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Who did you pick as your most loved Economy airline? And who won the New York flights?

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Last week we ran a market research survey on Head for Points, dressed up as a competition. As I didn’t think of the original idea, I am free to say that the concept was very clever.

An airline approached us to get an understanding of who people would choose to fly with if price, airline miles, status benefits and other perks not included in the ticket price were stripped out. The easiest way to do this was to create exactly such a situation. Not a hypothetical situation, but a real one. We asked readers to name the airline they would choose to fly to New York with if they could pick any carrier. The winner would get flights to New York, flying the very same airline that they picked.

We first ran this competition in 2018, and both the secret sponsor and HfP thought it would be interesting to see what had changed a year later. Today I want to share the results with you.

Virgin Atlantic A330neo economy delight

Who is your favourite Economy carrier?

In only a week we had 12,179 valid entries. This was a slight increase on the 11,934 entries we got last year. The results were (2018 results in brackets):

  • Virgin Atlantic 55% (55%)
  • British Airways 32% (29%)
  • American Airlines 4% (6%)
  • Norwegian 3% (5%)
  • Delta 2% (3%)
  • United 1% (1%)

Well done Virgin Atlantic (again). Whilst I did predict this before we started, I was slightly surprised that Virgin’s share of the vote held up. My gut feeling was that British Airways would take share from them as the memories of its well publicised economy service cuts, which have been partially reversed, began to fade, but it didn’t happen.

Why did people pick Virgin Atlantic? The top reason was ‘Brand reputation’ (36%) which shows that all of their marketing, customer experience and PR efforts have paid off. ‘Previous experience’ came 2nd at 27% – so people who fly it are happy to fly it again – followed by ‘Crew and service’ with 23%. As a reminder, you could only pick one reason.

Why did people pick British Airways? ‘Previous experience’ was the winner here with 36%. ‘Brand reputation’ was surprisingly strong with 34%. 21% picked ‘Crew and service’.

Looked at from the other angles:

  • Virgin was the only airline which got its highest score for ‘Brand reputation’
  • All of the other five airlines listed (BA, Delta, American, Norwegian, United) got their highest ‘why would you fly them?’ score for ‘Previous experience’
  • As with last year, Virgin had the highest score for ‘Crew and service’ (which, arguably, shares characteristics with ‘Brand reputation’)
  • ‘Food and beverage’ and ‘In-flight entertainment’ were rarely mentioned by anyone as the key factor. Norwegian scored highest on wi-fi which is interesting because – whilst they have it on short-haul in Europe – they do not have it on most of their UK-US flights, although it is coming.

I should mention that we plugged the competition via Facebook and it was picked up via some competition websites. The results are not exclusively driven by our regular readers and include the broader travelling public.

Whilst British Airways increased its share of the vote slightly, it did NOT take votes from Virgin Atlantic. The biggest faller was Norwegian, which I can only imagine lost votes due to publicity over its financial problems, and to a slightly lesser extent American.

This might be partially explained when you look at the split of passengers by age. We didn’t ask about your age in our economy competition last year.

If you draw a line at 45 (we had three age brackets under 45 and three age brackets above 45) then there is a clear split:

You were more likely to pick Virgin, American and Delta if you were under 45

You were more likely to pick British Airways, Norwegian or United if you were 45+

I would imagine that BA’s improved showing this year came primarily from people switching from Norwegian.

And Virgin Atlantic said …..

I sent these results to Virgin Atlantic for comment. Daniel Kerzner, Vice President Customer Experience, said:

“We’re delighted that our Economy offering has been recognised as most loved by passengers. We are committed to putting the customer at the heart of everything we do. We want to further differentiate our product and service and give people an even better way to travel, and to be loved for it.”

I thought it best not to ask for a comment from any of the other airlines ….

What can we draw from this?

There are a few key elements to take away from this, I think:

The Virgin Atlantic marketing, customer experience and PR machines do their jobs well, with the reputation of the airline being a key reason why people choose to fly it.

British Airways is recovering, slowly, from the bad PR in 2016/17 caused by its (mainly reversed) cuts to the economy product. The astonishingly low seat score (only 3% of people who picked BA picked it primarily because they liked the BA seat) shows that people are fully aware what they are getting.

Norwegian’s high score for offering wi-fi – even though it doesn’t on most long-haul flights – shows how easily marketing messages can get confused. Norwegian scored better for ‘Previous experience’ this year, possibly because more and more people are trying it out, but the sharp fall in their overall vote must be a worry. If our readers are nervous about picking them because they might lose their prize if the airline goes bust, imagine what the paying public are thinking.

No-one seems to put much importance on IFE or food and beverage, or readers decided there was little to choose between carriers

And who won the two free tickets to New York?

