RJFlyer
Wastin' time...
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2001
- Posts
- 211
Caveman - you're certainly right, and I essentially said the same thing -
I probably wasn't clear enough before. There are 2 issues involved in ASA's atrocious customer service in ATL, and each tends to exacerbate the other. First, the general work ethic in the available workforce in the ATL airport area is pretty bad (that's why I referenced the local Mickey D's - same people). Second, ASA pay rates for customer service agents is pretty bad, so the only people we can attract are the local airport environ dwellers. Hence, crappy service. If ASA were to pay AirTran or SWA payscales for CSAs, we could attract their same caliber of people, who generally speaking would have to come from other parts of Atlanta. If we did this, we'd have better service.
But back the point you commented on: if Comair thinks the answer to the problem is to hire 'Comair' people to work in ATL, for essentially the same wages as ASA, they're in for a shock. They will be hiring exactly the same people, and the same problems.
The point is, in ATL anyway, for what we are paying these people (those who are willing to hassle with coming to the airport to work for those wages), 95% of them will NOT have the requisite attitude. To get the shiny, happy people, they'd have to come from outside the immediate airport vicinity, and to get them to do that they have to be paid more.You can't train surly people to be shiny and happy. You have to hire them already that way. The only way to get those people is to pay them at least what AirTran is paying.
What is the 'going rate?' They all make more than ASA's pilots and mechanics and CSAs. And they make less than DAL. I wouldn't say DAL has 'stellar' customer service, but it's pretty good overall from what I've seen, and WAY better than my experiences with UAL. This also comes back to the smaller, newer company mentality - they feel like they make a difference. If you read all of surplus' post, this is also a theme of his. When Comair was its own company, everybody had a better attitude. Once it became a small part of a much larger, long-established company, that feeling went away.If your premise is true how do we explain SWA/JB success? They both pay less than the going rate for pilots and mechanics and CSA's yet customer service is allegedly stellar.
I probably wasn't clear enough before. There are 2 issues involved in ASA's atrocious customer service in ATL, and each tends to exacerbate the other. First, the general work ethic in the available workforce in the ATL airport area is pretty bad (that's why I referenced the local Mickey D's - same people). Second, ASA pay rates for customer service agents is pretty bad, so the only people we can attract are the local airport environ dwellers. Hence, crappy service. If ASA were to pay AirTran or SWA payscales for CSAs, we could attract their same caliber of people, who generally speaking would have to come from other parts of Atlanta. If we did this, we'd have better service.
But back the point you commented on: if Comair thinks the answer to the problem is to hire 'Comair' people to work in ATL, for essentially the same wages as ASA, they're in for a shock. They will be hiring exactly the same people, and the same problems.