Delta Airlines’ efforts to deliver a great customer experience

As I am fascinated by successful turnaround stories in business, below is my research on how Delta delivered a great flying experience to customers as part of their effort to turn the company around.

Tim Mapes, the current Chief Marketing and Communications of Delta, said the following in 2017: “[The Northwest merger] was our opportunity to emerge from the pack of U.S. airlines, the legacy carriers, and differentiate Delta, not as a commodity, where a seat is a seat, but as a different experience, with levels of service that are different from our competitors,” 

Since emerging from its bankruptcy, Delta has been relentlessly focused on delivering superior customer experience, willing to sacrifice short-term profits in exchange for better customer experience.

In 2018, Delta announced renovation for its 777 fleet, reducing the number of abreast seats from the industry standard of 10 to 9 in order to give its customer seat more room. For premium section, the carrier added “sliding-door accesses to a private cove filled with entertainment options, a personal table, and a 24-inch-wide reclining seat”. The reduction of seats meant a short term drop in revenue. The investment in premium section came with an increase in expenses. It showed how far Delta was willing to go to deliver a great customer experience.

In terms of in-flight entertainment, in 2016, Delta became the first US airline to offer all in-flight entertainment for free. Since then, it has added wireless back-seat screens and free messaging in flight for passengers, the latter of which allowed passengers to stay connected with others on the ground.

Additionally, Delta looked for other ways to make the whole flying experience from start to finish as pleasant as possible. In 2016, Delta spend $50 million in a technology called Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) for baggage tracking. RFID not only allows accurate handling to be more efficient, but also lets passengers know where their luggage is at any time via Delta mobile application. In 2018, the carrier started to let fliers file a baggage claim via its mobile application at the final destination instead of having to physically visit a Delta office. Confident in its ability to handle baggage, Delta is now committed to a 20-minute policy for luggage on domestic flights. Under the policy, if luggage doesn’t arrive on a carousel within 20 minutes of arrival of a domestic flight, passengers will be entitled to 2,500 bonus miles.

Late 2018, Delta rolled out the first biometric terminal for direct international flights from Terminal F at its Atlanta hub. The new technology allows passengers to check in without presenting papers. If you are annoyed by having to take out electronic devices for carry-on and personal items, you won’t have to with the new technology from Delta, making the boarding experience smoother and more pleasant. 

Clear and effective communication is key to customer satisfaction. Delta was the first US airline that offered customer support on Twitter. Since then, the airline has used social media extensively to offer customer support to passengers. In 2019, when a flight was delayed due to uncontrollable weather, Delta sent personalized emails to explain the situation and apologize to customers, along with 10,000 bonus points in their account. 

All the investments in and focus on improving customer satisfaction seem to pay off majorly for Delta. In 2019, it won the TripAdvisor Travelers’ Choice Awards for the Major Airline in North America category. Revenue from Premium products made up 31% of Delta’s total revenue in 2018, up from 18% in 2011. According to Delta;s CEO, passengers purchased 65-70% of premium seats on international and domestic routes, compared to only 13% of domestic premium seats sold in 2011. Loyalty Program’s revenue share rose to 9% of the carrier’s total revenue, up from 5% in 2011. Customer loyalty is also shown through the use of Delta branded credit card. In 2018, the carrier received $3.4 billion in revenue from American Express for the purchase of miles and merchant credit card fees. The margin from American Express payment was estimated to be higher than that of Delta’s core operations and grow at an 11% annual clip.

Disclosure: I own Delta stocks in my personal portfolio

News Outlets and How NOT To Stand Up Paywalls

News websites generate revenue mostly through either subscriptions, contributions or ads. Some offer exclusive content via subscriptions such as Washington Post, some offer content for free such as cnbc, bbc and others operate as a hybrid, providing free access to most articles while holding out a select few for only subscribers.

To get readers to subscribe, you need to deliver not only great content, but also a pleasant user experience. TechCrunch has been particularly awful in this regard of late. As a frequent reader or at least I used to be, I am disappointed by their new approach. A short while ago, you could read TechCrunch with your adblock app on. Now, here is what you are greeted on the website

Unless you turn off your adblock or subscribe, you can’t even see what is available. Even Washington Post lets you see the homepage and only shows the paywall after you click on a specific article. But even after you turned off all ads blockers, the annoying message still shows up

Meanwhile, CNBC, which is another major business news outlet, takes a much more user-friendly approach with adblock

The design trick is aimed to implicitly persuade you to turn the blocker off, but you can certainly leave it on and continue reading CNBC articles.

Saigoneer, a news website that covers happenings in Vietnam, has a similar idea to CNBC, though the homepage is covered completely by this message. I turned ads blocker off a few times before I realized that clicking on the black bar will allow me to continue reading it freely.

Or news outlets can just follow what The Guardian does: offer content for free and ask nicely for contribution

Here is the success that The Guardian had from their approach

Today the Guardian has 650,000 regular paying members, 360,000 of which are recurring paying members and 290,000 pay for print papers and digital memberships, according to the publisher. In the last year, it received more than 364,000 single contributions from around 318,000 contributors. In the last three years, the title received 1 million paid donations — a mix of one-offs, recurring paying members, and print sales.

Source: Digiday

In short, I hope that whatever TechCrunch is trying to do has been working for them. Personally, I became frustrated with their paywall and since their free articles are available on other news channels anyway, I have frequented to other websites more and abandoned what used to be one of my favorite sites.

Unsubscribe feature in the subscription world

We are living in the subscription world. Everything from enterprise technology to movies, clothes, food and news is offered on a subscription basis. A prominent feature in the model is that the suppliers allow users a short free trial (usually 7-30 days) before the first payment kicks in. As a consequence, offering an easy “unsubscribe” process is part of the customer experience. Unfortunately, different companies take different paths in this regard.

Take Netflix as an example. The video streaming service is so confident of its offering and obsessed with customer service that it has a feature reminding trial users of when to cancel. It’s smart of Netflix to do so. If users want to cancel trials, they’ll remember to do so. The number of those who forgot is not that many. Plus, being an honest and good company scores a lot of points in the users’ eyes, a far more important benefit in the industry in which there are a lot of alternatives. Technology can be copied, but good will from customers and a beloved brand are much more difficult to replicate.

Credit to Matthew Ball

On the contrary, take Wall Street Journals. If you are a subscriber, you have to call their Customer Center in order to unsubscribe. There is no online feature that allows you to cancel your account. A call to any customer center in the US, as you may know pretty well, isn’t a pleasant experience. They make it much harder for subscribers to leave. Though I subscribe to their service, I don’t appreciate the hurdles I will have to go through to unsubscribe. If there is any alternative coming along in the future with a feature like Netflix’s, a time-consuming call won’t stop me.