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Targeting Ancillary Revenue Growth in a Feasible Way
publication date: Mar 9, 2012
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author/source: Ritesh Gupta
by Ritesh Gupta
March 7, 2012
IN-DEPTH: “As ancillary is
ancillary, not the
core business - the guiding principle is that as long as the ancillary
products
can add value to customers and bottom line with marginal revenue out
weighing
total marginal costs involved, it’s a good product to offer and core
business
will be beneficial”. Is it the right way of assessing ancillary revenue
today?
Travel businesses continue
to gather customer preferences and have been looking to offer
improved
personalised features to their travellers.
Targeting Ancillary Revenue Growth in a Feasible Way
In its regular interactions
with specialists in this arena, EyeforTravel has found that travel
companies
are attempting to better serve their most loyal customers while also
working to
differentiate themselves from competition on features other than cost.
A lot of
these efforts are focused online in gaining a deeper understanding of
the plans
that a user has already made, and then using that information to market
travel
enhancements, upgrades, or add-ons.
In case of airlines,
merchandising and ancillary revenue are helping airlines in improving
their
bottom line results. Baggage fees, travel insurance and vacation
packaging are
among the top revenue generators.
Airlines assess various
ancillary revenue options first from the perspective of customer
whether that
is adding values, comfort and convenience to passengers, then followed
by
revenue and costs associated as well as whether that can help
incremental air
sales and operating costs saving.
Any discussion of ancillary
revenue should also include a realisation of the how the core revenue
is being
sold. Any supplier can sell ancillary items, but it shouldn’t be
without an
overall retailing strategy. As an executive from Cathay Pacific Airways
stated
last year, as ancillary is ancillary, not the core business - the
guiding
principle is that as long as the ancillary products can add value to
customers
and bottom line with marginal revenue out weighing total marginal costs
involved, it’s a good product to offer and core business will be
beneficial. It
is also highlighted that as long as the products add value to the
customer,
it’s not important whether it’s a standalone product from the airline
or if
it’s in cooperation with a partner. As far as selling is concerned, the
customer should never feel that the airline is ripping them off by
adding
something that they can’t decide freely.
EyeforTravel’s Ritesh Gupta
spoke to Michael Smith, founder, Sea Mountain about
cross-selling and up-selling, unbundling of fares, getting the
merchandising
right and more in detail.
A study last
year indicated that cross-selling and up-selling through the booking
process
will be the fastest-growing area of ancillary revenues for travel
businesses in
2012. What do you make of this assessment?
Michael
Smith:
This is an interesting one.
The industry has been on a bit of a journey. Way back in 1998 when I
was at BA
we introduced travel insurance to ba.com long before the term “in-path” had
been
coined and before the whole current ancillary movement had really
started.
That was one example of cross-sell that the Internet made a lot easier.
It
wasn’t very sophisticated but it was a start.
Since then, cross-sell has
been the push from the people (initially) selling travel
insurance/hotels/car
hire and then subsequently on-board meals and other “airline” items -
by that I
mean the airline “owns” the inventory. That was then followed by the
up-sell,
mainly focusing on getting people to move cabins. Optiontown and others
have
been helping airlines maximise that source of revenue without diluting
yield by
encouraging this upsell.
So, some of this has been
pushed by the technology vendors – saying that it will be fasting
growing area.
To an extent that is true, as it is coming from a lower base. I work
very
closely with Jay Sorensen at the IdeaWorks Company and we both think
that the
growth area is still going to be checked bags. Look what United
Airlines has
done on international routes for example. So, whilst cross-selling and
up-selling are way more sexy, the nitty gritty of bags and getting
a-la-carte
pricing to work better will probably be the area delivering for the
bottom
line.
The unbundling
of fares and services over the years has seen the growth of ancillary
products
such as checked baggage, meals, upgrades etc. What new trends have you
witnessed in this arena? How are these offerings shaping up as
ancillary
products?
Michael
Smith:
Subscription services – the
likes of United Airlines and American Airlines going down this route.
Not only
does it make collecting money easier – and adds to cash flow, it means
that you
are locking people into to your airline as they want to get value from
money
from their service. It also frees up real estate – if you have already
sold,
say, lounge access and priority boarding then you can focus on selling
other,
higher margin products and services.
In terms of new trends –
onboard seems to be an area of focus. Carriers with cashless cabins are
looking
at how they can pre-sell items before boarding either as part of a fare
family
or as a standalone item – e.g. (say) JetBlue bundling onboard TV with
food and
drink purchases – for example saying buy a $40 value voucher but if you
prepay
you only have to pay $25.
Onboard tablets – main
thing here that stands out from the crowd is MI.Airline – they have the
option
to pay direct from the tablet which I haven’t seen elsewhere. And, if
the
airline lets them, you can pay for miles!
“Intelligent” search. This
fits in a bit with cross- and up-sell. KLM has, along with their
partner,
RightNow, released a product that when customers search for information
not
only is better information returned but the banner ads that are
displayed are
relevant to the customers search. I call this the “googlisation of
airline
search” – more targeted ads that improves cross- and up-sell.
In the
past you have mentioned that getting the merchandising right is all
about
creating a better customer experience. What do you think is the key to
achieving the same? What factors does one need to take into
consideration?
Michael
Smith:
Customer Experience is
really the Holy Grail. At the end of the day, most people are flying
from the
same airports and generally with the same type of planes. So
how do
you differentiate and make money? Ryanair does it purely on price and
others
are trying via the customer experience route.
