In this January 25, 2016, file photo, a passenger talks on the phone as American Airlines jets sit parked at the gate at Washington’s Ronald Reagan National Airport. Airlines are increasingly using personal data about passengers to enhance the passenger experience. Susan Walsh / Associated Press
Airlines are really good at some thingsâlike people movement, aircraft maintenance, and keeping passengers safe. Theyâre also experts at collecting vast mountains of customer data, including what sorts of credit cards and computers you use, how often you fly, and where and how much you spend on all the extras.
If youâre stressing over a tight connection, flight attendants can usually tell you which gate to run toward, how much time you have, and whether your next flight is on time. But they may also know if you were stuck in Buffalo for six hours last week because of a delay, and offer a personal apology. They can even tap their data hoard to make sure thereâs plenty of red for the 2 million-miler who drinks only cabernet, or upgrade the woman on standby who got stuck in economy because she usually flies first class.
The swankiest hotels have long employed this strategy: If you feel special and loved, maybe youâll come back. Now the airlines have jumped on the bandwagon.
The industry has long envisioned a day when it could make use of all the information itâs accumulated on you. That data has traditionally been segregated in various IT systems, but now many airlines are gradually funneling it into a customer service strategyâwith flight attendants becoming the face of hyper-personalized service.
âWe have enough data about who you are, where you fly, and more importantly, over the last period of time when weâve delayed you, canceled you, made you change your seat, spilled coffee on youâwe have the points of failure and the points of success,â Oscar Munoz, chief executive of United Continental Holdings Inc., said Nov. 9 at a conference sponsored by the New York Times. âI think our customers need better service and better personalization today. And thatâs what weâre focusing on.â
âIf they know my birthday, what else do they know about me?â
But as they probe these new capabilities, some carriers are confronting a nettlesome question: How much personal data can be used to enhance customer service before slipping into the âtoo much informationâ realm, where a traveler may feel uncomfortable?
In April, Delta Air Lines Inc.âs 23,000 flight attendants began using new software called SkyPro on their Nokia Lumia mobile devices to keep tabs on some basic customer information. Youâll get an apology if your flight last week was delayed, for example. Or a thank you if you just hit 200,000 miles for the year. Or, say, a flight attendant spills some coffee on your skirt: The tools will allow him to award you some frequent flier miles or a future travel voucher on the spot.
On the Nokia devices, each seat of a flight is color-coded. A green thumbs-up for passengers Delta wants to thank or congratulate, a red check if the airline wants to apologize for a recent service mishap.
American Airlines Group Inc., the worldâs largest carrier, equips its 24,000 flight attendants with Samsung Galaxy Note devices. Early next year, American will release a new app called iSolve to let flight attendants dispense frequent-flier miles or a travel voucher to help resolve customer service issues onboard. Unitedâs flight attendants also track tight connections, mileage milestones and other customer matters with company-issued iPhones.
âWe want to stay one step ahead of them, if you will, by using our big data when things go wrong or when things are going great,â said Allison Ausband, Deltaâs senior vice president of in-flight service.
Like other carriers debating how to employ âbig dataâ through new digital tools, Delta is exploring where the creepy factor lies in all this customer insight. For example, should a flight attendant wish you a happy birthday? What about appearing with a bloody mary because you ordered the drink on nine of your last 10 flights? What if youâre sitting beside your boss this time? And should flight attendantsâ notes on high-value customers be updated and distributed companywide?
Right now, theyâre not, but what has begun as making use of information they had anyway could soon become a targeted accumulation of data on your travel persona.
Do we want to feel like weâre under the microscope every time we fly? Will we order that second drink? Even watch a racy movie? Entertainment isnât being tracked as of yet, but creating a big brother environment may not make for happy customers, which after all, is the point of the exercise.
âItâs a feel-good thing, but itâs also in the mind of the consumer, âIf they know my birthday, what else do they know about me?ââ said John Romantic, Americanâs managing director of flight service.
On Delta flights, there are no happy birthdays or unbidden cocktailsâyet. The carrier is âgradually increasing the number of data elements the customer is comfortable with us interacting on,â Ausband said. The larger, more immediate goal is âto make sure they know that they do matter to us, whether theyâre in 32B or sitting in 1A.â
Mallory Brown, a 10-year Delta flight attendant, said customers have responded well to the apologies and thank yous sheâs delivered. âThey were impressed by it,â said Brown, who also helps develop the carrierâs on-board service curriculum. âIt went so well that the surrounding passengers started talking about it.â
Atlanta-based Delta considers its knowledge of customersâ preferences a âstrategic advantage,â Ausband said. The airline is also trying to increase its number of daily ârecognition events,â which vary based on flight duration and whether a route is more of a business or leisure market.
âThroughout the cabin there are pockets of next-generation business travelers who are going to be high spendersâ
Delta is hardly alone when it comes to using its customer intelligence, with every big international airline exploring how to tailor its approach more specifically.
Flight attendants at British Airways, part of the International Consolidated Airlines Group SA, have used iPads since 2011. The airline developed more than 40 apps for various customer service aspects of a journey, including those that allow cabin staff to recognize âhigh-tier customers,â spokeswoman Caroline Titmuss said.
Via the iPads, a flight attendant can also note troublesâsuch as whether a specific meal order wasnât deliveredâso that the airline will offer an additional apology after the flight.
Two years ago, Singapore Airlines Ltd. cabin crews began using tablets to customize their service and to create digital âvoyage reportsâ after each flight.
In this service landscape, many airlines will also grapple with how widely to distribute this kind of digital interaction. Is it wiser to focus on the âhigh-valueâ customers in premium cabins or attempt to include the entire airplane? Flight attendant time, after all, is a very finite resource.
âWe donât think itâs either-or,â said Dave OâFlanagan, chief executive of Dublin-based Boxever Ltd., which sells customer service software and services for the travel industry. âThatâs the way people have thought about the two previously. Weâre pretty passionate about loyalty for everybody.â
While business and first class make up the bulk of full-service airline profits, and not coincidentally accrue the most bespoke services, OâFlanagan contends that âthroughout the cabin there are pockets of next-generation business travelers who are going to be high spenders.â
One Asia airline that employs Boxever even plans to offer immediate upgrades if your luggage gets mislaid, OâFlanagan said, owing to the rapid evolution of bag-tracking technologies. As carriers develop greater proficiency in coordinating customer data, expect to see more personal apologiesâand free drinks or bonus milesâawarded on board. You might even get a happy birthday wishâwithout mentioning your age, of course.
âTo the customer it says, âI matter,ââ Ausband said. ââI am sitting on this airplane with 200 people, but I matter.ââ
©2017 Bloomberg L.P.
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