trends in Engineering & Technology ISSN: Volume: 03, Issue: 06 (NOVEMBER -DECEMBER, 2017)

Using the SERVQUAL Model in Prediction of Customer Satisfaction in Czech Fitness Centres. Jan Šíma, Tomáš Ruda

Evaluating users experience of service performance using SERVPERF scale: A case study of some private university libraries in Bangladesh

Chapter 3. RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

Service Quality A Study with Special Reference to Tamil Nadu Public Sector Banks

Service Quality Management in the Insurance Industry on the Basis of Service Gap Model

Determination of Service Quality Factors of Private Commercial Banks in Bangladesh

AN ASSESSMENT AND ANALYSIS OF SERVICE QUALITY OF PRIVATE AND PUBLIC SECTOR BANKS OF LAHORE BY USING SERVPERF MODEL

Testing the Service Quality Provided by the University of Girne American Library

HEALTH CARE A PARADOX OF SERVICE QUALITY IN. An empirical study in the city of Coimbatore NIET. Journal of Management.

Expectation, Perception and Satisfaction with Service Quality A Mall Customer Insight Er Amit Kumar Sen Dr Manjusmita Dash

DETERMINANTS OF CUSTOMER EXPECTATIONS OF SERVICE: IMPLICATIONS FOR FOSTERING CUSTOMER SATISFACTION

Measurement of Service Quality using SERVQUAL model in a Mining Environment

DETERMINATION OF USERS SATISFACTION LEVEL REGARDING THE QUALITY OF E-SERVICES PROVIDED BY BOGDAN-VODĂ UNIVERSITY

International Business & Economics Research Journal December 2009 Volume 8, Number 12

Literature Review of Customer Service Value and Building Customer Value Model under the Internet Service Situation

SERVICE QUALITY OF PUBLIC AND PRIVATE SECTOR BANKS IN TIRUNELVELI DISTRICT

Gender and employees job satisfaction-an empirical study from a developing country

SATISFACTION OF MARKETING/MANAGEMENT STUDENTS IN HIGHER EDUCATION

R am duth Teeluckdharry

LITERATURE REVIEW Mishra et al., 2010 Reeves and Bednar (1994)

International Journal of Management (IJM), ISSN (Print), ISSN (Online), Volume 2, Issue 2, May- July (2011), pp.

A Model for Service Quality and Customer Satisfaction of Mobile Commerce

CUSTOMER SATISFACTION INDEX (CSI) AMONG FOUR WHEELER DEALERS ACROSS KARNATAKA

An Empirical Study on the Drivers of E-Commerce Business

ANALYZING STRUCTURAL RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN SERVICE QUALITY, DISCONFIRMATION, SATISFACTION AND LOYALTY

Customer Perception of Banking Service Quality: A Study on Jamuna Bank Limited in Sylhet City

Issues in Information Systems Volume 14, Issue 2, pp , 2013

Impact of Service Quality on Customer Satisfaction at AXIS Bank

Measuring Service Quality using Servqual Model in Pakistan

Measuring Service Quality of the Leisure Winery Industry:A Taiwan Based Study 李瑾玲觀光與休閒事業管理系. Abstract

customer repurchase intention

CHAPTER 2 LITERATURE REVIEW. This chapter discusses the literature review concerning the service quality

CHAPTER 3 RESEARCH METHODOLOGY. This chapter describes the methodology of the study. The research hypotheses are first

ASSOCIATION FOR CONSUMER RESEARCH

Factors affecting organizational commitment of employee s of Lao development bank

Examination of Green IT Adoption in Organizations: Based on the Expectation Disconfirmation Theory

Service Quality and Customer Satisfaction: Evidence of Nepalese Banks

International Journal of Management (IJM), ISSN (Print), ISSN (Online), Volume 4, Issue 4, July-August (2013)

Investigating Television News Service Quality Dimensions: A Factor Analysis Approach

