I so glad someone started this thread which the flying public needs to see.
There are differences and maybe it will become apparent when everybody gets turned into a Wal-mart.
As a business traveller (in my past life) I would NEVER fly SWA and the one attempt by my company to force me to do that soured me on SWA forever. Sure, they have friendly folks and good pilots and obviously dependable schedules (weather permitting).
But SWA and the LCC "dream world" (Paradigm, milieu, environment, whatever word you want) is just a dream. I'm not going to put up with a SWA cattle drive, elbowing fellow human beings to get a coveted up-front seat. It's not worth 50,60, 90 dollars to me. I will pay $120.00 more than SWA just to get a reservation, pre-assigned seat with the expectation that I will get my orange juice served to me in a relaxed fashion with possibly a light snack and a little more seat pitch and cleaner bathrooms. On top of that, when I want to fly from Boston to Chicago, I want that flight to leave BOS not PVD. My business center is not in Providence, its Boston (you know in the next state!) Now, Boston has all those landing fees, it costs a lot more to hire people in Boston than in Providence, the fuel is more expensive - hey guess what? It costs more to operate out of the cities that people WANT to fly out of.
So let's look at me the business traveller and me the tourist traveller. As a business traveller, I want point-to-point direct full service and no messing around. No connecting flights unless I'm going really long distance or to some pudunk town for a customer. I don't even want to be on a plane with a bunch of tourists. I want laptop ports, an airphone in front of me in case of business need (important), I want a drink and some food. The airline should be mitigating the fact that this is not my office but I have to arrive at a client or back at work ready to go - the environment needs to almost be peaceful unlike the work at my desk or the rest of my job on-the-run and on-the-go.
Now, as a vacationer, I will make trade-offs for cost savings. I will make a connection but I'd rather go direct. I can live without a snack but I still need a drink of some sort on this travel. I still need dependable transport to my destination because even my vacations are run on a schedule. (I will not personally put up with SWA cattle drives - I'm sorry that method of boarding planes is below human dignity.) Other vacationers may find the SWA / Wal-mart approach less of a hassle and all power to them.
The idea here is that there are different consumers but the airlines have their eyes set on Wal-mart. So what's happening? Well I saw the Signature ramp at both Dulles and BWI this past week. Signature Dulles ramp was so full that they were parking planes almost to 19L using the run-up block as extended parking. I wonder where all those biz-jets came from? I wonder who are all the passengers? You don't think they used to be former First and Business class passengers on the airlines, do you?? (said with dripping sarcasm)
American, Delta, United, US Airways, Northwest should hold a meeting (saying screw the anti-trust guys). Go back to distance based fares and make definite class structures between the cost of the seat and the service you get. And I'm not talking about $200 coach, $1500 Business and $3000 first class prices. That was a throw back. No, I'm talking about: Ok, you paid internet $199 seats - great, you go in steerage, you and 40/50 of your closest friends (or they are about to be) get thrown at the very back of the plane in tight seat pitch and NO, you are not moving up front for any reason, period, I don't care. You buy a steerage seat, you get one and a bottle of water. You may keep the complementary sick-sac found in your seat back.
You pay a "regular fare" for the distance (say $500 NY-Calif) I'll give you a "regular seat" with a little more leg room, some service and a smile. You buy a "class" seat and you get "class" including separate waiting areas, separate "class" lines for security, etc, etc. You pay $1000 for an airline seat and the airline works for you, you don't wait on the airline! Are we making money yet? (The magic is that the "bread and butter" airline customer needs to pay that price between discount and what a fractional jet could run for - you won't make a dime if you make every seat $99.)
I know, I know. SWA does make money flying $99 seats. But look at the audience and look at the city pairs. The big airlines right now need to stop catering to the $99 customer (we don't want 'em) and start stressing service and destinations. The airlines should take advantage of their differences - seat pitch, meals, direct flights. Ask the customer in advertising - what do you want $99 and this (show SWA cabin)? Or $186 and this? (Show lunch being served on trays to smiling relaxed travelers).
My old Lexus/Cadilac butt does not want to go on a three hour trek in a Ford Fiesta, the same goes for my choice in air travel. We just have to find our customers and give them what they want. But putting a Lexus customer next to trailer trash (sorry I know a lot of us live in them - I'm just making a point here) is not giving the Lexus customer what he or she wants.
PS, I 've spent about $20 in Wal-marts in the past 20 years - I hate those stores looking at cheap, imitation products mostly manufactured in countries whose names can't even be pronounced. If I want a Stereo, I'm going to a Stereo store. If I want a refrigerator, I'm going to Sears or an appliance store. If I want clothes (oh please, I would never buy at Wal-mart), I'm going to someplace that has wearable, fashionable stuff. If I want tires, I'm going to Good Year.