Search Travel Market Report

mainlogo
www.travelmarketreport.com
U.S.A.
English
Canada
English
Canada Quebec
Français
Menu
  • News
  • Packaged Travel
  • Cruise
  • Hotels & Resorts
  • Destinations
  • Retail Strategies
  • Air
  • Training & Resources
  • Luxury Travel Report

Op-Ed: Airlines Need to Change Their Tune

by Tom Brussow  July 20, 2022
Op-Ed: Airlines Need to Change Their Tune

Photo: Tom Brussow

On a positive note, business is booming and the travel industry has banded together quite harmoniously in the tenuous symphony that is the “coming out of Covid” travel industry. The lone exception, unfortunately, is our airline friends who continue to drag us down as they are so frequently playing out of tune. To be clear, I’m not just referring to their operational challenges, but also to their bigger-picture methods of doing business, especially as it impacts travel advisors and their clients.

As travel advisors, tour operators, cruise lines, and others are collaborating to innovate, improvise and adapt in support of each other and our shared customers, the airlines stubbornly stick to their greatest hits, with seemingly no real interest in updating their material to meet the newest trends.

This is confounding for advisors as we, in service to our clients, are left to cover and clean up the many messes they continue to create. In doing so, we are also left wondering how any major business sector can expect to be successful when they seemingly care so little about their customers, and are, at best, indifferent to a key component of their distribution network.

So, if that’s the song the airlines are intent on playing, the rest of us are going to have to cover our ears to ease the pain and do our best to keep the audience coming back. Or, how about if the airlines would take this opportunity to join the chorus of the faithful and make some important and long overdue changes that will put them in a better position to be successful moving forward?

Here are my five areas of advice for focused change that would make a world of difference:

1. Take Accountability
What could be more novel and yet simple? The sole business proposition of the airlines is they are paid by consumers to safely provide transportation from point A to point B. That is it. When they fail to do that, regardless of the circumstances, they should step up and own it. Make it right 100% of the time. Don’t shirk, evade, lie, or obfuscate your clear responsibility to the customer to save a buck.

2. Work Together with Your Fellow Airlines and Take a Leadership Role
Dear airline CEOs: Together you are stronger and better. Get together in a room and figure out how you can all do better. Remember the good old days of Rule 240? Protect the customer and get them to their destination instead of leaving them high and dry to fend for themselves or sending them home disappointed because that family vacation to Jamaica they’ve been dreaming about for months is now ruined.

Also, with so much market power and business influence, the leaders of the airlines need to be more visible, approachable, and engaged. In today’s travel landscape, compared to the many great leaders across the spectrum of suppliers, they are essentially invisible and inconsequential from my perspective.

3. Acknowledge and Appreciate the Role and Contribution of Travel Advisors
As advisors, along with driving a significant amount of their revenue, we take on the arduous work of dealing with the onerous airline business policies and cleaning up the many messes they create. For all of our efforts on these two fronts, the airlines unapologetically believe we are due exactly NOTHING for the countless hours we expend in caring for our mutual clients.

Imagine a universe where the airlines paid their fair share and the impact this would have on the well-being of the travel advisor community. One in which advisors were afforded fair compensation for their work, non-rev flight benefits, improved ease of doing business, and access to sales support/service staff. There is little doubt this would be a game-changing development for travel advisors.

4. Better Manage the Leisure Vacation Package Market
For years, the airlines made the vast majority of their money from “high yield” business travelers—corporate and government contracts and meeting and incentive customers who routinely paid the highest of their fares. As a result, leisure travel represented a small piece of the profit pie and was afforded little time, attention, or investment. A greater focus on the leisure travel market is warranted. Here is how to do that:

-Create processes/programs that will allow you to identify the travel advisors who are selling your product. I sell a significant amount of airline products. Yet, the respective airlines have absolutely no idea that I even exist, what or how much I am selling, or how to go about growing my sales/market share.

-Develop an advisor engagement, communication, and relationship-building game plan. Let the travel industry know that the airlines are on the side of the travel advisors and are committed to building their business and relationships with advisors in very specific and much-needed/overdue ways. 

-Develop agent support vehicles for problem resolution, business development opportunities, training, marketing tools, etc. Every business sector in the travel industry, except for the airlines, has widely invested in these areas for many years. It is basically standard operating procedure.

-Assemble a group of top leisure agency owners to help you understand the landscape, challenges, and opportunities and build a plan. From there, the sky is the limit.

5. Be Easy and Enjoyable to Work With
The harsh reality is that working with any airline-related issue is truly painful, time-consuming, and hugely frustrating for travel advisors. Why does this have to be the case?

First, airline executives should do the math and consider the ramifications of a scenario where travel advisors stopped selling and servicing their products. How many more reservation and customer service support employees would be needed to fill that giant gap? How many millions of dollars would that cost?

There are some quick, easy, and inexpensive opportunities here to examine business policies and processes and the ease in which advisors (and their clients) can do business with the airlines. There is a long list of examples where the policies just don’t make any sense, create tons of unnecessary work and frustration, and are a disservice to the customer.

