This week, Marketing Daily brings you exclusive coverage of the Brand Keys 2012 Customer Loyalty Engagement Index. Each day, you received
a full report on key product/services categories from among the 83 surveyed for this year's study, including automotive, electronics, retail and technology. This fifth and final installment focuses
on highlights from the airlines and hospitality categories.
Continental edged out last year’s top-ranking Southwest in the 16th annual Brand Keys Customer Loyalty Engagement
Index (CLEI). Dropping to number three is Delta, which last year was tied with Southwest for first place.
United finished fourth, while JetBlue took the biggest nosedive, dropping to fifth
(tied with US Airways) compared to third place last year and first place the year before. Midwest and Northwest tied for sixth and American finished seventh.
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In the airlines category, most of
the brand strength Continental is showing is in inflight-related services and rates and extra charges (or lack thereof). “They seem to be doing it better than others in those critical
drivers,” said Robert Passikoff, founder and president of Brand Keys, Inc.
JetBlue has lost a lot of brand value by having planes sit on the runways for hours, he said. “Doing that
takes away from the brand big-time, no matter how many salty snacks you pass around,” Passikoff tells Marketing Daily. “Sugar jags wear off and you're still on the ground. Not a
delightful feature.”
The other airlines missed the boat by cutting back when times were rough. “Flyers don't forget if you've tried to gouge them for luggage. Or blankets and
pillows,” he adds.
The CLEI, which quantifies consumers' current engagement/loyalty levels across 598 brands in 83 categories tracked by Brand Keys, once again ranked Avis as the top
rental car company for a third consecutive year. Hertz finished second, followed by Enterprise, Budget, National, Dollar and Alamo.
The top hotels, according to Brand Keys, were
InterContinental Hotels Group (luxury), Hilton (upscale), Best Western (midscale) and Days Inn (economy). All of the brands took top honors last year with the exception of Marriott, which beat Hilton
in the upscale category.
Hilton moved up due to a large increase in scoring in “efficient services” and “amenities,” Passikoff says. “Given the general ubiquity in
this level of hotel offering, it turns out to be the little things that can push a traveler one way or the other,” he says. “Like offering double AAadvantage miles.”