Identifying Strategic Factors of Service Quality in Organized Retail Sector

THE IMPACT OF SERVICE QUALITY ON CUSTOMER LOYALTY: A STUDY OF PHARMACEUTICAL FIRMS

NBR E-JOURNAL, Volume 1, Issue 1 (Jan-Dec 2015) ISSN EVALUATION OF TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT FOR ORGANIZATIONAL COMPETITIVENESS

The Relationship among Brand Personality, Brand Image, and Perceived Service Quality

Measuring service quality and a comparative analysis in the passenger carriage of airline industry

Service Quality of Hotel: Weighted Average SERVQUAL Method

Service Quality Analysis of Indian Life Insurance Companies. Chapter-V COMPANIES. 5.1 Service Quality: Conceptualization and Operationalization

CHAPTER 7: BUSINESS SKILLS FOR TECHNICAL PROFESSIONALS

Exploring the Relationships between Contemporary Career Orientations and Atypical Employment

MEASURING SERVICE QUALITY LEVEL IN THE JORDANIAN TELECOMMUNICATION SECTOR FROM ITS CUSTOMERS PERSPECTIVE USING THE SERVPERF SCALE

ISSN AnggreinyTatuil, The Impact of Service...

The Role of Knowledge Management Infrastructure in the Quality of Electronic Services: Applied Study in the Jordanian Banking Sector

ABHINAV NATIONAL MONTHLY REFEREED JOURNAL OF REASEARCH IN COMMERCE & MANAGEMENT

Journal of Management and Marketing Review

Service Quality Models: A Review

Relationship Between Employee Motivation And Performance Of The Employees Working In Retail Sector In Jaipur Dr. Neha Sharma, Ms.

MEASURING SERVICE QUALITY IN THE TAKAFUL INDUSTRY. Farah Sahul Hamid SEGi College Penang, Penang, Malaysia. ABSTRACT

Importance-Peformance Analysis in A Selected Multi-speciality Hospital - Patients' Perception

Importance-Performance Analysis of Attractiveness Assessment for Festival: A Case of Sobaeksan Royal Azalea Festival

CHAPTER 3 RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

The Importance-Performance Analysis: an Evaluation of Tourist Satisfaction with the Destination Attributes

Establishment of Performance Evaluation Model for the Bank Industry Service Quality

FACTORS EFFECTING CONSUMER PREFERENCES IN AIRLINE INDUSTRY

Customers' Perspective towards Customer Relationship Management with reference to Service Quality: A Study of Indian Public and Private Sector Banks

A STUDY ON TO ANALYSE THE CUSTOMER SATISFACTION TOWARDS BAJAJ BIKE WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO KANCHIPURAM DISTRICT

Measuring the performance of G2G services in Iran

International Research Journal of Interdisciplinary & Multidisciplinary Studies (IRJIMS)

SSRG International Journal of Economics and Management Studies (SSRG-IJEMS) volume4 issue4 April 2017

SERVICE DELIVERY AND DRIVERS OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION AS DETERMINANTS OF PUBLIC RELATIONS OF FOOD ESTABLISHMENTS IN REGION XI.

The Service Quality Analysis of Public Transportation System using PZB Model- Dynamic Bus Information System

A study on customers perceptions towards ICICI bank services

Effect of Website Features on Online Relationship Marketing in Digikala Online Store (Provider of Digital Products and Home Appliances)

THE IMPORTANCE OF CREATING CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIPS IN THE SERVICE ENCOUNTER

Service Quality, Customer Satisfaction and Performance Evaluation of BAS Employees of Kaohsiung City, Kaohsiung County and Pingtung County

COMMONWEALTH JOURNAL OF COMMERCE & MANAGEMENT RESEARCH CUSTOMER EXPECTATION AND PERCEPTION IN TELECOMMUNICATION SECTOR: AN EMPIRICAL STUDY OF UDAIPUR