Probably two main areas.
The first is understanding your brand and your corporate culture –
can’t see
Ryanair making a marketing proposition out of a
fantastic premium customer experience when their culture is
geared
around everything being screwed to the floor ! That allows you to work
out what
is possible to deliver, day in, day out. The second is understanding
your
market and what people are willing to pay for. All business class was a
great
customer experience, but there weren’t enough people willing to pay for
it,
hence one of the reasons why the
all business-class carrier Eos
Airlines and the likes didn’t survive.
Once you have those two
areas worked out then you can consider how you train people, market it,
use
technology to help deliver it. CRM rather failed because it was driven
by
technology rather than people/strategy/culture – hopefully Customer
Experience
will not be another buzzword that crashes and burns.
How do
you assess the maturity level of cross-selling and up-selling
strategies in
terms of them being tailored to match benefits and promotions to
customers’
profiles? What sort of trends have you witnessed in this arena?
Michael
Smith:
Many people are at a
very basic level. They have some products to sell and they are slowly
getting
there. Even people like EasyJet who are pretty good, still have trouble
populating offers – e.g. if you are flying from airport x and they
offer
parking make sure it offers that airport first.
If you keep offering me
first class and I never take it, why keep on doing it? Which is what
lots of
carriers do as they are not yet at the level of sophistication to
deliver up
better offers. RightNow is doing some great stuff in this area. People
like Beyond
Analysis are also working in this area to help people turn their data
into
actionable information, but, airlines are awash in that information and
not
overly great at using it.
Many years at BA there was
a promo called “Magic One Way” which looked at people who were only
buying one
way tickets long haul and were clearly not emigrating. Offering them a
return
deal had good results – something simple and relatively easy to do and
many
airlines are not doing these things.
I’m doing a fair bit in the
payments arena these days and that’s another area rich in transactional
data
that some airlines are starting to use to get better insights.
For
example, LAN increased its sales conversion on its payment page by 20
percent
by working with its PSP (payment services provider - in this case
Adyen) to
better understand what was happening and then re-configure the page
layout. Several of the PSP’s like FirstData, WorldPay and Ogone
offer
similar type services to help airline merchants.
However, compared to the
mail order company that I worked at before BA way back in the ‘90’s
they were
streets ahead even then of where most airlines are now.
Travel
companies are attempting to better serve their most loyal customers
while also
working to differentiate themselves from competition on features other
than
cost. A lot of these efforts are focused online in gaining a deeper
understanding of the plans that a user has already made, and then using
that
information to market travel enhancements, upgrades, or add-ons. What
do you
make of such efforts?
Michael
Smith:
Again, it is the Holy
Grail.
Companies like TripIt have
gone down a subscription model for their services – they know more
about me
(and their regular users) than any one airline as it has all my hotel
and
flying activity in it, but, airlines are not yet into getting that data
or even
exploiting the data they have themselves. Some people are advertising
on these
services (mainly car rental and hotels) but it hasn’t taken off -
pardon the
pun! In Australia, Qantas has done a good job at selling activities as
part of
the flight process, but, if any of the carriers are being ultra
sophisticated
about this, they are doing a good job of keeping it quiet!
What
factors do you think a supplier should take into consideration while
going
ahead with offering ancillary services selling via mobile phones and
tablets?
Michael
Smith:
This is a very, very new
area. BA, for example, is focusing on its onboard tablet
(understandably
with an outsourcing partner) and there are plans to sell the
concept/product
elsewhere for the onboard offering.
There are a lot of factors
to take into account:
- Who owns
the app in terms of the IP
- How does it
touch the airline system (reside in it, cross the firewall and so on)
and what
are the security/data protection implications
- How often
and how does it update
- Is it only
your airline or multiple airlines
- Platform –
just phone (Android/apple etc) or tablet and phone
- Is it a cut
down version of your regular site or an optimised version
- What do you
want (can?) sell on it
- How do
people pay on it – how do you manage refunds?
- How do you
manage disruption and change of plans/aircraft and failure to deliver
the
agreed product
And those are just a few
things!
What
according to you are the dos and don’ts in Ancillary Services Selling
via
mobile phones and tablets?
Michael
Smith:
Some of the points I would
recommend:
- Don’t think
it is easy
- Don’t think
it is cheap to do -although it might be cheaper than other ways of
selling!
- Do test it
to make sure it works
- Do keep it
simple – not everyone has 3G or higher services or a smartphone
- Do look at
it through your customers eyes – how many check in apps do you want to
have if
you travel a lot on multiple carriers?
- Don’t get
caught up in the hype
- Again the
list above could go on.
About EyeforTravel
EyeforTravel is a leading business
intelligence
provider for the online travel and tourism industry. As well as
providing some
of the most in-depth research into global online travel markets and
trends,
EyeforTravel produces a series of senior executive travel conferences
on a
diverse range of topics including travel distribution, online
marketing, social
media, mobile and revenue management. For more information
visit www.eyefortravel.com.
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Contact:
Rosie
Akenhead
Director of Events
& Industry Analysis, EyeforTravel
rosie@eyefortravel.com
Toll
Free: 800 814 3459 ext. 7229
Travel companies are attempting to better serve their most loyal customers while also working to differentiate themselves from competition on features other than cost. A lot of these efforts are focused online in gaining a deeper understanding of the plans that a user has already made, and then using that information to market travel enhancements, upgrades, or add-ons.
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