Did I hear you say….

I will be the first to admit that I have been very tardy in the past month delivering my weekly repertoire on my time in spend in the tail of the national emblem.  And it has been an exciting time for Qantas.

Out with the old, in with the new.

The redQ experiment is over.  By all accounts it was an ill-conceived and poorly executed plan and would appear to be a more smoke and mirrors exercise.  Scare the shit out of the unions by threatening to move 10% of the business offshore.  After Alan’s mouth had stopped moving and the reality of what he had said was starting to sink in it must have dawned on him that he was going to try and copy the Singapore/Arab model and hope the competition said, no problems.  That was never going to work, so plan B.  Lets talk to China.  We have the safety record and they have the population record – now there is a good model.  Time will tell if this is a good idea or more the 1 + 1 = 3 variety of Qantas planning.

Stuck in traffic?

Tuesday morning, all neatly tucked up in seats, eyes forward. feet flat on the floor waiting for the calisthenics display from the cabin crew.  The door had been closed and the cabin was being pressurised, or what ever they do to make the trip more “comfortable”.  Announcement from the captain, who I might add was female and made for a pleasant surprise (think multi tasking, more women pilots please!).  We are a little behind on the pre-flight paper work as we, the flight crew, were stuck in traffic on the way to the airport.  Qantas have a dim view of late arrivals and over at Jetstar, that’s akin burning cash.  But if you are at the controls, take you time!  It reminds me of George Orwell’s Animal Farm after the pigs had taken over.  One rule for us and one rule for them!

I like my food to move.

Picture this, crammed in the back of an A380, complementary bar snacks at the end of the cabin (that is qantanomics for less staff) and in your snack bag you find movement.  Now this is not the movement that the Banjo Patterson poem was talking about “There was movement at the station, for the word had passed around”.  In the sealed fruit and nut bag was something alive that was not meant to be there.  The press had a field day, the offended customer ,Victoria Cleven was offered a cash payment and the poor bastards in the bag were most likely incinerated by AQIS.  Had the customer been in the pointy end or the top deck of the plane, she would have been offered more “hush money” but by the same token, the stewards (no self service there) may have noticed the offending bug.

Movements in the shadows.

My mate Sid Gokani (figuratively speaking) at Qantas has had a brilliant idea.  Those kids at Virgin Australia are making in roads and causing Alan and Sid a bit of bother under the collar, so Sid is offering double status credits to selected frequent flyer members for all flights booked and flown In April to June.  Status credits are those pesky points that you earn from flying and show the airline how important you are, as opposed to frequent flyer points that you get for not flying like school fees and petrol.  This is great.  Now everyone will be gold or platinum, so much for be exclusive.  Something tells me the shadows from Virgins Brisbane bunker are making the kids in the Mascot Bunker worried.  It is a little like reading a v Spy v Spy comic.

Jetstar, say no more…

I ran a survey in the office during the week.  I rounded up the 15 consultants that I work with and who all travel, like I do, to get to work each week. As a background, they come from everywhere, Perth, Townsville, Brisbane, Hobart, Melbourne, Sydney and Adelaide.  The general consensus is “do not fly Jetstar”.  I could not find anyone who had a good word to say about it.  Interestingly, Jetstar do not fly from Canberra, you can only get Qantas or Virgin flights and Virgins schedule is not as complete as Qantas so Canberra really is a one horse town.

Did you want leg room with that seat?

The Friday flight is a little like ground hog day. I see the same faces each week in the same way you see the same people on the train to work or in the coffee shop.  Canberra flights are no different.  Every now and again Qantas change the plane, so instead of a 734 we get a 738.  For those not in the know, 734 is a 737-400 and 738 is a 737-800, ah jargon!  I could not help but notice that it was ever so tight in the 738.  The new 737’s have more seats and less room – hang on that is what operators like Ryan Air and Easy Jet do, except and this is a big except.  You can fly from the Uk to Denmark for £24.49.  Even if they add 300% in tax, it would still be worth it!  But Alas, Qantas is not easy Jet yet and they certainly charge more than £24.49.

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Please switch off your mobile phone.

The guy sitting behind me and the hostess had what could only be described as avibrant discussion about his iPhone when coming into land today. The hostess pointed out that it was a CASA requirement to turn off all electrical equipment and that by putting the phone in flight mode this was not sufficient.  The passenger pointed out that most of the passengers on the plane probability still had phones and the like turned on.  The hostess was not having any of this and proceeded the give the passenger direction on powering down the phone.  Good one Qantas, yet anther happy customer but there is a salient point in this.  If the phone, in flight mode is so dangerous, why allow them at all.  From where I am sitting I can see the ground.  When flying at night or above cloud where you can get visual references from the ground, if a passengers phone sent the the auto pilot on another course, on one would be the wiser.  I actually think it is more to do with exit speed in an emergency.  If a place crashes when landing survival rate 50/50 at very best, at 11 kms up, survival rate 0.  It is not the mobile phone per-say but how fast you can run with the thing plastered to your ear, so unless you are Jack Bauer or James Bond, turn the phone off, or at least hide it from the fun police.

