The aviation industry works endlessly to improve the passenger experience. According to
The majority of passengers are 'educated' by the industry on what their 'experience' should be, and not necessarily the other way around”
In this pursuit, the majority of passengers are 'educated' by the industry on what their 'experience' should be, and not necessarily the other way around. This is because common standards are defined and implemented based on individual processes and services. In addition, the international standards may have stereotyped passenger expectations, hence, airport operations do not deviate too drastically from one airport to another.
These pre-conceived standards contribute to passengers' expectation of certain facilities and services at their gateways. The service quality level approach is often based on the individual touchpoints. They are handled as different units. Therefore, the whole airport experience is not considered as an entity, which may result in a distorted overall passenger satisfaction perception.
The question is, are airport operators truly addressing the underlying needs of passengers when they travel?”
The question is, are airport operators truly addressing the underlying needs of passengers when they travel? Many of us are privileged to have travelled, some more frequently than others. Even for the most seasoned traveller, one of the more common psychological aspects is a certain degree of anxiety, mostly coming from events that they have no control over, yet are disruptive to their plans and schedules. For example, delays and cancellations. In today's pandemic environment, hygiene and health-related risks are being added to the list. So, what is the real need of today's passengers?
Pinpointing what passengers truly need
We believe that trust and confidence are the real underlying needs that we must address, as they are at the core of the passenger experience”
At
This explains the need for a holistic approach to plan the services on offer at any airport. Every touchpoint or service, no matter how different in nature, must become part of an entity. There should be a connection that links these different units together to make it one product to the passenger. One crucial consideration is to allow passenger needs and expectations become the drive behind an airport's development as a package, not as individual service items.
Spring Breeze Service
The Spring Breeze Service accounts for an extensive, detailed and well thought-out holistic service concept and plan”
Post-COVID-19 passenger experience
Today, hygiene and health-related issues are dominant in creating trust and confidence and will mandate a prolonged sustainability. We see how habits are instilled almost instantly - handwashing, sanitisation, social distancing, wearing of masks and the exponential use of personal protective equipment (PPE) when travelling.
Our challenge is to maintain the stressless travel feeling by adjusting our processes and facilities to meet the new needs”
Our challenge is to maintain the stressless travel feeling by adjusting our processes and facilities to meet the new needs. Apart from the installation of touchless facilities where appropriate and possible, airports vie to design simplified processes at checkpoints to reduce waiting times and high concentrations of people in queues. This also calls for a complete review of current norms and regulations. Are we able to eventually work on a single checkpoint, satisfying the different stakeholders' needs, in terms of safety, security and other border regulations to reduce queuing times and frequency? This calls for an international collaboration that the
With reduced flights and passengers, we saw the need for extra effort from our staff to bridge the gaps between passengers and the facilities”
At this juncture,
Seamless passenger experience
We easily fall prey to the tendency of focusing, following and implementing trends
What is behind the passenger experience cliché is, perhaps, 'nothing can replace the human touch'. We easily fall prey to the tendency of focusing, following and implementing trends. The overwhelming development of artificial intelligence (AI) has changed the industry to such an extent that it is becoming somewhat apparent that human touch is slowly being phased out.
The industry is moving towards a smart airport approach at lightning speed. The aim is to reduce passenger waiting time through the introduction and continuous enhancements of AI-based self-services. It is certainly a valid move, as time spent in queues translates into reduced time enjoying the other facilities - the added-values that an airport offers.
What needs addressing is how to redeploy the human factor in services to co-exist with AI in offering a seamless passenger experience”
What needs addressing is how to redeploy the human factor in services to co-exist with AI in offering a seamless passenger experience. For example, travellers' cultural needs when travelling in
How to weave human service and technology so that they compliment each other is key to delivering the seamless passenger experience that our customers truly await at each departure and arrival, at an airport they trust.
In
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