Thursday, 31 October 2013

Customers getting more positive about holidays

Customers getting more positive about holidays, says Feefo

By Phil Davies

Oct 31, 2013 08:18AM GMT

Customers getting more positive about holidays, says Feefo

Consumer satisfaction levels hit 90% for holidays taken this summer, according to new research.

The figure is based on a sample of 13,000 holiday ratings and reviews left by holidaymakers over the summer released by global feedback engine Feefo.

The study found that ‘excellent’ ratings increased by nearly 9% compared to last year, while negative reviews declined by more than 2% over summer 2012.

This demonstrates that tour operators continue to deliver the high standards expected by consumers, according to Feefo.

The report also highlights the top five drivers for positive ratings, with one in three (33%) citing ‘staff service’ as the most significant factor, closely followed by the quality of the hotel accommodation (31%).

Feefo chief executive Andrew Mabbutt said: “This is excellent news for the travel industry and also for consumers whose voice is clearly being heard.

"These positive trends highlight the improvements that the industry continues to make in delivering the choice and quality that drives consumer satisfaction.

“Compared to positive reviews, negative ratings are often supported by a more in depth qualitative review.

"Negative customer verbatim is often feared by businesses when, as highlighted in the report, used effectively it should actually be welcomed.

“By using customer feedback effectively travel businesses will demonstrate to consumers that they not only value their feedback, but that they are also willing to act upon it in a transparent way.”

The report highlights a good year for UK ‘staycations’ – with 68% of consumers who chose to stay and holiday within Britain rating their holiday as ‘excellent’ - an increase of 3.5% over last year.

But the findings suggest that although negative reviews have decreased by more than 2%, more can still be done among the 9% that rated their holiday as a negative experience.

People taking more holidays

Holidaymakers plan to take more breaks next year

By Ian Taylor

Oct 31, 2013 08:47AM GMT

Holidaymakers plan to take more breaks next year

Three out of four consumers planning holidays between now and next September intend to take the same or a greater number of trips than in the previous 
12 months.

YouGov research for First Rate Exchange Services suggests 60% will take as many holidays and 17% more holidays than in the past year, with in excess of one in two (56%) planning more than one trip abroad.

The results produced a three-point rise in the First Rate Holiday Frequency Index compared with its launch in March, taking the measure to 52 points. The index is one of six used to produce an overall Holiday Confidence Index, also launched in March.

First Rate attributed the improvement to a falling number of people planning fewer holidays. It noted “almost one-third of those planning more trips overseas are aged 55 or over”. The research found those in the 25-34 age group were the most likely to reduce their holidays abroad.

There was no movement in the proportion planning longer holidays (14%) but there was a fall in numbers intending to reduce their holiday duration – from 14% in March to 11% in September.

First Rate noted: “Fewer than half the respondents (44%) intend to take only one holiday abroad in the next 12 months. More than one in five (22%) plan to take three or more, significantly more than in March (17%). This may represent a seasonal change and/or increasing confidence in the economy.”

Alistair Rennie, First Rate head of business decisions, said: “The proportion saying they will take fewer holidays or spend less on holiday or go away for less time has fallen.”

First Rate also noted: “Younger consumers are significantly more likely to take shorter holidays of one to three or four to six nights.”

Holiday spending: Britons expect to increase outlay

First Rate/YouGov respondents were asked whether they are likely to spend more or less on their next overseas holiday than 
on the last.

Spending was broken down into the cost of booking, amount of spending money taken on holiday, and spending in destination to produce three separate indexes. All three rose in September compared with March.

First Rate’s Cost of Booking index was 
up three points to 55 and its Travel Money and Destination Spend indexes each up 
four points to 54.

More than half of prospective holidaymakers expected to spend the same amount in each area as in the past year, but a greater proportion expected to spend more on the booking (23%) than in resort.

However, the results suggest an improving UK economy has yet to translate into greater interest in overseas holidays among those who have not travelled in the past year.

They also suggest 40% of those who intend to travel abroad had booked a holiday at the time of the September survey. This would include late summer 2013 holidays as well as winter 2013-14 and summer 2014 breaks, but it seems high – suggesting 22% of all respondents have booked a holiday.