CPMD CUSTOMER SERVICE LECTURE 3 BUILDING CUSTOMER SERVICE QUALITY

Measuring Customer Satisfaction in the Retail Banking Sector of Iran Using RATER Model

Consumer s perceptions of service experience and service quality of a strategic alliance network. Vikrant JANAWADE

A STUDY ON ASSESSMENT OF SERVICE QUALITY BY TRAVEL AGENTS IN THE STATE OF PUNJAB

A Review of Customer Loyalty Models in Hotel Services and Research Model in Vietnam

Impact of Service Quality on Customer Satisfaction: A Study of Hotel Industry of Faisalabad, Pakistan

16 WTO t PZB SERVQUAL

Transcription:

Evaluating Customer Satisfaction for Training Provider: case study in Johor ahru nizan. 1, Saiful I.S 2,and K. Khairul Za im 3 1 Universiti Kuala Lumpur (MITEC), Malaysia, ezan.comp@yahoo.com 2 Universiti Kuala Lumpur (MITEC), Malaysia, msaiful@mitec.unikl.edu.my 3 Universiti Kuala Lumpur (MITEC), Malaysia, khairulzaim@mitec.unikl.edu.my STRCT This study focused on level of customer satisfaction for training provider by using SERVQUL method. This study was conducted in Johor ahru(mpc J, FMM J and SIRIM J).The objectives of this study are to determine the level of customer satisfaction for training provider and also to find the most anticipated service quality dimensions (based on SERVQUL) for training provider. The method used in this study is a modified SERVQUL based questionnaire using LIKERT SCLE for data collection. The data collection was conducted in Johor ahru area where the respondents have attended training or received service from any of the three mentioned training providers. Mean analysis statistical is then used to analyze the data. Finally the level of customer satisfaction for the related training provider was obtained and it was found that there are three dimensions (tangible, reliability and empathy) needed quality of improvement in order for the training provider to increase their customer satisfaction and directly improve to excellent service. Keywords: SERVQUL, customer satisfaction, training provider. I INTRODUCTION Companies in Malaysia have been providing training to their human force in ensuring their competitiveness and sustainability in the chaos of economy nowadays. The assistant of Human Resources Development by the government enhance the value of K-knowledge and skill of local personnel. This will ensure the investment from domestic and international companies to our shore in order to derive our growth of economy. Certain employers allocate a big amount of money for their employees training and upgrading of skills. Training programs are costly in money, but also in time. Therefore, they should be evaluated carefully to determine the effects, and to decide whether they should be improved or should be continued (Herman and Karin, 21). There are a lot of sources have been used for training by training provider. The level of satisfaction of customer and the effectiveness of the training is a critical factor to the company for human resources planning. Service quality is about ensuring customers, both internal and external, to get what they want. Customer satisfaction is the feeling or attitude of a customer towards a product or service after it has been used. Satisfaction and service quality are often treated together as functions of customer s perceptions and expectations. Training provider provide training for trainer while, training is a service to give to their customer. Service quality is determined by the differences between customer s expectations of services provider s performance and their evaluation of the services they received (Parasuraman et al.,1985, 1988). In this context, the term of training refers to the acquisition of knowledge, skills, and competencies as a result of the teaching of vocational or practical skills and knowledge that relate to specific useful competencies. In other word, training entails personal involvement, commitment and experiential gains. Training involves learning by doing. Training aims to provide human force with proficiency in the execution of given tasks. Training is important for several reasons. In addition, trainings are purposive and meant to equip the human forces with the necessary skills or to upgrade skills that are required for particular jobs. The major advantage of trainings is the trained work forces need lesser supervision than those who are not. trainee acquires new knowledge, skills and attitudes and applies them in job situations. Training is a key strategy for generating skills in people, since it enables them to both learn and unlearn skills in other words, to acquire new skills and change inappropriate skills (Pilar Pineda, 21). Services are intangible and heterogeneous. Thus, it is extremely difficult to assess. There are other researchers who have looked into the importance of customer satisfaction. Kotler (2) defined satisfaction as: Knowledge Management International Conference (KMICe) 212, Johor ahru, Malaysia, 4 6 July 212 364

