According to the 2016 SITA Passenger IT Trends
Survey, airline passengers across the globe are so comfortable
with technology today that they are choosing to use it rather than
interacting with people.
SITA’s survey shows that 85% of passengers
had a positive travel experience, up from 80% last year.
Noticeably, passengers are happier at the
steps of the journey where they have more choice and control in
how they manage their trip. At booking, which they can do online,
using a mobile or with an agent, 93% had a positive experience.
Perhaps not surprisingly, passengers experience the most negative emotions
during the security screening, passport control and baggage
collection steps of the journey, peaking at nearly one third of
passengers at security. These are also the steps with the least
number of self-service technology options.
Francesco Violante, CEO, SITA, said, “Knowing
that passengers prefer using their own devices and self-service
technology throughout the journey should encourage airlines,
airports and government to examine how they can transform the
experience at security, border control and baggage collection. The
technology is available today and the industry can be confident
that it will be welcomed by passengers.”
But not all passengers are the same and SITA has
analyzed the behavior of four different types – Careful Planner,
Pampered, Hyper-Connected and Open-Minded Adventurer.
Each profile
uses technology in different ways and SITA’s research shows that a
‘one-size fits all’ approach risks alienating some passengers.
Regardless of their type, once passengers are
converted from person-to-person interaction to using self-service
technology few want to go back. Even if they are not satisfied
with one type of self-service technology they tend to try another
rather than revert to human contact. When it comes to check-in 91%
using self-service technology will do so again and again.
“It is clear that passengers
love technology. Once they start to use kiosks, websites, mobile
devices, automated gates and other tech they will continue to do
so rather than returning to human interaction. As airlines and
airports look to introduce new technology they should also note
that ‘ease-of-use’ is vital for passengers. At check-in, the ease
of use can increase kiosk adoption by as much as 86% and mobile by
59%,” added Violante.
Other key findings from the survey include:
- A majority of passengers (55%) use some
self-service tech on their journey but the end-to-end self-service
journey is not yet widespread;
- If passengers have a negative experience, 54%
will try a different self-service technology;
- When using mobiles for travel 92% find
check-in easy to use;
- Passengers indicate they want more mobile
services and baggage notifications are a top priority;
- More than half of passengers (56%) using
self-service baggage bag-drop plan to use it again;
- ‘Hyper-connected’ and ‘Pampered’ passengers
are the happiest; and
- 92% of passengers are happy during dwell time
at the airport but providing poor quality services like food,
entertainment and shopping is worse than not providing any.
The SITA/ATW
Passenger IT Trends Survey was conducted with more than 9,000
passengers from 19 countries across the Americas, Asia, Europe, Middle East and Africa representing almost three-quarters of
global passenger traffic.
See also:
Future of Air Travel - HD Video Interview with SITA President for
Asia Pacific.
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