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Brunchgate: How many flyers are impacted by BA’s morning and evening meal changes?

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Our articles on the new British Airways long-haul brunch and late evening meal changes this week caused a lot of discussion.

Oliver Ranson of Airline Revenue Economics produced an interesting analysis on the changes for his Substack newsletter and I thought it would benefit from a wider audience.

You can see other articles by Oliver, and sign up to receive Oliver’s future articles by email, here. Click ‘No thanks’ on that page to bypass the sign-up page if you just want to read his other content.

We have edited this article slightly from its original format and any errors or typos may be ours. Over to Oliver ….

British Airways brunch and late evening meal changes

As HfP covered this week, British Airways is now offering a brunch service on longhaul flights leaving before 11.29am. The menus look bonkers. As the HfP article showed, you will get:

  • a starter, like smoked salmon, soup or artichoke
  • a breakfast course like waffles or sausage, mushrooms and hash browns
  • chocolate cake, coffee and liqueurs

You can wash your breakfast down with a nice glass of red or white wine if you wish.

As well as the rather strange menu choices, BA has decided that any flight scheduled to leave before 11.29am will get this brunch menu. This choice looks far too late.

To see why, consider Monday’s BA255 flight to Bridgetown, Barbados. Scheduled to depart at 11.25am, this flight will have featured brunch. Operated by Boeing 787-10 G-ZBLG, the flight left more or less on time and was airborne by 11.45am.

It will take the crew about an hour to get everything ready for the service. So passengers will start to eat around 12.45pm. This is time for the full lunch, not brunch. If the flight had been delayed, which is not unusual at Heathrow, passengers would be eating their waffles or sausages at 1pm, 2pm or later.

For the many passengers connecting from Europe, which is generally one hour ahead of London, the brunch service is even less suitable.

British Airways brunch and late evening meal changes

Why has British Airways chosen this model?

Why has BA chosen this bizarre model? Obviously it is down to cost control. But why is the cutover point at 11.29am? I have reverse-engineered their decision, looking at outbound flights from Heathrow.

For simplicity, I have ignored inbound flights and long-haul flights from Gatwick.

Departures leaving before 10.00am might be suitable candidates for brunch. Unfortunately BA simply does not have many long-haul flights leaving that early.

I took the airline’s schedule for 6th November from OAG Schedule Analyser and identified all the long-haul flights departing from Heathrow.

The table below shows that only 1% to 2% of the airline’s long-haul First, Club World and World Traveller Plus (premium economy) capacity departs before 9.00am. In fact, there is just one flight – the early departure to New York JFK.

British Airways departures long haul by time

As you can see, just 14% of First seats and 11.8% of Club World and World Traveller Plus seats are scheduled to leave before 10am.

However, 25% of First seats and 20.7% of Club World and World Traveller Plus seats leave before the 11.29am cut-off.

BA’s reasoning is now arguably clear. A business case to save money by serving brunch was proposed, and management has pushed the service time back until the savings looked good enough. 20% of passengers was their magic number.

At the other end of the day BA is cutting costs too. It is only offering a light meal on flights that leave after 9.00pm. The table compiled from OAG data shows that this change affects 10.5% of First passengers and 12.2% of Club World and World Traveller Plus travellers.

Together, the cost cutting is expected to impact almost exactly one third of premium cabin travellers flying from Heathrow.

A beautiful number like one third is too much of a co-incidence for me to ignore. This feels like a service change designed by accountants.

British Airways brunch and late evening meal changes

Which routes are impacted by these changes?

Choice – in terms of your ability to choose an alternative BA departure with a full meal service – will be eliminated on nine out of 56 long-haul routes on the sample date I looked at.

Six routes will be brunch only: Dallas Fort Worth, Tokyo Haneda, Houston, Lagos, Nassau and Nairobi. On my sample date there are no alternative departures to these cities with a full meal service.

Three routes are only scheduled at times with the late light meal: Abuja, Abu Dhabi and Santiago. Again, on the date I picked there was no alternative BA flight available.

Nine routes will have a choice of brunch or a full meal service depending on which flight you pick. These are Bridgetown, Mumbai, Boston, Delhi, New York Newark, New York JFK, Los Angeles, Miami and Chicago.