Wednesday, 30 October 2013

Costa Concordia

Moldovan dancer admits affair with Concordia captain

By Phil Davies

Oct 30, 2013 08:07AM GMT

Moldovan dancer admits affair with Concordia captain

A Moldovan dancer who was on the bridge of Costa Concordia with captain Francesco Schettino has admitted she was his lover at his trial.

Domnica Cemortan testified that she was in a romantic relationship with the captain and was with him when the ship ran aground off the Italian coast in January 2012, killing 32 people.

Schettino faces multiple charges of manslaughter and abandoning ship.

On the night the ship ran aground, Cemortan had dinner with the captain before he invited her to join him on the bridge as he oversaw what was meant to be a close sail-past of the island of Giglio, the BBC reported.

She acknowledged in court after being pressed that they had been romantically involved.

She had boarded the ship as a non-paying passenger hours before the crash, she said, adding: "When you are someone's lover, no-one asks you for a ticket." She subsequently dismissed the remark as a joke to her translator.

Cemortan said she had worked for Costs Cruises for about three weeks in December 2011, and had met Schettino on a previous cruise.

After the ship hit the rocks, Cemortan said the captain urged her to "save herself".

She told the court that she helped other passengers to abandon ship before getting into a lifeboat herself.

The court is expected to hear evidence from about 1,000 surviving passengers and crew during Captain Schettino's trial.

In testimony earlier in the day, ship maitre d' Antonello Tievoli told the court in Grossetto that he had asked the captain if he could sail close to the island of Giglio because he has family there, the news agency AP reported.

The captain obliged on January 6, but was apparently disappointed with the result, and ordered the ship's helmsman to plot a closer route for next time.

A week later, the ship ran aground on rocks after veering too close to the island, with 3,206 passengers and 1,023 crew aboard.

The captain has acknowledged fault in the tragedy, but his defence team is arguing the ship sank in part because watertight doors did not function.

He also told the court in late September that his Indonesian helmsman was to blame for steering the ship onto rocks and ignoring orders to slow down.

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Tuesday, 29 October 2013

Grenada or Granada

Grandmother flies to Grenada instead of Granada in booking error

Oct 28, 2013 13:00PM GMT

Grandmother flies to Grenada instead of Granada in booking error

Image via Shutterstock

A grandmother who thought she was heading to Granada in Spain flew to the Caribbean island of Grenada due to a booking mix-up.

Lamenda Kingdon only realised the error when chatting to a fellow passenger about how much she was looking forward to visiting Spain and the woman corrected her.

According to the Evening Standard, the 62-year-old had booked through air miles travel firm Avios but a misunderstanding meant she was put on a 10-hour journey instead of the two hour flight to Spain.

The trip was on her bucket list after she was diagnosed with breast cancer and a brain tumour.

Ms Kingdon said: "After lunch and a gin and tonic I began chatting to the lady sitting next to me,” she said. “I told her how much I was looking forward to seeing the Alhambra.

"She replied: 'Not on this flight, you won’t be.'

"She then grabbed the elbow of a passing stewardess and told her: 'This lady thinks she’s going to Spain'.

"I looked at the ticket and it did indeed say Grenada. I had noticed the departure and arrival times were vastly different - but I presumed that had something to do with the time difference."

At a scheduled stop in St Lucia, she was put on a flight back to Gatwick. The following day she was flown to Spain.

Avios apologised for the mistake and gave Mrs Kingdon enough points for her next destination, New Zealand

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Ryanair

Ryanair's new-found 'customer comes first' ethos and Michael O'Leary's previously unsuspected touchy-feely persona have attracted no end of attention.

Yet for once the carrier and its chief executive are not on the front foot.

This may seem a strange thing to say about an airline that carries 80 million passengers a year and is targeting 110 million.

But Ryanair's announcement of customer service improvements last Friday (October 25) was revealing.

The announcement came, Ryanair said, "after an extensive feedback programme" conducted through a "Tell Michael O'Leary" initiative launched 10 days earlier.