Happy running and in the immortal words of Donkey from Shrek, “stay away from the light” or the Qantas hostess, follow the arrows away from the plane!

Qantanomics, the Airline that stopped a nation.

What a week in the Australian Airline Industry. On Saturday 29th October, I got a text message from my National Project Manager.

I smell trouble…

Qantas has shut down the Australian Air Travel Market, 68000 people affected, no stranded and the message from my political masters is “Good Luck”. They have other staff to worry about. It was the people who were sitting on aircraft and asked to disembark before taking off and the passengers who were in mid flight and turfed into Hotels in Singapore and Hong Kong who I felt for. In the latter, some were asked to share with fellow passengers.

But this was the intro to another battle, the industrial relations at the heart of the matter. The unions involved had promised 12 months of rolling stoppages in the ilk of “death by a thousand cuts” and this was something that the “Spirit of Australia” and the Irish CEO was not going to stand for, understandably. I could not help but think it was timed around the Melbourne Cup because it would effect less domestic business travelers and the “race that stops a nation” is sponsored by a competitor.

I noticed that the Airline Pilot’s union is back in the Federal Court trying to extract an exemption to wear the red ties (their a militant bunch) or something to that effect.  Alan, if a group of professionals want to protest by wearing red ties and you see this as the threat to your business model, I suggest you drink less coffee in the mornings!

What a storm in a tea cup – well I was not affected!  By Tuesday all was back to normal and the million hours of coverage was, well History.  We are flying again but for how much longer is anyone’s guess.  What I found all very oddwas the 250 odd people affected by the A380 landing in Dubai due to an engine problem.  This was a few days  after Qantas was up and flying again.  I thought they had thousands of stranded customers but two after normal resumption of service, a air frame that carries 450 people only had 258 passengers.  With a 55% loading, remind me again exactly how many people were stranded but the shutdown?

Qantas Club belly

A few weeks ago I mentioned that the Qantas Club Lounge is Canberra was akin to a tip.  I had not been back in since then and but today, wow, what a transformation.  It is so clean, you can eat from the floor. No dirty coffee machines, mountains of dirty plates and a general trashiness that is was.  But all this cleanliness has come at a price. I stood at the bar for 5 minuets waiting for a drink.  The manager walked past and asked if I wanted anything.  I had to refrain in my comments!  She obviously has a new directive: clean, clean, clean and do not worry about the service.  Ah well, maybe next week will make for a better balance!

Qantanomics, The Economics of Cancelled flights and more.

Qantanomics is where “The Spirit of Australia” look after the bonus pool with no regard for  “those annoying people who take up valuable space on the aircraft”.

As previously indicated, I was rolled by Qantas due to “Industrial Action” but that did not seem to stack up this morning.  Qantas fly two direct flights from Melbourne to Canberra each week day before 9 AM.  The first flight (7:20AM) is a 767-300 and the second (8:30AM) is a 737-800.  Based on their own data, that would give you somewhere in the vicinity of 390 to 420 seats in a combination of Business and Economy seating configurations.  On Tuesday(25/10/2011), Qantas  then cancelled the first flight and ran a full 737-800 on the second flight.  This would indicate that they calculated they were taking a bath on the seat yield across the two flights so conveniently dropped the first flight and blamed the ongoing industrial action for the cancellation.  Good one, you must think we are fools.

The other side of Quantanomics is the yield that can be extracted before flyer start drifting access to Virgin Australia.  Since July I ave flown to Canberra every week and in August, I had a side trip to Brisbane.  In this period, I have spent over $12,500 and on my present flying regime, I will not break out of  the  entry level flyer status, Silver flying every week till Christmas so looks like the investment in the Qantas Club was a necessary requirement!

Tired using the iPhone app to check in.  I did and see what happened:

When I asked about this in the Lounge, the response was the problem must be with my phone – checked that, no problem, wrong app – checked that, no problem.  Ahh well it could not possibly be our (Qantas) fault as you were checked in successfully.  I hope the people who manage aircraft safety do not work on the iPhone app’s!

Qantas goes “mad” and Mt.Kosiosko

Last week I had a few comments about the amount of packaging and recycling, so I did my bit this week by NOT using the recycling bag and out everything in the used cup.  I had to laugh, the guy sitting in the row in front of me asked for a beer and had to pay $6 for the privilege.  In a very Virgin manner, that also asked for correct change!  As I was on a $838.00 fare this week – the cheapest I could find return MEL – CBR – MEL – I felt they should be giving us NV Lafite Rothschild – see price guide! http://www.wine-searcher.com/find/lafite+rothschild

 

On a lighter note the view of Mount Kosciuszko was fabulous.  It was sitting in a gap between the clouds and still has a decent snow coverage.  I know why, it was 1 in Canberra on Wednesday morning!

14/10/2011