Four routes will have a choice of a late light meal or a full meal service depending on which flight you pick. These are Cape Town, Dubai, Johannesburg and Singapore.

All remaining long haul routes fall exclusively into the noon to 9pm window where a standard full meal will be offered.

(Remember that I have looked at one day only. Some routes like Tokyo Haneda have multiple flights on certain days of the week.)

Things might not be so bad on short flights like Abuja and Abu Dhabi. Nairobi will be a disaster as the flight leaves early-ish at 9.45am but due to the long 8:50 flying time and late 9.35pm arrival it completely fills the day. Passengers will want more than a poached egg on toast.

I would hope that the ultra-long flights to Santiago, Singapore and South Africa are fully catered but I will not be surprised if they are not. [HfP edit – we understand that South Africa flights ARE impacted by the reduced catering.]

Overall, I expect the new brunch menu to be a disaster and it will hopefully be a matter of months before BA cancels it. It is not without form here. When a complex trolley based service was introduced in 2018 (image below) it took hours for the service to complete and the idea was terminated quickly.

British Airways brunch and late evening meal changes

Technology is meant to bring us fully personalised airline services

The prognosis for modern airline retailing is terrible. Consider these two conclusions:

  • The 11.29am cut-off point and the resulting optimistic-case 12.45pm service delivery time shows that BA decision-makers either do not understand or do not think through what the service will actually be like in practice
  • The fact that exactly one-third of passengers are impacted shows that service changes are probably designed by or for accountants, not the travelling public

When BA is taking decisions like this, how are they supposed to operate effectively in an offer-order retailing environment?

(HfP edit: ‘offer-order’ is the technical term for the move to fully personalised airline retailing. In theory ba.com would learn from your travel history and intelligently suggest relevant flights and non-flight ancilliaries during the booking flow. Whilst this sounds pretty basic, it is still a big step forward from the current position where airlines still email me asking if I need a hotel in London, despite my trip originally starting here and my loyalty account having a London address on it.)

The standard industry response would be to say that offer-order will be entirely driven by algorithms so it will all be OK. Some people would even say that a simply bad product like BA’s brunch service would not be designed in the offer-order world because data would show passengers would not want it. This misses the point.

Algorithms are designed and monitored according to the priorities of their human controllers. When these priorities are messed up, as the case of brunch shows they will be, the algorithms will simply not work.

Offer-order is seen by airlines mainly as a technical challenge. When it comes to the technical matters I am sure that British Airways’ solutions will be second to none. After all, they have the might of travel IT giant Amadeus behind them. Since they are an Amadeus “driver customer” it is fair to say that what goes down at British Airways will influence the industry.

Unfortunately the case of brunch suggests that the future of offer-order at British Airways may be a disaster because they do not understand what their passengers want. Since BA’s approach to the technology will influence almost every other airline, the future of airline retailing looks dismal for all passengers.

There is a simple solution. Airlines need to train their staff to think like passengers.

Managers should fly several times a year as commercial passengers. They should pay on their own credit card and reclaim expenses like millions of business travellers do.

Unfortunately we all know this will not happen. To fly. To starve.

You can see other articles from Airline Revenue Economics, and sign up to receive future articles by email, here.


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Comments (413)

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

  • Shanghaiguizi says:

    A good analysis.

    To all those whining, the solution is simple; don’t fly BA. As long as you fly BA you’re part of the problem.

    BA know their customers. They know they’ll whine and moan, but they also know 99.999% will continue to bend over and take BA’s shafting with a minimal amount of grumbling.

    • david says:

      This 100% :D.

      It is english after all. Paying guest at a restaurant tells his wife the food is dreadful. Waiter approaches “is everything ok with the meal?”. Both turn around with “its splendid”.

      • meta says:

        This is everything!🤣

      • LittleNick says:

        Yes that is the English way but they won’t be returning to the restaurant unlike the rest of us who keep returning to BA!

    • Sarah says:

      I have a flight to Cape Town booked with a 2-4-1 voucher. The cash price for the 2 flights would be about £12,000 so unfortunately I’m stuck with BA. It will certainly make me think about booking with them in the future though.

