Moderators: jsumali2, richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
shamrock350 wrote:It was The Wall Street Journal...
"The Wall Street Journal looks at seven key operational metrics for their rankings, including on-time arrivals, canceled flights, extreme delays, 2-hour tarmac delays, mishandled luggage, involuntary bumping and complaints."
These are the same metrics that Ryanair has used for years to validate its claim to be the world's best airline for customer service. Not to be taken seriously.
jfklganyc wrote:Yup, it is true.
Heads should be rolling over there. Especially in light of the fact that they rolled out an on time program a year ago! It is also amazing that an airline that doesnt overbook should have so many denied boardings...but they do!
OzarkD9S wrote:https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/jetblue-just-named-worst-airline-162508330.html
Ok, so I've never flown B6 living in STL, but can this be real?
jfklganyc wrote:Yup, it is true.
Heads should be rolling over there. Especially in light of the fact that they rolled out an on time program a year ago! It is also amazing that an airline that doesnt overbook should have so many denied boardings...but they do!
dc10lover wrote:Just today, I noticed JetBlue has over 2 Million followers on Twitter. That is really good.
dc10lover wrote:Yahoo is fake news. I would say JetBlue is the best airline. Alaska Airlines was once good but JetBlue is way better than American, Delta & United. Even Southwest is better than AA, DL & UA.
AAvgeek744 wrote:dc10lover wrote:Yahoo is fake news. I would say JetBlue is the best airline. Alaska Airlines was once good but JetBlue is way better than American, Delta & United. Even Southwest is better than AA, DL & UA.
It's not fake news, it's uninformed news. People seriously need to stop crying fake news when there is a story they disagree with. IMO, B6 has gone down, but it's still light years ahead of F9, NK, or B6.
jfklganyc wrote:how is the Wall Street Journal fake news? It’s the most read newspaper in the country.
Enough with the fake news garbage already. There are going to be a lot of opinion pieces out there that you don’t like and a lot of reporting with slanted viewpoints that you don’t like… Doesn’t mean it’s fake news. It means you don’t like the news being reported
They looked at the operational metrics of the airlines in question and JetBlue has the worst operational metrics. Those are facts not opinions and not fake but very real, hard, cold facts.
There are many reasons for those facts. Some can be contributed to the congested airspace, runway closures, bad weather... Unfortunately many of them can be attributed to how JetBlue runs their operation.
I can not look at my employer when I arrive at JFK today And say “I’m sorry for being chronically late; the Van Wyck Expressway is always so congested.”
It is a known entity in my day… And I have to account for it and take responsibility. Sounds like JB should start doing that when it comes to JFK: Pad your schedules, increased turn times, have more spares, put the planes to bed so the kick off flights go off on time, speed up your boarding process instead of monetizing your boarding process while simultaneously slowing it down.
These are easy fixes with guaranteed results...but you lose efficiency of resources...and that costs money. Only JB can make the decisions necessary to fix these problems.
shamrock350 wrote:"The Wall Street Journal looks at seven key operational metrics for their rankings, including on-time arrivals, canceled flights, extreme delays, 2-hour tarmac delays, mishandled luggage, involuntary bumping and complaints."
jfklganyc wrote:Yup, it is true.
Heads should be rolling over there. Especially in light of the fact that they rolled out an on time program a year ago! It is also amazing that an airline that doesnt overbook should have so many denied boardings...but they do!
b6bos143 wrote:When you truly compare apples to apples, you see that B6 is actually pretty much on par with the others at JFK and BOS, at least for the month of October which is the most recent month available. Is there room to improve? Absolutely. For JetBlue and every other airline in the country. It's just unfortunate and unfair that an airline's overall quality would be portrayed the "worst" in the USA based on these things alone.
shamrock350 wrote:It was The Wall Street Journal...
"The Wall Street Journal looks at seven key operational metrics for their rankings, including on-time arrivals, canceled flights, extreme delays, 2-hour tarmac delays, mishandled luggage, involuntary bumping and complaints."
These are the same metrics that Ryanair has used for years to validate its claim to be the world's best airline for customer service. Not to be taken seriously.
That's a good reference. If you showed 12 months of data with the average you could make a fairly powerful argument. Of course, 'We're no worse than anybody else,' isn't a great aspiration.
