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British Airways CEO: “Many of our customers are rightly fed up”

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If you saw any of our social media feeds over the weekend, you will have seen pictures of the huge queues in Heathrow Terminal 5 on Saturday morning. Even the First Wing had a huge queue at the time our pictures were taken (see bottom image below).

British Airways CEO Sean Doyle later addressed this in a vlog to staff. It is worth running through the key points – the bottom line is that you should not expect any immediate improvements as we head into Easter.

Heathrow queues

“Many of our customers are rightly fed up”

Unsurprisingly, said Doyle:

“Many of our customers are rightly fed up.  I know you’re also fed up and I’m as frustrated as you are with some of the things we’ve had to deal with.”

The current British Airways issues can be broken down into three areas. If you’re planning to make a BA booking for future travel, especially if it involves a Saturday departure, you should take a view on how long these issues will take to fix before buying your ticket.

Staffing

As we covered extensively at the time, British Airways used the pandemic to try to rid itself of ‘legacy’ employees on ‘above market’ pay scales. This was broadly successful, but led to many thousands of years of combined experience leaving the company.

British Airways is facing similar issues to many other organisations. With ground-based hospitality companies increasing their salaries, and without the anti-social working hours that often come with working for an airline, it isn’t easy to attract people back. We have already seen BA wet leasing aircraft from Iberia Express because it doesn’t have enough crew to operate the new Gatwick short-haul schedule.

Doyle claims that 27,000 people have applied for jobs across the airline since it actively started recruiting in October. Over 5,000 have accepted offers but only 1,200 are actually working due to notice, training and security requirements.

Covid paperwork

Doyle blames confusion over ‘Covid paperwork’ for much of the airport delays and for blockages at call centres.

This is, of course, partly true. I am flying to Amsterdam today and was surprised to find out at the last minute that I need to print off a ‘health declaration’ form. Because there is no requirement to upload this on ba.com before travel I could have been caught out during boarding.

However, BA isn’t helping itself. Courtesy of my friend Andrew, here is a comparison of BA vs easyJet pre-flight messaging when heading to Portugal (the easyJet example is a few weeks old so the exact Portugal information may now be wrong).

easyJet:

“For international flights, the Portuguese Government requires you to have proof of a negative test before you travel (PCR test done within 72 hours or Rapid Antigen test done within 48 hours before departure). Self-tests are not accepted.

Only customers with EU-DCC showing proof of recovery are exempt from the test requirement. For all flights (including domestic flights) you must also complete an online PLF before boarding, regardless of your vaccination status (https://portugalcleanandsafe.pt).

All customers travelling to mainland Portugal must go to Bag Drop to have their documents checked. Please check the latest Government requirements for full details.”

BA (this is the default email, at least on short haul, as of last weekend):

“With just three days before you head to [your destination] with us, we wanted to make sure you’re all set, and ready to fly.

You’ve probably got everything in hand, but with a few days to go its worth double-checking you’ve covered all the essentials, from entry requirements to COVID-19 tests, travel documents to face masks. From 24 hours before departure, use the British Airways app to check-in, then you can travel contact free at the airport. If you think you may have forgotten something, you’ll find all you need to know on ba.com as well as a handy final check list.”

Which passenger is most likely to arrive at the airport with the wrong paperwork?

Heathrow queus

Issues at Terminal 5

Some of the issues at Terminal 5 are outside of BA’s control.

Qatar Airways is still camping out in the terminal, taking up boarding gates and check-in desks. Terminal 4 is due to re-open, but not until July.

You could argue, of course, why British Airways is not moving more flights into Terminal 3. You could also ask why American Airlines has been allowed to move a number of flights from Terminal 3 to Terminal 5 if capacity is so contrained.

In the short term, British Airways is responding by cancelling a wave of flights over the next few weeks. This will do nothing to reduce the number of people at check-in or security, assuming that everyone accepts a rebooking, but it will reduce the pressure on gates.

