What do air travelers want?

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By Alexandra Marks

NEW YORK (The Christian Science Monitor) -- If Jane
Viscardi Brown had had her druthers over the holidays,
she would have hopped on JetBlue - the low-cost
airline that prides itself on high-quality customer
service.

But it doesn't fly from Myrtle Beach, S.C. So she took
Delta to San Francisco and back. And overall, despite
the packed airports and security screenings, it turned
out to be a rather pleasant experience. She credits,
at least in part, JetBlue and the other low-cost
carriers that are giving the older "legacy" carriers a
run for their money.

"Since Delta's going bankrupt, they've gotten much
nicer, and the perks have gotten much better," says
the South Carolina singer. "I admire them still being
cheerful after having to take pay cuts."

Thirty years after deregulation promised more
consumer-friendly skies, the success of low-cost
carriers is helping usher in an era of consumer-driven
experimentation. Whether it's free satellite TV, a
choice of "meal boxes," wireless Internet service, or
ergonomically correct seats, airlines are scrambling
to determine not only what customers want, but more
important, what they're willing to pay.

The flying public has made it clear that low fares are
king. So the race now is to determine what else will
draw them to one particular airline and keep them
loyal: Is it more legroom, a great frequent-flier
program, or more flexible fares?

With most legacy carriers either in bankruptcy or
struggling to avoid it, the answer to such questions
may determine which ones survive. Those that falter in
the consumers' eyes - like US Airways, with its
Christmas-weekend baggage meltdown and rash of
cancellations - may be the first to pay the ultimate
price: liquidation.

But in the end, experts believe this age of
experimentation may finally produce what the aviation
industry promised 30 years ago: business that is truly
market-driven and more consumer-friendly.

'Sustaining your existence'

"There's no question that the drive for innovation is
now unprecedented," says John Heimlich, chief
economist at the Air Transport Association, the major
airlines' lobbying arm. "Before, it was just about
improving your profit margin. Now, it's more about
sustaining your existence, so the consequences of
failure are more dire."

As in any transitional era, some of the
experimentation has produced big wins for consumers,
as well as a few public- relations snafus. On the
winning side are less restrictive fare regulations.
For decades, the major carriers tried to keep their
planes full with complex fare schedules and sometimes
infuriating requirements. To get a reasonably priced
ticket, one had to book at least two weeks in advance
and stay over on a Saturday night. Otherwise, the
flier had to pay business fares, which could be five
times as high as the leisure-class fares - even for a
seat in the same plane in the same row.

The innovative Southwests of the aviation world
recognized how much that frustrated consumers, and
they put in place much simpler fare schedules. Now,
anyone can walk up the same day of travel and pay a
reasonable price.

Such innovations have helped the low-cost carriers
capture as much as 30 percent of the market, a
critical mass that has forced the big six - American,
Continental, Delta, Northwest, United, and US Airways
- to change their ways. Most of the major airlines
have already simplified some of their fare schedules,
and some have experimented with doing away with the
Saturday-night stay on certain routes.

Delta is expected to announce later this month the
most radical changes yet in its fare structure. Once
Delta does this, aviation experts say, the other
legacy carriers will be close on their heels.

But some other airlines have had less than stellar
success with experiments. American made a big
public-relations splash in 2000 with its decision to
take out seats and add more legroom. Now, it's not
only reversed that decision, but it also recently
announced it was taking pillows off some short-haul
flights to save on the cost of cleaning them.

"When we do our customer research, they say their
first priority is a low airfare," says Tim Wagner, an
American spokesman. "The other things they may value
to some extent, but not to the extent that they want
them if they'll end up raising the price."

But others like Clint Oster, an aviation expert at the
University of Indiana at Bloomington, see it
differently. "That's one example of some of the
experimentation that's been mindless," he says.

Some of American's customers have noticed the changes,
and they're not pleased. Political blogger Bryan
Keefer usually flies JetBlue from New York to San
Francisco to see his family. But last weekend, he
decided to use up some frequent-flier miles and took
an American flight.

"I certainly didn't have any extra legroom, and I used
to like to fly American because of it," he said
shortly after touching down at Kennedy Airport on
Sunday night. He also thinks the overall service has
deteriorated: He says it took far too long for the
flight attendants to remove meal trays. Then, because
half of the reading lights on the plane didn't work,
the pilot turned on the overhead lights during the
movie, which annoyed many people.

So, despite having racked up quite a few
frequent-flier miles on American, Mr. Keefer says he'd
prefer to fly JetBlue because the planes are more
comfortable and "noticeably quieter."

Holding on

But American and the other legacy carriers are not
ready to cede a single customer. United has decided to
keep the extra legroom it reserves for frequent
fliers. And, like American, it's experimenting with
things like hand-held DVD players and new meal choices
- for a fee.

"The final battle ground is going to be on customer
service," says Kevin Mitchell, chairman of the
Business Travel Coalition in Radnor, Pa. "The industry
has forever changed, and it's true structural change
we're going through, which is good for the consumer."


		
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