I love almost everything about a life with
lots of travel in it. But the modern-day airport and flying experience is one notable exception.
I’m just back from flights in and out of
Orlando, Florida, where I went for two weeks to visit family. I've been travelling quite a bit these past five years, and what becomes clearer with each
passing flight is that the air industry service model is to slowly increase our suffering to the point that we'll pay them to make it stop.
While I admire how the industry whips us around the world with impressive efficiency, its view of us as widgets to be profited from rather than flesh-and-blood customers is becoming increasingly transparent.
While I admire how the industry whips us around the world with impressive efficiency, its view of us as widgets to be profited from rather than flesh-and-blood customers is becoming increasingly transparent.
I get that it’s a tough management
challenge to safely move so many people to so many destinations every day. Some 3.5 billion travellers passed through the world’s airports in
2015. But that hardly justifies a business model built on the concept of deliberately eroding basic customer service so that your customers eventually feel miserable enough to pay for what they once got for free.
Whether it’s about shivering in a sub-zero
economy cabin or paying $25 each way just to check your only bag, I can’t shake
this feeling that rather than being motivated by the desire to provide me with the
optimal customer experience, what actually motivates the industry is discovering new ways
to make me into a more efficient and profitable widget. Even the once largely
democratic act of boarding the plane has been turned into a profit-making
vehicle, with the industry constantly introducing new ways to lure travellers
into paying to jump the line.
A quick review of the typical airport
experience based on my August 29 and September 12 flights, to make my case:
· Uncomfortable seats. Your
butt’s going to hurt, your legs are going to twitch, and your arms are going to
cramp from trying to keep yourself from touching the passenger next to you. Unless
you’re willing to pay for a better seat – what we long-time flyers used to know
as “normal” leg room has now become a premium to be paid for – expect to feel
cramped, jostled, and forced into unpleasant intimacies with strangers. If
money’s no object, you might buy yourself one of those really great seats that
the rest of us can only gaze upon longingly on the way to steerage, where everybody enjoys roomy lazy-boys and quaffs free booze and warm almonds. But most
of us non-rich people tend to opt for the suffering. Yes, theatres and arenas also
charge a price for premium seats, but for me it’s the physical discomfort of
the cheap seats that really distinguishes the airline industry in this
category.
·
Unfair baggage policies. Once, you
could check two bags for free. Then one. Now, none. I just paid $50 so that my
one bag could accompany me to Orlando and back. And then you sit in the cabin watching
people stuffing increasingly enormous and ludicrous “carry-on” bags into those
weary looking overhead bins, and a thinking person such as myself just might
go, hey, WTF, does the industry truly not see how unpleasant they’re making it
for us just to carry our stuff while we travel?
·
Food. Not even a decade ago,
the airline industries fed you a meal at mealtime. It wasn’t a particularly
terrific meal, but it was OK, and even came with a little bottle of wine if it
was dinner. Oh, I laugh ruefully at the memory. Most of the airlines won’t even
toss you a bag of bad pretzels anymore without charging, and those little
bottles of wine are now $7. Not surprisingly, travellers responded by buying their
own food in the airport to bring on the plane, but I now see that airport
vendors have rather strangely countered this development by jacking up the
price on anything that can be carried easily on a plane. I realized during this
trip that at $12 and $14, airport sandwiches are now so costly that it makes
more sense to buy a $7 sandwich on the plane. How clever – they've made me
into a widget who will not only buy a $7 chicken wrap on the plane, but feel grateful
for the chance. I wouldn’t want to suggest collusion between the airport and the
airlines, but it sure looks that way from a customer perspective.
·
Security lineups. I know, we’ve
all got a million anecdotes about this one, but it’s the big picture that gets
me (that and the crazy lineups that screw up everything about the airport
experience, including how much time you have to buy an exploitively priced
sandwich). I mean, look at us: Taking off our shoes, belts and jackets;
worrying whether we’ve got any trace of metal somewhere on our person; extracting
our laptops to put them in bins; carrying only teeny-tiny bottles of creams and
lotions in our carry-ons; shuffling through the naked x-ray machine without a
word of complaint. Complaint, after all, just might get you sent into the back
room with the scary looking dude wearing the latex gloves. It’s gotten so
unpleasant that I’m now exploring the various pre-approved options for
passing through security – which, of course, I will have to pay for. I can
practically feel the industry using our largely baseless fears of security
risks to reshape us as compliant widgets happy to pay for premium services if it means we get to skip at least some of the waits and humiliation.
·
In-flight entertainment. Let’s
just say I was overjoyed to discover free movies and TV on both Air Canada flights
to and from Toronto on my way south, but that’s not a common experience. I
don’t want to romanticize the days when small, bad TVs dropped from the plane
ceiling and you watched whatever the airline was showing that day, but there
are fewer and fewer flights that provide any entertainment at all unless you
pay for it. And maybe there’s nothing wrong with that, because bringing a good
book is still free, but it still exemplifies the way airlines have found ways
to package basic customer service as something you now have to pay for.
·
Cold. Freezing, freezing cold.
The guy across the aisle from me was wearing one of those “slankets” yesterday
to ward off the sub-zero chill and I was dead-envious. Sure, it’s minus-59 C.
outside at 35,000 feet (Really. I saw it on the free TV screen.) but you can bet
those high rollers in the comfy seats aren’t having to wrap themselves in
fleece. Should you want one of those thin, small blankets of unpleasant material
that the airlines used to provide for free, you now have to pay for it.
I could go on. If there isn’t already a business-economics
case study on the airline industry’s mastery at wringing profit out of what was
once basic customer service, there ought to be. It’s not only a triumph of
capitalism, it’s an example of how an industry can deliberately worsen the
experience for their customers and not only get them to go along with it, but
happily paying to stop the torment.
Pack your slankets and homemade sandwiches,
kids. They’re taking us for a ride.