Super80Fan wrote:Well we all know that the WSJ is fake news
MR27122 wrote:B6 is hyper-proactive towards resolving customer issues in favor of the customer, often before they're asked for anything by the customer. The Valentine's Day massacre conditioned them "big time", and shed light open fantastical operational failings...namely, they possessed no "action plan". A March ice storm crippled the airline & tarnished it's image just as "phones on planes" were starting to be in vogue. Neeleman certainly deserves a heap of criticism for somehow believing B6 was immune from Mother Nature. Geography is a very large piece of the pie in regards to how these stats skew. The one absolute failing of B6 is timeliness as the day progresses. As for not "over booking"----I don't "buy it". I flew them on Saturday from BOS-AUS...the flight had been cxld Thur/Fri due to the northeast snowstorm. Prior to boarding they were asking for 4 "volunteers" yet kept on repeating the flight was not oversold (in that specific instance, 2 days of back-to-back cancellations for the nonstop BOS-AUS, it probably would've been better to be transparent---too many pax were booked for too few seats). Yet they proceeded with boarding after not getting sufficient volunteers. We then sat for 4.5 hours due to a "weight & balance" issue (we were overweight) that evolved into a suitable runway issue due to winds, that became a fuel issue due to weight & the decision to offload fuel & stop at RDU, that became a decision to re-fuel after 2 people volunteered to get off, that became a too few passengers---6 had deplaned because we were sitting for so long and had to be called back, while they offered everybody the option to de-plane (very odd), that finally turned into a refueling issue because they were having issues connecting the fuel pump, that became a suitable runway issue again. The point being---B6 has always seemed to be transparant since the Valentine's Day massacre...not so much anymore (if your giving away $700 travel vouchers pre-boarding & going via JFK to 4 volunteers, yet nobody bites, it's fairly obvious that the flight is overbooked....going "weight and balance" when you need 4 people off the plane was simply dopey because 4 people is a razor thin weight & balance "need").
United787 wrote:The second flight was delayed for 3-4 hours at JFK, their hub, because of "late arriving crew". They can't find a crew at their own hub?
b6bos143 wrote:
Just to be clear: The point of the post was not to say B6 was "no worse than anybody else." It was to help illustrate that, when you isolate the two airports mentioned frequently in this thread, JetBlue was largely on par with other carriers (not significantly better or worse than the others,) at least for the most recent month for which data is available. I think it makes a fair point that with a disproportionately large percentage of its operation in those two cities, JetBlue still does fairly well at maintaining an on-time operation most of the time, despite its lack of another hub the size of JFK or BOS in a different geographical area to help balance the negative effects of a saturated operating region.
BREECH wrote:United787 wrote:The second flight was delayed for 3-4 hours at JFK, their hub, because of "late arriving crew". They can't find a crew at their own hub?
Good gawd, I thought people like that only existed in ABC sitcoms. 3-4 hours delay in the busiest airport in the world. And you do realize that pilots who fly you from JFK may have started their day at their home in Los Angeles? VERY few pilots in America live where they fly.
RDUDDJI wrote:shamrock350 wrote:It was The Wall Street Journal...
"The Wall Street Journal looks at seven key operational metrics for their rankings, including on-time arrivals, canceled flights, extreme delays, 2-hour tarmac delays, mishandled luggage, involuntary bumping and complaints."
These are the same metrics that Ryanair has used for years to validate its claim to be the world's best airline for customer service. Not to be taken seriously.
??? What other metrics would you suggest?
As someone who flyies 150+ revenue flights per year, I can tell you those metrics are absolutely what frequent flyers care about. Time is money. It definitely trumps terra chips, free Wifi, and TVs at every seat.
RDUDDJI wrote:b6bos143 wrote:
Just to be clear: The point of the post was not to say B6 was "no worse than anybody else." It was to help illustrate that, when you isolate the two airports mentioned frequently in this thread, JetBlue was largely on par with other carriers (not significantly better or worse than the others,) at least for the most recent month for which data is available. I think it makes a fair point that with a disproportionately large percentage of its operation in those two cities, JetBlue still does fairly well at maintaining an on-time operation most of the time, despite its lack of another hub the size of JFK or BOS in a different geographical area to help balance the negative effects of a saturated operating region.
I'm a fan of B6. They're probably one of my top three airlines in the US. However, the reason I don't fly them (unless terminating in BOS/JFK) is because I intentionally avoid congested/delay prone airports like JFK. I suspect there are many others that do the same. B6 (and other carriers who choose to hub at congested/delay prone airports) deserve some of the blame. They're directly contributing to the congestion. They could have another (connecting) hub operation at a less congested airport*.
*I'm not advocating or even suggesting that B6 move their hub (after all it's the No 1 O&D market in the US), but they did choose the bed that they lie in. They should not be absolved from all blame for congestion issues that they contribute to. On the flip side, just ~10 years ago, WN pulled down the PHL hub citing chronic delays that were cascading into their whole network. Of course that's a bit easier for WN who has a dozen or so hubs, but it's a business decision available for any airline.
Just my 2 XRP.
United787 wrote:I have flown them twice, ORD-JFK and JFK-ORD.
The first flight was cancelled because of "weather", in fact B6 cancelled most of their flights that day...the other airlines did not and operated fairly normally that day. I had to fly the next day.
The second flight was delayed for 3-4 hours at JFK, their hub, because of "late arriving crew". They can't find a crew at their own hub?
So yes, in my experience, worst airline ever. Even Olympic circa 1991 wasn't this bad.
Super80Fan wrote:Well we all know that the WSJ is fake news, so take anything they say with a grain of salt.
AAIRLINERS wrote:More of a statement of WSJ and maybe the "Wall Street" gang as a whole. My family and I have flown them several times from NY to FL and it has always been a good experience. I fly for one of the big three and I feel they put our domestic product to shame. More room, pricing equal to or less than ours and I did pay full fare to do so. Wall Street is out of touch with their metrics when it comes to the traveling public. I am not an investor. I am a consumer. Big difference.
jfklganyc wrote:Those metrics are for one month. A good weather month. A low traffic month.
Post the stats at JFK and BOS for the year. Then we will have a real discussion.