Congratulations to our winner, Aaron W. He chose Virgin Atlantic as this preferred carrier and will soon be heading off with them to New York.

Comments (55)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Alex says:

    In many ways it shows the power of marketing over reality. Sitting in a cramped Virgin 787 is objectively inferior to a more spacious United 767.

  • Peter K says:

    Congratulations Aaron!

    • xcalx says:

      It would be interesting to know the method of entering used by winners of the HFP competitions (facebook etc). Have not noticed a courtesy thanks reply in the comments from winners for quite a while.

      • Peter K says:

        This competition was on the MoneySavingExpert competition page so the person entering may never have read this blog.

  • TripRep says:

    Now it’s confirmed it’s VS, any word on how they will make redemptions from regional airports possible with FlyBE?

  • Nate1309 says:

    If the VA 241 voucher was exactly the same as the BA one, they would be getting all my business. As it is though I dont want to use miles for economy or premium so BA win out.

    • The Savage Squirrel says:

      This. Rob is absolutely right when he says it’s a huge missed opportunity from Virgin. Give those of us who currently fly lesser cabins with Virgin a taste of up front and we may get addicted…

    • Doug M says:

      Indeed. Given the miles you have to burn anyway, and the fees still payable it’s hardly a freebie as such.

    • Alex D says:

      +1

      • Mark says:

        +1 I would switch from collecting with BA to Virgin in a moment if the 241 was available to non status flying club members

        • Stu287 says:

          I think this is exactly why virgin limit the 2 4 1 to status pax. They want to reward flyers rather than points collectors. Not tarnishing you personally given that you may well be a ff. But if BA chose to limit the 241 in premium cabins to those with some kind of status they would probably make their ff’s quite happy given the large amount of extra availability that would likely bring.

          • Rob says:

            Totally the opposite. BA would be happier to stop frequent flyers redeeming (since those people have miles that were not paid for) and let Tesco / Amex customers have all the space. BA, well IAG, has had 1p for every Avios for those people redeem.

  • Alex Sm says:

    «Norwegian scored highest on wi-fi which is interesting because – whilst they have it on short-haul in Europe – they do not have it on their UK-US flights!»

    That’s news! Perhaps then it’s _perceived_ expectation which will then only exacerbate disappointment…

  • Aaron Watson says:

    Thankyou so much, it has been a pretty rubbish couple of weeks for my wife and I with family problems so this has put a smile on our faces.

  • The Savage Squirrel says:

    I flew Virgin this week PE on a start-of-half-term flight.. Should be terrible right? An old 747 that gets ‘hard wear’ from kids messing with things, a flight jammed with overexcited kids… The plane was jammed full this being around school holiday time so this must be as challenging as it gets for crew (excepting rowdy Vegas flights on UFC weeks etc). As someone always looking for ways to improve the customer service offering in their own (tiny) business I was watching with interest. Have to say the crew were absolutely exemplary and service was excellent (nosied down the back and seemed just as good there). In another example of cost of product not always being not the biggest factor in service levels, both Mrs Squirrel and I said one of the noticeable touches was being served coffee in a homely full sized china mug rather than small plastic/paper cups. Haven’t flown Virgin for a couple of years but definitely maintaining standards in all cabins from what I can see and a worthy winner.

  • Alex Sm says:

    Well done Rob on copying and pasting :)) Repeating the jokes does not always work…. But at least quotes are different (though the word “differentiate” used in both)

    _3 May 2018_

    And Virgin Atlantic said …..

    I sent these results to Virgin Atlantic for comment. Daniel Kerzner, VP Customer Experience, said:

    “Sir Richard Branson founded Virgin Atlantic with the purpose to create a better and differentiated passenger journey. We remain a challenger brand, always innovating to provide irresistible, great value experiences that our customers love. We’re also fortunate to have the most fabulous crew who bring our brand to life across every cabin.”

    I thought it best not to ask for a comment from any of the other airlines ….

    _28 February 2019_

    And Virgin Atlantic said …..
    I sent these results to Virgin Atlantic for comment. Daniel Kerzner, Vice President Customer Experience, said:

    “We’re delighted that our Economy offering has been recognised as most loved by passengers. We are committed to putting the customer at the heart of everything we do. We want to further differentiate our product and service and give people an even better way to travel, and to be loved for it.”

    I thought it best not to ask for a comment from any of the other airlines ….

    • Russ says:

      Agreed. Outrageous plagiarism. Let’s call the police….

      • Rob says:

        No point totally rewriting the same article is there?! Daniel gave us a new quote.

        • Alex Sm says:

          I know this well enough from my newswire journalism past… While many of my colleagues did what you do, I always tried to vary language and style a bit even for repeat pieces. But each to his own of course

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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