In between, O'Leary conducted a Twitter love-in with punters, whom he assured: "Humility, courtesy, service [are] my middle names."

So to show "we are listening and responding to our customers", Ryanair will:

  • Remove the 'Recaptcha' security code from its site for individual bookings - clearly the system has affected bookings;
  • Allow a 24-hour grace period for customers booking direct to correct an error to a booking - clearly people are pissed off with the previous charges for making a mistake;Operate 'quiet flights' with no PA announcements before 8am and after 9pm - clearly people are fed up with the sales patter;
  • Allow passengers a second small carry-on bag - clearly the ferocity of Ryanair's existing bag policy has aggravated customers, not to mention its airport 'partners' stripped of valuable retail revenue;
  • Cut its boarding card reissue fee from £70 to £15 - presumably because people have cottoned on that O'Leary is more Dick Turpin than Dick Tracy;
  • And halve the standard airport bag drop fee to £30 - because clearly even Ryanair  could not get away with such a hike indefinitely.

This poses a challenge to rivals, of course - a fact immediately acknowledged by investors who sold off shares in British Airways and easyJet, lowering the carriers' respective share prices.

All of it came after Ryanair issued a first profit warning in early September, albeit a relative one - failing to make €570 million (£485 million) would hardly rate as a warning for any other carrier.

Nonetheless, O'Leary has apologised for Ryanair's "over-abrupt culture" and declared the airline is becoming more "sophisticated".

"We have made some errors in the way we behaved in the past that need to be corrected," says O'Leary.

In a nutshell: "In the past we said 'go to hell'. The culture needs to evolve." Indeed. A major part of the correction in behaviour will be an appeal to business travellers.

"Before we get to next March, we will have a business product," O'Leary told the Airport Operators Association conference in London last week.

This is an intriguing idea. How many corporate travellers wish to fly to Frankfurt Hahn or Charleroi is unclear.

But a lot of corporate travellers must be heading to airports few others fly to because O'Leary claimed last week that 27% of Ryanair's existing traffic are business passengers.

This is higher than the 20%-25% the carrier claimed less than a month earlier, and the kind of growth we expect to see from Ryanair

Yet I'm bound to say I'm sceptical. One reason is most companies above a certain size want their corporate travel managed and require the management information that accompanies the process.

This is why most business travel goes through travel management companies (TMCs) and global distribution systems (GDSs). Ryanair stands aloof from both (although TMCs do book the carrier).

Another reason is easyJet: Ryanair's biggest rival has been wooing corporate customers since 2007 and with no little success.

EasyJet does what Ryanair does not. It flies to big hub airports (Schiphol and Charles de Gaulle). It offers flexible fares. It is available on GDSs.

Yet easyJet has a 20% target for corporate passengers. Last I heard, the Gatwick-based carrier's business traffic was at 17%. Could Ryanair really have a lead of 10 percentage points?

Figures released by Amadeus and reported today by Travel Weekly Business:am offer a wider context.

London is the world capital of low-cost carriers, with 15 million seats available in the first half of 2013 and year-on-year growth of 3%.

Europe is by some way the world's biggest regional low-cost market, with 182 million passengers in the first six months of 2013. But growth was just 0.8%.

That is the backdrop to O'Leary's mea culpa and Ryanair's conversion to corporate travel's attractions.

Amadeus reports low-cost traffic at Madrid down 27% year on year, Athens down 17% and Rome down 13%. Parts of Europe are hurting and Ryanair is not immune.
At the same time, the carrier has aircraft on order that require it add another 30 million passengers.

Unless Ryanair moves beyond the bargain basement - or flies beyond Europe and North Africa - it faces a challenge to find them.

Thursday, 24 October 2013

Tui Holiday Reps

Special report: How Tui is updating the role of holiday reps

Oct 24, 2013 08:25AM GMT

The role of the holiday rep is changing. Nowhere is that more clear than at Thomson and First Choice where 1,300 reps are not only being given their own iPads but also being empowered to deal with customer complaints and even decide compensation levels.

Even their traditional welcome meetings will become available to view on YouTube.