If you haven’t landed at Heathrow recently, you won’t know that it is now common to wait 30 minutes for a gate to become available. (I was also caught out at Terminal 3 recently on a Finnair flight so this is not exclusively a BA issue.) Once a gate is free, it is pot luck whether any staff are available to attach a jet bridge and/or to remove baggage from the hold.

Is this enough?

It is clear that BA could do more in terms of preparing passengers better for their trip, even if it meant calling everyone individually. Those people who do online check-in will already have cleared the documentation threshold so it wouldn’t require contacting every passenger.

Solving the recruitment issue is, to some extent, outside the control of the airline given legal requirements over training and security clearance. This doesn’t necessarily excuse losing so many employees in the first place.

The issues over Terminal 5 gates will ease when Terminal 4 is back, but problems over baggage handling etc will not go away if more staff cannot be found. The recent pay rise given to Menzies Aviation staff who had threatened strike action will hopefully carry across to other areas of the ‘below the wing’ operation.

As Sean Doyle said in his message:

“That’s all for now, thanks for listening, and thanks for joining us as we begin our climb to be a Better BA. Speak soon.”


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Comments (234)

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

  • Maggie says:

    Yes! I got my pre-flight email from BA yesterday, expecting them to require me to upload our documents prior to flying to South Africa on Monday. But no…the generic email. In contrast, we flew to Panama last month and were hassled by Iberia to upload all documents for arrival in Panama and transiting through Madrid to their website. It was time consuming but it paid off as we had a streamlined experience in transit at in Panama. We weren’t able to check in online until all of the documentation was uploaded. What a contrast. South Africa have requirements too, and I’m guessing passengers won’t be prepared and cause inevitable delays.

  • James says:

    Well at least Sean Doyle confirms the race to the bottom for BA continues.
    The IT issues started when BA decided to sack their permanent IT staff in 2016 and brought in people from India for a fraction of the cost.
    The staffing issue is also a BA self inflicted own goal with the fire and rehire of the BA board under Alex Cruz and the still present board who try to hide the fact they followed the same policy like COO Jason Mahoney yet they seem to suffer amnesia forgetting they were jointly responsible for creating the huge staffing issue now.
    Perhaps the CFO at BA in all his wisdom thought just slashing staff was the answer….well how much is it costing the company and its reputation now???

  • Stewart Hughes says:

    Strangely, having recently used T2 with Air Canada outbound and inbound at the start of March our experience was extremely good. Everything on time, no issue on landing, baggage including ski’s all arrived within 30 minutes of leaving the aircraft.

  • Andy says:

    I was there Friday lunchtime and I have never seen T5 so busy! big queues even for fast track and had to queue for 20 minutes just to get to the ticket scanner.

    All a big mess really and put me off flying with BA in the short term. I might as well fly low cost if I’m going to spend all the time queuing

  • sambe says:

    I’m fed up with every single booking having at least one flight cancelled since at least Autumn 2020. Stop advertising false availability BA. Besides being fraudulent, it’s a massive pain for everyone involved, including your IT and customer support teams.

  • Chris says:

    Last night I watched the case against Boeing on Netflix. It’s essentially about how the company abandoned it’s ethos of passenger safety first in favour of stock market first. The first anyone realised it was when planes started dropping out of the sky. At the time I thought to myself that I would avoid any company where safety is critical that is cutting costs. Not 12 hours later I’m reading this. BA’s safety is probably fine but I’m not sure I want to take the risk.

  • YC says:

    Any problems with doing a bag drop 6hrs pre-departure with finnair in heathrow? Keen to avoid any mishaps and get some work done in T3 lounges. They have a number of flights outgoing throughout the day so I’m sure their counter will be open but not sure if they limit when u can check in/bag drop

  • NigelthePensionerr says:

    “That’s all for now, thanks for listening, and thanks for joining us as we begin our climb to be a Better BA. Speak soon.”
    There are more steps upwards here Mr Doyle, thanks to your friend Mr Walsh, than there are in the Empire State Building. Happy climbing! I hope im still around to see BA get back to former glory, but its going to take a massive board reshuffle towards people who understand efficient, comfortable and luxury air travel.

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

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