a person s feeling of pleasure or disappointment resulting from comparing a product s perceived performance (or outcome) in relation to his or her expectations. Hoyer and MacInnis (21) said that satisfaction can be associated with feelings of acceptance, happiness, relief, excitement, and delight. Simply stated, customer satisfaction is a customer feels when comparing his expectations with the actual quality of product or service provided. The advantage to determine the levels of customer satisfaction is to understand the customer s feeling and perceptions. These result are also able to identify areas for improvement and make the necessary changes. The most obvious reason why companies have to worry about customer s satisfaction is they need customers to be ready to repurchase their services in the future (Olga V. Krivobokova, 29). Quality = Customer satisfaction = Value / Cost Excellent service quality and high customer satisfaction are important issues and challenges for the service industry (Hung et al., 23). This paper endeavors to fill the gap in the service quality which determines customer satisfaction by exploring the five dimensions of customer perceived service with expected service in the context of training provider in Johor ahru. II SERVQUL model LITERTURE REVIEW One of the most popular models, SERVQUL used in service was developed by Parasuraman et al (1985, 1988). SERVQUL is based on the perception gap between the received service and the expected service, and has been widely adopted for explaining customer perception of the service (K. Ravichandran,. Tamil Mani, S. run Kumar & S. Prabhakaran, 21). Studies on service quality have extensively examined service quality measurement to help superiors effectively manage service quality delivery (Parasuraman et al., 1988; abakus and oller, 1992; olton and Drew, 1991; Cronin and Taylor, 1992; Yang, 27).The SERVQUL model has been widely used by service providers in various industries to assess key quality attributes with a view to devising strategies for quality improvement (Parasuraman et al., 1998). The SERVQUL instrument enables providers to ascertain perceived service quality by calculating a so-called gap between customers expectations of the service they would receive and their perceptions of the service they actually receive (Parasuraman et al., 1988, 1991). Training Training may be defined as the systematic acquisition of skills, rules, concepts, or attitudes that should result in improved performance of the trainee (amodt, 27). Training is often necessary to find a new job or to be successful in your career in an organization (Herman and Karin, 21). Training is the key strategy for generating skills in people, since it enables them to both learn and unlearn skills in other words, to acquire new skills and change inappropriate skills (Pilar Pineda, 21). s illustrated by the preceding scenario, training sessions which deal with soft skills topics such as diversity and quality are often quite entertaining but seldom involve the kinds of hands on experiences that help employees translate awareness into action. Training should involve tangible, hands on skills and observable behaviors (aron W. Hughey and Kenneth J. Mussnug, 1997). Evaluation of training Evaluation has become a very important task for the organization, and there are several very sound reasons to start to put more effort into it (t-thari and Zairi, 22). The evaluation of training in organizations is to mean the analysis of the total value of the training system or action in both social and financial terms, in order to obtain information on the achievement of its objectives and overall cost benefit ratio of training, which in turn guides decision making (Pilar Pineda, 21). Customer satisfaction Satisfaction is closely linked with the quality of the product or service received. The process of improving quality has to be aimed at consumers. The manufacturer must do the following (Olga V. Krivobokova, 29): - Identify customers and define their requirements for products; - Transform the customer requirements into technical terms; - Identify the stages in the technological process of manufacturing products, and develop criteria of the process; - ssess the results and the level of customer satisfaction. Knowledge Management International Conference (KMICe) 212, Johor ahru, Malaysia, 4 6 July 212 365

