They say it takes a lifetime to build a reputation and a moment to lose it. BA has had a good go at damaging its brand over the past couple of years and the result is stark.
Out of 65 airlines
researched for a league table on reputations, the national flag carrier now comes in at 55.
The airline's pilots are on strike today and tomorrow, and threatening more action before the end of
September. The result is 24-hour news coverage of empty check-in halls all around the world, particularly the ghost town of Terminal 5 at Heathrow, where one would usually expect to see a sea of
travellers jetting off all around the globe.
Today's action follows previous action by cabin crew. More recently, however, passengers have been grounded by an IT glitch, and in 2017, a power
cut.
That is not to mention a GBP183m fine for not protecting half a million users' data from a cyber attack.
Sadly, the airline has become an occasional laughingstock over
reliability. It seems that at least every year, passengers are beset by a massive issues, whether that be IT systems going down or staff being involved in a dispute of some sort.
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Fortunately, I have not been directly involved, but the media is full of stories from people who cannot make weddings and whose holiday dreams are shattered, and so on.
The story always
appears to be that the BA customer services hotline is too busy to take all call and that leaves passengers deeply frustrated.
I guess most people don't know whether the pilots or the
airline are in the right over how fair the new pay deal is. What they do know is that when their plans are ruined and there's not a simple way to rebook or simply click to accept a flight on a rival
airline, then the brand's good name takes a nosedive.
It's a shame to see because, ultimately, it's a brand most Brits have a lot of love for, and so it could go back to the days of being
universally respected.
To get there, though, it's got a hell of a reputational damage limitation to do. As a writer quipped the other day, it really should stop going on about a hundred
years of history and focus far more on getting its brand, and IT system, right for today.
When I'm planning work trips BA would always be my go-to airline but, I have to say, I'm now not
so sure. At the back of every traveller's mind there's now a risk of delay or cancellation attached to BA that wasn't there just a handful of years ago.
It's very sad to see this happen to the
national flag carrier.