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MONTREAL — For his frequent trips to Canada, Tom Burke,
a Dallas-based consultant, no longer worries about sky-high charges for
changing his plane reservation, booking too close to his trip or booking
during a peak travel season.
Burke last year paid Air Canada a flat $6,858 for 20
flights between eastern Canada and many of the 53 U.S. cities where the
carrier operates, including his home airport, Dallas/Fort Worth. That
means each round trip costs $686 no matter when Burke takes it during the
12-month life of the deal. He's eligible for free upgrades to business
class, and he can book the trip up to one hour before flight time, and
change or cancel without penalty.
"A couple of times (before buying the pass), I got
socked with significant increases in fare because I changed the (travel)
date," Burke said recently at the Toronto airport.
Selling bulk travel to individual customers is just
one of a half-dozen innovations by Air Canada in recent years that have
U.S. rivals glancing northward to monitor their acceptance by travelers.
Once a lumbering money-loser, it's now a profitable pioneer, finding new
ways to sell passengers only the services and amenities they want and
nothing more.
With Air Canada, a traveler can, for example, cut
fares by agreeing to leave a suitcase at home or by forgoing loyalty
points. Or the traveler can choose to pay more for reserving a seat. In
short, Canada's biggest and oldest carrier is showing its U.S. competitors
a new way of doing business that could become the future of air
travel.
Since the travel bust earlier this decade, Air Canada,
the world's 13th-biggest airline, has broken from the pack of big airlines
by focusing on customers rather than deep cost cuts, says Perry Flint,
editor-in-chief of trade magazine Air Transport World.
"Very few airlines tackled the idea of trying to
persuade customers that airlines deliver value for money," Flint says. Air
Canada has achieved that largely by unbundling fares on its website so
customers have no longer been forced to pay for things they haven't
wanted, says Flint, whose publication awarded Air Canada its 2007 Airline
Industry Achievement Award for Market Leadership.
Flint says major U.S. airlines, for now, are
reluctant to adopt Air Canada's approach largely because of the financial
risks if they prove to be a flop with their passengers. "The herd
mentality means that no one wants to move first," Flint says.
Peter Belobaba, an airline pricing expert at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, agrees that Air Canada is ahead of
the pack among North American airlines. "More than any other U.S. legacy
carrier, they've been willing to try innovative ideas," he says.
Sept. 11 impact
Like the U.S. airlines, Air Canada grappled with the
travel downturn following the 9/11 terrorism in 2001. And, like U.S.
rivals, Air Canada lost domestic business to a discount rival, WestJet.
In 2003, Canadian travel sank when the SARS outbreak
scared travelers. That year, Air Canada began an 18-month, top-to-bottom
restructuring under bankruptcy-court protection.
Lately, the outlook has brightened. The company
earned $171 million last year and is expected to improve on that this
year. It also has restored its workforce to 23,000, about the level before
the travel downturn.
Some of what travelers are seeing as a result of the
restructuring:
•Ticket pricing. Last year, Air Canada became
the first North American carrier to implement a la carte pricing. Fliers
can buy cheap tickets for bare-bones service, then pay more for extras
such as schedule flexibility or reserved seating. Fliers can also decline
services such as baggage handling and loyalty points and deduct $4 to $12
from the price of the ticket.
The cheapest, "Tango" tickets, come with minimal
service and are Air Canada's most popular. The most expensive, "Executive
Class," include the works: meals, lounge access and reserved seating.
Ticketing levels below the deluxe Executive Class
offer a long list of options, and they vary by ticketing level. Among
them: reserved seats, $13; the option to change departure time, $36;
agreeing not to cancel or change the ticket, a $6 credit; or agreeing not
to check baggage, a $5 credit each way.
•Flight passes. In 2004, Air Canada started
selling passes that let customers buy 10 or 20 flights for travel in
specified zones over a set period. For example, a traveler can pay $2,100
upfront to fly Air Canada 10 times (five round trips) in western North
America, territory consisting of 12 U.S. cities and 30 Canadian cities.
The flights must be taken within 12 months of the purchase date or they're
forfeited. Individual pass sales, which generate about 6% of Air Canada
revenue, doubled in 2006 over 2005.
Marianne Borenstein, an executive at Toronto-based
data tracker Points.com, calls the passes "really convenient." She can
call up to an hour before departure to reschedule without penalty.
•Subscription travel. In October 2006, Air
Canada introduced subscriptions, which allow buyers to take an unlimited
number of flights for three or six months. In March, the carrier started
selling them for the first time the USA. Because prices vary by fare class
as well as geography, fliers wanting the most freedom pay more. A pass to
fly anywhere in North America, for instance, costs more than a pass
restricted to eastern North America.
Frequent flier Jim Flieler of Toronto, who flies at
least 100 times a year, now buys a pass for a set number of trips, and
plans to switch to a subscription to bring down the cost of his travel on
Air Canada.
"It's huge savings," he said in an Air Canada VIP
lounge in Toronto before flying recently.