Customer satisfaction means the satisfaction degrees of customers purchasing commodities. Under electronic commerce, how to raise the consumers degree of satisfaction and gain the consumers loyalty has become the key factor relating with whether e-commerce enterprise can survive (Minghe Wang, Peide Liu and GuoliOu, 27). Therefore, customer satisfaction must be translated into a number of measurable models to evaluate customer satisfaction level and organizational operating efficiency (Shun-Hsing Chen, Tsu-Ming Yeh and Chee-Cheng Chen, 211). Providing high quality services and improving customer satisfaction are widely recognized as fundamental factors boosting the performances of companies in the hotel and tourism industry. III METHODOLOGY To find if customers are happy with the products and services they are receiving, an organization must implement a metric for tracking customer satisfaction. This can be done by using a SERVQUL questionnaire. The SERVQUL is an instrument for measuring gap between customer s expectations of the service they receive and their perceptions of the service they actually receive with respect to five dimensions of SERVQUL scale. Primary data was collected and an undisguised structured questionnaire, SERVQUL by Parasuraman was used for the study. Figure1. Methodology process number which respondent can choose to show how much they agree with the statement. IV EMPIRICL FINDING The questionnaire consists of open ended question, close ended question and question use LIKERT SCLE. Part consists of five demographic variables investigated in this study. There are gender, profession, position, salary and training provider that the respondents have attended the training before. The demographics of the final sample are shown in Table 1. The majority of the respondents (73.4%) were male, and almost half (49.3%) from manufacturing profession as an executive (61.2%). Some (51.8%) get 3 until 4999 of salary. The most popular training provider is MPC (53.3%). Table 1.Demographic of sample. Items Detail Percentage (%) Male 73.4 Gender Female 26.6 Manufacturing 49.3 Education 19.2 Profession Construction 31.5 Position Salary Training provider Non executive Executive Manager elow 999 1-2999 3-4999 5-6999 7 and above MPC FMM SIRIM 27.7 61.2 11.1 9.2 29.4 51.8 9.6 53.3 25.6 21.1 Part has a set of statements relate to respondent feelings about training provider using LIKERT SCLE rating. The set has 44 statements. Statement 1a until 22a is for expected service quality of training provider and statements 1b until 22b is for received service quality of training provider. The values of the five dimensions (tangible, reliability, responsiveness, assurance and empathy) show the statements pertaining to the dimension. The questionnaire uses Likert scales (seven levels) to evaluate according to any kind of subjective or objective criteria and followed by a series of Knowledge Management International Conference (KMICe) 212, Johor ahru, Malaysia, 4 6 July 212 366

PERCENTGE(%) PERCENTGE(%) PERCENTGE(%) PERCENTGE(%) PERCENTGE(%) Figure 2. Tangibles R GRPH OF PERTINING TO THE TNGILES 1 5 1 2 3 4 ar graph represents the tangible result for statement from 1 until 4. Figure 3. Reliability R CHRT OF PERTINING TO THE RELIILITY Figure 5. ssurance R GRPH OF PERTINING TO THE SSURNCE 8 6 4 2 ar graph represents the assurance result for statement from 14 until 17. 14 15 16 17 Figure 6. Empathy R GRPH OF PERTINING TO THE EMPTHY 8 6 4 2 5 6 7 8 9 ar graph represents the reliability result for statement from 5 until 9. 8 6 4 2 18 19 2 21 22 1 Figure 4. Responsiveness R GRPH OF PERTINING TO THE RESPONSIVENESS ar graph represents the responsiveness result for statement from 18 until 22. The result shows the level of customer satisfaction which depends on the five dimensions measured. From that, it can determine which dimension is very important for customer. 5 1 11 12 13 ar graph represents the responsiveness result for statement from 1 until 13. Knowledge Management International Conference (KMICe) 212, Johor ahru, Malaysia, 4 6 July 212 367