If anything, the rep is set to become far more important by communicating to agents and customers before departure in a way that has never happened before on such a large scale.

Eight years ago the situation was somewhat different. Thomson reduced its overseas reps by a third, leaving 40% of clients without a traditional rep service.

But the aim has been consistent – to modernise the role of the overseas rep. Then, the company ploughed the savings from cutting its reps into a texting service Thomson Travel Buddy; now the technology is in the hands of the reps as well as agents and consumers.

Reduce paperwork

Ian Chapman, Tui Travel UK’s director of holiday experience, aims to modernise the role of the rep.

What he doesn’t want is reps to be bogged down in paperwork. The introduction of iPads will largely spell the end of face-to-face staff meetings; instead, they will be held via FaceTime video apps – in some cases saving long drives to resort. And the completion of customer service forms and weekly and financial reports will now be done online.

“All the forms that took time to do before are now online and can be completed more quickly. Reps will spend less time on paperwork and more in resort,” he said.

In other words, the new rep will have an even more prominent customer-facing role in future, from tweeting customers pre-departure to emailing agents about clients’ requests and showing videos of rooms live to agents and holidaymakers.

Cut complaints

So, what’s the aim? In short, Chapman wants Tui Travel to be a cutting-edge travel firm offering top customer service.  And there is another goal: to reduce customer complaints.

“Our dream is to not to have any complaints come back from overseas to the UK,” said Chapman.

A trial of the technology this summer in Cyprus resulted in 85% of complaints being solved in resort, up from 39% last summer.

Empowering reps to resolve complaints in resort is not only cheaper but usually more effective as clients get an immediate response.
Dealing with clients’ queries pre-departure is also aimed at eliminating problems in advance.

Boost communication

During the trial in Cyprus, iPads were given to 75 reps, digital noticeboards were installed in hotel receptions, and free Wi-Fi was made available on coaches and in public areas in hotels.

The resort team received more than 5,000 emails direct from customers. The most common questions were about birthday cakes, anniversary treats, beach towels and the best tavernas.

Tui’s score on customer loyalty barometer Net Promoter increased by 34% year on year after the trial. And Tui’s customer satisfaction surveys showed a 47% increase in the number of holidaymakers who would recommend Tui to a friend.

By next summer, 80% of Tui’s differentiated properties will have Wi-Fi in the rooms and public areas. When clients arrive, they will receive a text telling them where their luggage and transfer coach is. They will be able to fill in hotel registration forms online in advance, merely having to pick up their key from the desk on arrival.

“People can go from the coach to the sunbed,” said Chapman.

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Monday, 21 October 2013

Aircraft close to colliding

Two aircraft 'close to colliding over Scotland'

Oct 21, 2013 07:00AM GMT

Two Boeing 747s carrying around 1,000 passengers almost collided in mid air over Scotland because pilots confused their flight instructions.

The aircraft were 30 miles to the north of Glasgow and preparing to fly across the Atlantic when an air traffic controller spotted on a radar sweep that they were moving closer together.

The controller immediately ordered the aircraft on the left to make a left turn and the one on the right to make a right turn, to move them further apart.

But the two pilots on board each aircraft did just the opposite, bringing their aircraft closer together.

When the danger was first spotted the aircraft were 10 miles apart, but within a minute they were less than three miles away from each other and still closing in.

A crash was only averted when the pilots physically saw the other aircraft, with one climbing and the other diving. At their closest, one aircraft was just 100ft above the other.

Details of the incident, which occurred on June 23, came to light following a report by the UK Airprox Board, which examines near-misses in British airspace, the Daily Telegraph reported. The airlines involved were not named.

"It was apparent that both crews had taken each others' instructions,” the authors of the report said, but experts "found it hard to determine why this had occurred".

It read: "The Board was surprised that all four pilots had misheard or misinterpreted the avoiding action instructions despite at least one of the crews reading them back correctly.

"Expecting only routine information to be transmitted at that time, they may have been perplexed by the avoiding action information and instinctively responded without properly assimilating it," it said.

The Board said that the danger was needlessly increased because the aircraft had earlier been ordered by air traffic control to fly at the same height of 34,000ft.