•Digital entertainment. Air Canada is the
first airline in the world to install digital entertainment systems in
every seat, even in its smallest 70-seat jets. The fleet will be outfitted
by the end of 2008. The systems contain digital movies and music that
passengers can start, stop and pause whenever they want. The system is
free, even for Tango ticket holders.
Music fans this month, for instance, can choose from
a few XM satellite radio channels or make a playlist from albums by
artists including Beyoncé, Abba and Zero 7. Only top-tier international
carriers such as Emirates, Singapore and Cathay Pacific have similar
systems.
This spring, Air Canada will begin testing technology
that lets travelers check in, check bags and ultimately board Air Canada
flights with just a cellphone or mobile device. A traveler will be able to
receive boarding pass information through a tiny bar-code image on a
cellphone or mobile device.
That, too, would put Air Canada ahead of U.S.
airlines. Now, U.S. airline security rules require travelers to have a
paper boarding pass in hand when going through security, says Betsy
Talton, a Delta Air Lines spokeswoman.
Reinventing the wing
Former Air Canada CEO Robert Milton, who is now
chairman of airline parent company ACE Aviation Holdings, concluded in the
late 1990s that the traditional airline business model was broken and
needed reinvention. Customers no longer trusted that airlines were dealing
fairly with them, partly because of the hassle and expense of buying a
ticket, he said. Milton said Southwest Airlines, the consistently
profitable discount giant, had shown the value of keeping the trust of its
customers.
The result of the changes, says Henry Harteveldt,
travel industry analyst at Forrester Research, is "the smartest travel
retail model" among big traditional airlines. "It allows the customer to
buy what they value, gives the customer an extraordinary amount of
control, and it helps Air Canada earn more money."
He likens the airline to a "shopping mall with
wings." When taking a short flight to be at an appointment on time, they
can buy the cheapest, most restrictive Tango ticket. When flying home
after a business meeting that could end early, they might buy a more
expensive ticket so they can catch an earlier flight. It's no different
than when consumers choose among K-Mart, Macy's and Neiman Marcus, he
says.
Despite the views of Air Canada's fans, airline
analyst Ray Neidl says its pricing approach will be slow to catch on with
U.S. competitors. Neidl thinks small U.S. carriers will embrace it faster
than the big airlines.
And some Air Canada-style features are showing up at
smaller U.S. airlines.
In June, low-fare carrier Spirit Airlines will make
baggage check-in and on-board beverages optional charges so that it could
lower its own costs and keep fares low. Soft drinks and coffee now cost $1
on flights, while those wanting to check bags must pay $5 online or $10 at
the airport. Columbus, Ohio-based Skybus, which is set to launch service
on May 22, charges separately for an array of services from baggage
handling to on-board snacks.
Air Canada has had enough visits from curious U.S.
industry executives that it gives them a "canned presentation," says Sean
Menke, Air Canada's chief commercial officer. On visits to its low-key,
seven-building campus between runways at the Montreal airport, U.S.
airline executives hear about how surprisingly few customers buy only a
Tango ticket. Only about 25% of Air Canada travelers buy one with no
upgrade, he says.
Menke and Air Canada CEO Montie Brewer also share
findings about what customers don't want to pay for, such as $10
meals.
While Air Canada executives won't say which U.S.
executives have visited, the airline's Star Alliance partner in the USA —
United Airlines — is studying the concept of offering customers an option
to choose services they're willing to pay for, says Robin Urbanski, a
United spokeswoman.
Shareholders win, too
Not all of Air Canada's innovations are visible to
travelers.
Milton, the ACE chairman, created the new holding
company three years ago, believing that Air Canada's stock price didn't
reflect its true value. The holding company has allowed the company to
launch separate publicly traded companies: Aeroplan, its loyalty program;
Jazz, its regional carrier; and Acts, its maintenance unit, which
contracts with 100 airlines.
The spinoffs created billions of dollars in value for
shareholders, Milton says. In all, ACE and its four business units — the
two airlines, the maintenance unit and the loyalty program — have a stock
market value of about $7 billion, roughly on par with American Airlines,
the world's biggest airline.
Air Canada is in the midst of the biggest fleet
overhaul of any North American airline. Some 130 planes are getting new
interiors, including seats, power outlets for laptops and lavatories. Air
Canada's 44 Boeing 767s, which are used to fly to London Heathrow, Tel
Aviv, Shanghai and other distant cities, are getting cutting-edge,
lie-flat beds in business class. Air Canada has ordered 37 Boeing 787
Dreamliners, the most of any North American airline.
What could be Air Canada's biggest and riskiest
behind-the-scenes move won't happen until next year.
The airline is spending an undisclosed sum to replace
its decades-old computer reservations system, a patchwork of mainframe
computers similar to the systems that the world's major airlines continue
to rely on today. Air Canada now sells 60% of its domestic tickets
directly from its website, vs. more than 70% for Southwest, one of the
industry leaders in that area. The more flexible Web-based system will
allow the airline to develop even more inventive ways to sell its fares,
says CEO Brewer. For example, it will allow customers to accumulate and
spend credits from a canceled reservation or a food voucher given during a
flight delay.
"As long as (airlines) sell through the traditional
channels," he says, "they preclude
innovation." |