More Spin from Song:
Press Release Source: SONG
Strong Bookings for Thanksgiving Week Demonstrate High Consumer Demand for Song
Thursday November 20, 3:18 pm ET
Song's Unique Pre-Ordering Option for In-Flight Meals and Simplified Online Booking/Check-in Process to Ease Customer Experience at Peak Times
NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov. 20, 2003-- Song(TM), Delta Air Lines' new service developed to change customer expectations for high-quality, low-fare air travel, reports that it will service significant traffic volume around Thanksgiving, especially November 21-26, November 28-30 and December 1. Specifically, Song reports that bookings on peak dates are ahead of those posted last year by Delta Express - as much as 12 points -- in certain key markets.
"The high advance bookings around Thanksgiving are clearly demonstrative of consumer demand for the Song product," said Joanne Smith, Song's Vice President of Marketing & Customers. "The fact that Song's loads are so high this Thanksgiving is particularly noteworthy given the airline is only seven months old and our capacity is as much as 40 percent greater than that of our predecessor, Delta Express."
Song recommends passengers traveling around Thanksgiving take the following steps to ease their travel experience:
Go online to
www.flysong.com to print out boarding passes in advance. Passengers who are unable to access the Internet are advised to utilize one of Song's many convenient self-service airport check-in kiosks.
Go online to
www.flysong.com to pre-order meals from Song's menu, which features a wide range of organic food selections and premium beverages.
Please allow extra time - as much as 30 to 60 minutes - to get through airport security.
Just in time for the Holiday Season, Song has begun introducing the MAS eFX In-Flight Entertainment system to its fleet of 36 Boeing 757 aircraft. Over the next several months, Song will phase its new entertainment technology - the most sophisticated available on a single aisle aircraft -- into its fleet of thirty-six Boeing 757 aircraft at the rate of approximately one plane every four days. By March 2004, all Song aircraft will be outfitted with personal video monitors at every seat, offering a complement of entertainment features, including:
All-digital, live, satellite broadcast programming with 24 free channels;
All-digital broadcast audio programming with 24 free channels; and
Multi-player interactive trivia games that allow play between passengers.
Beginning in the second quarter of 2004, Song will add server technology to its aircraft, providing a more sophisticated, broader array of amenities, including:
Digitally-streamed MP3 programming that allows customers to create individual play lists during their flights;
Downloadable, pay-per-view movie programming available on demand, featuring a wide-range of current offerings for all ages;
Interactive iXplor moving map program with zoom capabilities and points of interest information; and
Connecting gate information broadcast directly to personal in-seat video monitors.
Consumers can experience Song's in-flight entertainment technology "on the ground" at Song's first-of-its-kind concept store in New York City, open now through December 21. The "Song in the City" store, located at 98 Prince Street in the heart of Manhattan's Soho district, features actual Song all-leather aircraft seats that are equipped with the In-Flight Entertainment system.
Additionally, Song and American Express have announced a special promotion to engage consumers. American Express classic, Gold and Platinum Delta SkyMiles® Credit Cardmembers and Delta SkyMiles® Business Credit Cardmembers from American Express can earn triple SkyMiles® when they use their Card to purchase Song tickets at
www.flysong.com and for all in-flight purchases now through December 31, 2003.(1) Plus, Cardmembers also receive a special 1,000 mile bonus for their first in-flight purchase with the Delta SkyMiles Credit Card.(2) The 1,000 SkyMiles bonus is awarded for the first onboard purchase made on Song with a Delta SkyMiles Credit Card during the promotion period of 10/15/03 - 12/31/03. Only one 1,000 SkyMiles bonus will be awarded per account. The bonus will be posted to the primary Cardmember's account 8 to 12 weeks after the promotion has ended. All standard Delta SkyMiles program rules and conditions apply. For complete terms, conditions and restrictions, please visit
www.americanexpress.com/deltaoffers.
Song provides non-stop service between major cities in the Northeast United States and key Florida leisure destinations, plus Atlanta, Los Angeles, Las Vegas and direct service to San Juan. Utilizing a fleet of thirty-six 199-seat, one-class Boeing 757s, Song provides more than 140 daily flights. Song offers an onboard food program created by Chef Michel Nischan featuring healthful, organic selections. Customers can pre-order their menu selections online at flysong.com or use their credit card or cash to make purchases onboard. Song presently serves all three New York metro area airports - JFK, Newark and LaGuardia - the only low-fare service to do so. All Song flights are operated by Delta Air Lines. Song tickets can be purchased by visiting flysong.com.
Song's in-flight entertainment system will be installed between October 2003 and the end of the first quarter of 2004. Song cannot guarantee the system's availability on any flight during this transition period, nor the availability of all entertainment system features prior to the third quarter of 2004.
Side-stick-n,
I do agree that our LCCs were created to combat yours. You can't just lie down and take it, you need to fight it. I happen to think that Song was well thought out and has a chance of doing well. Delta was not affected as much after 9-11 as some of the other majors, and SARS also didn't really affect us. We have been lucky in some ways, but we do have a debt problem. But, we put the correct airplane, the 757, on our LCC, and the routes are well thought out. We know there are people out there that won't pay a lot for tickets, and we won't just give them to you or Airtran etc. There are other people that live in cities that don't have LCCs, or want to go somewhere---like Aruba, that doesn't have LCC service, yet. It will take years for the LCCs to grow and to serve all of the same cities, and in that time we will try to patch ourselves up, and a better economy will help. If the economy was still going down the tubes, that might be different.
Bye Bye--General Lee
PS--Also, read the IFE section above and tell me what you think? Do you think that might retain passengers and allow them to enjoy their experience for once? That is why we have had larger losses lately---mostly due to the Song set up. It must be expensive to paint those planes!!