 

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Wednesday, 9 October 2013

Passenger lands airplane

Passenger lands aircraft after pilot falls ill

By Phil Davies

Oct 09, 2013 08:19AM GMT

Passenger lands aircraft after pilot falls ill

Humberside airport was put on alert last night after a pilot fell ill at the controls and a passenger safely landed the light aircraft.

Police, fire and ambulance crews were called to the airport after the pilot collapsed and a distress call was made.

Two flying instructors were called in to advise the passenger how to bring the aircraft down.

Instructor Roy Murray told the BBC the passenger had no flying experience and did a "remarkable job".

"He didn't know the layout of the aeroplane, he didn't have lights on so he was absolutely flying blind as well,” he said.

"I think he'd flown once before as a passenger but never flown an aeroplane before."

The airport said a full emergency plan was put in place. Roads surrounding the airport were closed but have since reopened.

Two inbound flights from Aberdeen and Amsterdam were delayed while the aircraft was removed from the runway.

Costa Concordia

'I messed up', Concordia captain said after hitting rocks

By Phil Davies

Oct 09, 2013 08:23AM GMT

'I messed up', Concordia captain said after hitting rocks

A detailed version of events on the bridge of Costa Concordia in the minutes leading up to the ship crashing into rocks has been relayed to a court in Italy.

Captain Francesco Schettino ordered his navigator to change route from its designated course so that the ship passed within just a few hundred yards of Giglio, the court heard yesterday.

Schettino is on trial over the disaster in which 32 people died.

“Let’s get really close to Giglio, I love doing these salutes. Let’s go and do this Giglio s***,” the captain told his crew, as the ship prepared to set out from Civitavecchia, the port of Rome, on the night of January 13, 2012, at the start of a week-long cruise of the Mediterranean, the Daily Telegraphreported.

Audio recordings from the bridge, which were played in court, showed that Schettino made the remarks at 6.27pm that evening.

Schettino spoke in Neapolitan dialect, rather than standard Italian, when he told the ship’s navigator Simone Canessa to change the route.

The officer told the court in Grosseto, Tuscany, where Schettino is on trial for manslaughter and abandoning ship, that he was not explicitly told the reason for the change of course, according to the report from the trial.

“I wasn’t directly given any information but I heard that it was to perform a salute, for the benefit of members of the crew who came from Giglio,” he said.

Schettino reportedly performed the sail-past to impress Antonello Tievoli, the ship’s maitre’d, who was from Giglio, and Mario Palombo, a sea captain and friend who was on the island that night and with whom he was in contact by telephone.

The court also heard an audio recording of the moments after the ship crashed into the rocks and the captain realised the enormity of what had happened.

As water flooded into the engine rooms and a power black-out sparked fear among the passengers, Schettino called Roberto Ferrarini, the head of the crisis unit of Costa Cruises.

“Roberto, I took the ship past Giglio. Palombo was telling me ‘sail close, sail close’. I hit the rocks. I’m destroyed, I’m dead, don’t say anything to me.”

Another witness, first mate Giovanni Iaccarino, said that the captain put his head in his hands and told the officers on the bridge: “I messed up”.

Canessa also claimed Schettino showed chronic indecision as he contemplated the loss of his ship.

“I was saying to him very insistently that he needed to do something, to give the general emergency signal, but he was telling us to wait,” he told the court.

“At first he gave the impression of having everything under control and initially us officers were less insistent, but then we started shouting and screaming at him to give the emergency signal.”

It was only much later that the captain gave the order to abandon ship.

He also made a point of going below to change out of his captain’s uniform and into civilian clothes, allegedly in an effort to blend in with passengers when he abandoned ship before the evacuation was completed.

“I saw him later and he was wearing a blue jacket,” said Canessa. “He had changed out of his uniform.”

As panic broke out on the bridge after the collision, Schettino turned to Domnica Cemortan, a Moldovan ship's dancer whom he had had dinner with that night, and told her "You will be saved", according to Canessa.

Cemortan was not the only non-officer on the bridge. "There were other girls, hostesses," Canessa said.

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