First, let’s start with a commitment to a business philosophy that says that the number one mission, absolutely no matter what, is to get the customer to their destination as quickly, and with the least amount of hassle, stress, and disappointment as possible.

How about a dedicated advisor sales and customer service support staff that are easy to reach and are empowered to assist in quickly resolving customer issues? This seems reasonable and represents the very minimum that could be done.

If the airlines had the force of will and the good sense to address even one of these opportunities, that would certainly be music to the ears of thousands of travel advisors and the millions of clients we serve. I remain optimistic and offer up any further contribution that I make to bring about changes to an industry that so desperately needs them.

Because the rest of us up here up on the stage need the airlines to perform at their very best and hold up their end with every note. For, if they do not or will not, it means the entire orchestra that is the travel industry will suffer. The audience will continue to judge us and make their future purchases based on the weakest performers among us…the airlines.

  0
  0
Related Articles
IATA Offers Integrated Fraud-Prevention Solution
Top Five Airline Stories from 2015
Air Canada Broadens Its Relationship with Amadeus
Google: Consumers Make 32 Visits to 10 Websites to Book an Airline Ticket
United Partners with CLEAR to Make Air Travel Easier for Customers
U.S. Senators Introduce Bill of Rights for Airline Passengers
The World’s Most Expensive Flights
Here’s What Travel Advisors Are Least Thankful for This Year
Op-Ed: Wrapping up 2023: Inspired to Keep Inspiring

MOST VIEWED

  1. Power Outage in Spain and Portugal Causes Major Travel Disruptions, Including at Madrid Airport
  2. 5 Things I Liked About Norwegian Aqua – and 4 I’m Not Sold On
  3. Testing the Waters with Dori: Do Travel Advisors Actually Dislike Viking?
  4. Beaches Ocho Rios Resort to Close Doors in May 2025
  5. How Pope Francis’ Funeral Will Impact Travel to Rome and Vatican City
  6. Using a Phone on a Cruise Ship Will Cost Thousands: Urban Myth or Reality?


  1. Travel Advisor Appreciation Month Offers Not to Be Missed
  2. TTC Tour Week Returns with 9 FAM Trips Scheduled for November
  3. Booking on Grandma’s Budget: How Grandparents Are Driving Multi-Gen and Skip-Gen Travel
  4. The Best Hotels to Book in Portugal & Spain: Roundup From an ALGV FAM 
  5. Vanessa McGovern Lands at Global Travel Collection
  6. 5 Things to Know About the Brand-New MSC World America
TMR Subscription

Subscribe today to receive daily in-depth luxury coverage, analysis of luxury news, luxury trends and issues that affect how you do business. Subscribe now for free.

Subscribe to TMR

Top Stories
Headquarter Happenings: Gifted Travel Network Hosts 3rd Annual Symposium on Avalon Poetry II
Headquarter Happenings: Gifted Travel Network Hosts 3rd Annual Symposium on Avalon Poetry II

GTN is keeping its momentum going in the luxury space by offering coaching and partnership opportunities to its advisors.

The Top 11 Hottest Adventure Tours of 2025 (So Far)
The Top 11 Hottest Adventure Tours of 2025 (So Far)

Top tour operators talk their best-selling products for 2025.

4 Qualifying Questions Travel Advisors Should Ask Clients with Autism
4 Qualifying Questions Travel Advisors Should Ask Clients with Autism

Advice for selling accessible travel to neurodivergent customers, from the experts.

Gifted Travel Network on Trevello Deal: ‘Philosophy Was So Aligned’
Gifted Travel Network on Trevello Deal: ‘Philosophy Was So Aligned’

Though GTN was not looking for a buyer, Trevello’s new compensation model and common ideals helped seal the deal.

Travel Guard Releases Enhanced Self-Service Tool for Travel Advisors
Travel Guard Releases Enhanced Self-Service Tool for Travel Advisors

The enhanced version features a more intuitive, self-service experience.

InteleTravel Acquires Tickitto, Adding Ticketed Events & Experiences to Brand Portfolio
InteleTravel Acquires Tickitto, Adding Ticketed Events & Experiences to Brand Portfolio

The acquisition gives advisors booking access to tickets for concerts, NFL games, F1 races, and more.

TMR OUTLOOKS & WHITE PAPERS
View All
industry spotlight
https://img.youtube.com/vi/TVZhtAkFzW8/0.jpg
How ALG Vacations Is Redefining Travel Advisor Appreciation in 2025
Advertiser's Voice
We Celebrate YOU
About Travel Market Report Mission Meet the Team Advisory Board Advertise Syndication Guidelines
TMR Resources Calendar of Events Outlook/Whitepapers Previous Sponsored Articles Previous This Week Articles
Subscribe to TMR
Select Language
Do You Have an Idea Email
editor@travelmarketreport.com
Give Us a Call
1-(516) 730-3097
Drop Us a Note
Travel Market Report
71 Audrey Ave, Oyster Bay, NY 11771
© 2005 - 2025 Travel Market Report, an American Marketing Group Inc. Company All Rights Reserved | Terms and Conditions
Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Manage cookie preferences