PERCENTGE(%) V CONCLUSION Figure 7.SERVQUL five dimensions. R GRPH OF 5 DIMENSION DIFFERENT ETWEEN EXPECTED ND CTUL 1 8 6 4 2 65% EXPECTED 58% 85% 73% CTUL 61% 62% 65% DIMENSIONS 67% 78% 72% The extent of the quality disconfirmation in five dimensions is based on the order from the highest different to the lowest different, as follows: reliability (11%), tangibles (7%), empathy (6%), responsiveness (-4%), and assurance (-5%).From this result, 3 dimensions can be improved like tangible, reliability and empathy. The tangible of training provider is the second factor to be improved by training provider which has less in appearance of physical facilities, equipment and communication for their expected customer. The most dimensions that were not fulfilled customer satisfaction are reliability. The training provider should be able to perform the promised service dependably and accurately for customer to be satisfied. REFERENCES amodt, M.G. (27), Industrial/Organizational Psychology. n pplied pproach, 5 th ed. aron W. Hughey and Kenneth J. Mussnug, (1997). Designing effective employee training programmes. Training for Quality hmad l-thari and Zairi, (22), Training Evaluation: an empirical study in Kuwait. Journal of European Industrial Training abakus E, oller GW (1992). n empirical assessment of the SERVQUL scale. J. us. Res., 24(3): 253-268. olton R, Drew J (1991). multistage model of customers assessments of service quality and value. J. Consum. Res., 17(4):375-384. Cronin JJ, Taylor S (1992). Measuring service quality: reexamination and extension. J. Mark., 56(3): 55-68. Herman Steensma and Karin Groeneveld. (21). Evaluating a training using the four levels model. Journal of Workplace Learning, Vol. 22No5. Hoyer, W. D. &MacInnis, D. J., 21, Consumer ehaviour.2nd ed., oston, Houghton Mifflin Company. Hung YH, Huang ML, Chen KS (23).Service quality evaluation by service quality performance matrix. Total Qual. Manage. us. Excel., 14(1): 79-89. Kotler, P., 2, Marketing Management.1 th ed., New Jersey, Prentice-Hall. K. Ravichandran,. Tamil Mani, S. run Kumar & S. Prabhakaran. (21). Influence of Service Quality on Customer Satisfaction pplication of Servqual Model.International Journal of usiness and Management Vol. 5, No. 4 Olga V. Krivobokova. (29). Evaluating Customer Satisfaction as an spect of Quality Management. World cademy of Science, Engineering and Technology 53 29. Parasuraman,., Zeithaml, V.., & erry, L. L. (1985). conceptual model of service quality and its implications for future research.journal of Marketing, 49, 41-5. Parasuraman,., Zeithaml, V.., & erry, L. L. (1988).SERVQUL: multiple-item scale for measuring con- sumer perceptions of service quality. Journal of Retailing, 64, 12-4. Parasuraman,., Zeithaml, V.., & erry, L. L. (1994). Reassessment of expectations as a comparisonstandard in measuring service quality: Implications for further re- search. Journal of Marketing, 58, 111-124. Pilar Pineda. (21). Evaluation of training in organizations: a proposal for an integrated model. Journal of European Industrial Training, Vol.34 No. 7 Shun-Hsing Chen, Tsu-Ming Yeh andchee-cheng Chen, (211), Integration SERVQUL model and performance control matrix to improve service quality for the hot spring. frican Journal of ussiness Management Vol. 5(13), pp. 5378-5387. Yang CC (27). systems approach to service development in a concurrent engineering environment.serv. Ind. J., 27(5): 635-652. Zeithaml, V.. (2). Service quality, profitability, and the economic worth of customers: what we know and what we need to learn. Journal of the cademy of Marketing Science, Vol. 28 No. 1, pp. 67-85. Zeithaml, V.., erry, L. L., &Parasuraman,. (1996).The behavioral consequences of Service quality.journal of Marketing, Vol. 6 pril, pp. 31-46. Knowledge Management International Conference (KMICe) 212, Johor ahru, Malaysia, 4 6 July 212 368