A new study finds East African carriers, such as Ethiopian Airlines, RwandAir and Kenya Airways, score significantly more for customer satisfaction and loyalty ratings among their frequent flyers than carriers in the rest of Africa.
The rating shows that the East African airlines scored well above the global average. The findings were revealed in a Net Promoter Score (NPS) study that global technology provider, (NASDAQ: SABR), conducted for a group of African airlines.
The study looked into strength of brand, customer satisfaction and loyalty within African Airlines Association (AFRAA) member airlines from North, East, West and Southern Africa. Widely recognised and used by more than 35 percent of global consumer-facing companies, the study identifies areas impacting on customer satisfaction and awards a score of between -100 and 100.
“Despite economic, political and societal challenges in Africa, airlines – particularly in the East – have invested in customer experience, satisfaction and loyalty to cultivate a positive brand reputation among travellers,” said Dino Gelmetti, vice president, EMEA, Airline Solutions, Sabre.
“This has worked well for them and now the focus is on unlocking more profits by investing in the latest customer experience technology and benchmarking their service levels against the world’s best carriers; everyone from the CEO to the gate agent must demonstrate a consistent, customer-centric approach. Air travel on the continent is expected to increase by as much as 24% after the pan-African passport is rolled out in 2018, so there’s no better time to be investing for future success.”
Each airline’s travellers were asked how satisfied they were on a scale of 1-10 with factors across four key areas – brand, customer effort, in-flight and customer service. They were then asked how important each of these attributes were to them. Satisfaction was then measured against importance to identify where airlines were not meeting customer expectations.
The study found that the highest-ranking attribute among passengers of African airlines was the quality of service from cabin crew. Areas that received the lowest scores centered on customer effort – including check-in, ease of booking ancillaries and website experience.
“We are committed to helping our airlines tap into an increased demand for travel services in the continent, and have been able to set a clear path for growth by partnering with Sabre on this study”, said Dr. Elijah Chingosho, AFRAA Secretary General. “By following Sabre’s recommendations to become more customer centric, African airlines can achieve greater profitability through increased customer loyalty. This will then help them to win business from their international rivals.”
The study was the first of its kind performed in the region. It aimed to help African carriers identify how to improve in order to compete with global rivals and increase revenue. Studies by Sabre have previously found that globally on average, a +/- 1 point shift in NPS is equivalent to approximately $10-$13 million in revenue.
Sabre Corporation is the leading technology provider to the global travel industry. Sabre’s software, data, mobile and distribution solutions are used by hundreds of airlines and thousands of hotel properties to manage critical operations, including passenger and guest reservations, revenue management, flight, network and crew management.
Sabre also operates a leading global travel marketplace, which processes more than US$120 billion of global travel spend annually by connecting travel buyers and suppliers. Headquartered in Southlake, Texas, USA, Sabre serves customers in more than 160 countries around the world.