      • shanghaiguizi says:

        Google flights has return in business to CPT for two people for as low as GBP3,900 all in depending on when you want to travel and how much effort you put into planning in advance.

        Not flying on BA to CPT seems like an easily solvable problem.

        • Nic says:

          BA is the only direct flight to Cape Town currently. So unless you want some hellish connection that adds 5 hours plus to your flight, it is your only option

          • Brandane says:

            Those of us not living near London have much better options, rather than making the “hellish connection” through Heathrow. From Glasgow, we can make a much more pleasant connection via Amsterdam, Frankfurt, Dubai, Paris, etc..

  • MAY LIM says:

    I believe ultra long haul flights are exempted from these changes. I believe that 12 hours is the cut-off time, which excludes Singapore from these changes. Correct me if I am wrong.

  • S says:

    Flew out to SF on BA285 yesterday in WT (work trip). Served up an essentially inedible vegetable frittata for ‘breakfast’ at 12 noon. Bar cart wasn’t sent around until 6 hours (!) into the flight, under threat of mutiny by thirsty passengers. They’ve lost the plot.

    • Ian says:

      I would have pressed that bell after 10 minutes asking for a drink. 😂

      • meta says:

        Me too, I actually tell them where is the drink when they deliver the food and if necessary I get up and go to the galley to ask for one. This only happens on BA and Lufty.

  • Martin says:

    Does this mean the basket of chocolates and crisps ready to pop on CE routes has also bitten the dust.?
    I like the basket option, even if I have to ask the crew on CE routes if it’s coming out as crew seem to forget, most of the time.!!
    To be fair, they always say, it will be shortly.
    So either I’m impatient or I remind them, I’m expecting it.!!

    • TGLoyalty says:

      Isn’t that just items from the club kitchen in the galley you can visit at any time you want but probably go early or it’ll be empty

  • SydneySwan says:

    To fly. To starve. Love it. BA’s new motto. Why don’t they become a LCC and be done with it?

  • david says:

    There will be a lot of FA putting trays down with a “I am sorry”.

  • NigelthePensioner says:

    Excellent article. However, I’m not sure that every airline will follow suit like lemmings to a cliff edge. I am sure that by March 25 (our next trip to DFW) things will be back to normal!
    BA’s IT is simply atrocious. The app freezes, the website doesn’t flow, requiring “out of the blue” re- logins etc etc.
    There can be no other explanation for doing this other than further cost cutting. Whether this is done by fully fledged accountants or by internal auditors matters not, it is a blatant penny pinching move which will surely backfire big time.
    I say again, time for BA to be run by someone who understands luxury travel and not some cheapskate who only looks at a “bottom line”. There are so so many things wrong with BA and instead of improving they find ways of making things even worse!

    • Shanghaiguizi says:

      Why do you assume BA leadership aspire to be associated with ‘luxury’? It’s at best one above easy jet and for the last decade has been content to be completely mediocre.

      Anybody that expects BA to realistically compete with Qatar, Singapore, Japan, Emirates etc needs to have a cold shower.

      BA couldn’t hold a candle to the big boys, and has zero desire to.

      • LittleNick says:

        No but is it unreasonable to expect BA to compete with AF/VS/IB/LF? All European airlines which some argue deliver more

        • shanghaiguizi says:

          That’s like saying Mercedes delivers more than Ford, but then somehow expecting Ford to want to up their game to compete.

          BA are a two-bit mediocre airline that delivers sub-par service. The bean counters at BA know this and they also know that they have the market cornered so can keep on going in dry and the punters will be lining up. Why change when you can keep racing to the bottom whilst at the same time delivering ‘value’ for IAG shareholders.

    • Steve says:

      Shares are going up again tho. Isn’t that all that matters these days?

      • George says:

        Yes 90% YOY, so the accountants are obviously doing something right to generate “value”

        • Mikeact says:

          Bat apparently, according to earlier posts, accountants had/have nothing to do with it.

          • AJA says:

            Not quite. The accountants will be recording the share options paid out as bonuses to the c-suite for achieving the stellar stock market performance. The accountants, bar the CFO, won’t be sharing in the spoils associated with the “value” generated.

  • Hugh says:

    bean counters – know the cost of everything and the value of nothing

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