Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

More Free Tickets On Delta/song

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web

BLUE BAYOU

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 15, 2002
Posts
836
Be nice to your flight attendants!!!

Delta Low-Fare Carrier To Give Free Tickets For Being Nice
May 19, 2004: 17:50 p.m. EST



-
ATLANTA (AP)--Airlines have offered more legroom, televisions and even martinis on flights to draw customers in a highly competitive market.

In the latest unusual effort, Delta's low-fare carrier, Song, will give free tickets to passengers who are nice to one another.

Help another passenger carry a bag, stay upbeat during a difficult situation or assist a flight attendant and you could earn one of 5,000 roundtrip tickets Song will give away in June for redemption between September and November.

Song hopes the program will build customer loyalty and generate more revenue for Delta Air Lines Inc. (DAL), which has lost more than $3 billion in three years and recently warned about the possibility of bankruptcy.

"We always give away products when people have a problem," Song Chief Executive John Selvaggio said in an interview. "I'd love to see what happens when you give away a ticket for somebody doing something good."

With profits hard to come by for the major airlines since the 2001 terrorist attacks and several having to raise ticket prices recently because of high fuel costs, some have been trying a few tricks to attract customers.

AMR Corp. (AMR), the parent of American Airlines, said recently that it would keep its expanded legroom instead of adding more seats in many of its jets and will provide more passengers power ports to plug in their entertainment devices.

In January, New York-based JetBlue Airways Corp. (JBLU), which has TVs in every seatback, said it would enhance its in-flight entertainment with about 100 channels of free digital satellite radio and two pay-per-view movie channels. Song has martini bars on its flights and Atlanta-based Delta has experimented with premium food for sale and is having fashion designer Richard Tyler update employee uniforms.

In the latest Song promotion, each flight attendant will get four tickets to give away to passengers at his or her discretion. The tickets will be good for travel between Sept. 7 and Nov. 10 in any of the 12 cities Song flies.

Song would not say how much the initiative will cost, though it noted that the seats being given away are only a small fraction of the 1 million a month it has available and the fall period is usually a slow time in the airline industry. A marketing tour to promote the program begins Thursday in Boston.

As he got off a Song flight Wednesday in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., John Murphy, a 34-year-old financial consultant from New York, said he was intrigued by the promotion. "Perhaps it will put people in a better mood on airplanes," said Murphy, who was traveling Song for the first time.

Some analysts, however, are skeptical of Song's plan.

Ray Neidl, an airline analyst with Blaylock & Partners in New York, said he doesn't believe the promotion will generate much new business for Song or Delta.

"Next thing you know, they'll be paying you to fly," Neidl said. "I just hope there are not that many people that are nice. Yields are bad enough already."

Dow Jones Newswires 05-19-04 1750ET Copyright (C) 2004 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
 
or....

we could deal with our employees honestly and with integrity

we could make sure that our front-line employees follow that golden rule with our customers

we could watch our customers enjoy their experience, reward us with loyalty, and subsequently pay us what our product is worth

...but then I'm not a manager
 
Another Song and Dance
By Alyce Lomax
May 20, 2004

Delta Air Lines' (NYSE: DAL) answer to low-cost air flight, Song, has come up with what is quite possibly the weirdest promotion I've ever heard of: It will offer free tickets to passengers who are... nice.

It's a clear attempt to differentiate itself in a market where one low-cost carrier changed all the rules -- namely, JetBlue (Nasdaq: JBLU). The airline shook up the industry by offering leather seats, television entertainment, and XM Satellite Radio (Nasdaq: XMSR) in addition to low fares. Its ability to differentiate itself in a struggling industry through innovation is one reason why it's among the stocks picked for Motley Fool Stock Advisor.

It's a strange time for Song's odd promotion, since airlines probably aren't feeling all that nice right now. Delta itself is in the midst of a reorganization, while rival Continental (NYSE: CAL) warned that it will post losses for 2004 and beyond.

Meanwhile, yesterday's news was fraught with headlines about the high price of fuel driving carriers to hike fares. Delta, Continental, UAL's United, Northwest (Nasdaq: NWAC), and AMR's (NYSE: AMR) American Airlines are all on board with the idea, with varying degrees of selectivity concerning what kinds of fares will be hiked. The consensus seems to be a $10 or $20 increase.

Delta said it will raise the price of your ticket, and discounter Southwest (NYSE: LUV) said it will consider such an increase. JetBlue, on the other hand, said it's holding firm to its current fare rates.

Song's interesting promotion will occur in June, and involves 5,000 tickets to be given away for the September through November period. CNN reports that each Song flight attendant will award four tickets to whomever's not naughty but nice.

While interesting (and bringing up lots of fascinating ideas, like the definition of the word "nice" on an airplane -- let's hope it doesn't mean who's the best-looking passenger), it seems unlikely that the promotion will do much more than generate some buzz. That may be needed, judging by JetBlue's mettle in attracting a boatload of customers, nice or not. Some contend that despite Song's attempts to follow JetBlue's footsteps, it's still the same old song and dance, unable to break away from Delta's more traditional roots.

Flying the friendly skies could have a whole new ring now. Oh, to be a fly on the wall of those cabins.
 
Song from JFK to SJU, connecting in MCO,departing the 28th, returning the fifth. (Did search for lower fares using the look forward-lookback dates, not much difference)

base fare $ 731.49
taxes/fees $ 58.01
price per person(1) $ 789.50

jetBlue on the same date, $273.00

If Song is able to extract such a revenue premium, that is impressive!
 
With 85-92% occupancy according to travelnet.
 
Ohoh, GG should not be liking that, hard to cry poverty!
 

Latest resources

Back
Top