Business Standard

Delhi airport’s starry turn on social media

IGI Airport is on the global top 5 and the first among Asian airports on social media, marking a shift in the way public spaces are viewed and branded

- T E NARASIMHAN

It is not every day that the mad bustle that is the New Delhi airport gets a chance to upstage the swank sophistry of Changi, Singapore or sit at the same league table as the Heathrow, London. Except when it is on social media platforms: the Indira Gandhi Internatio­nal (IGI) Airport is the first among Asians and on the list of top five globally on Twitter with a similar ranking (a few notches up and down) on other platforms too. Even as it grapples with the rising swell of fliers and aircraft, IGI is learning to play by the rules of the social media jukebox; swinging to the beat of millions that walk through its gates and not just the airlines that ply its runways.

“Our strategy is to serve three key objectives, online reputation management (ORM), customer response mechanism (CRM) and brand building. In other words, humanise the customer experience by engaging with our flyers digitally. This is what we are doing for 365 days a year, for the last six-and-a-half years,” says I P Rao, CEO, Delhi Airport, GMR Group.

The public is social

Social media has changed the way people interact with public spaces. Airports are doubling up as shopping malls with restaurant­s, spas and a bunch of other things. Passengers are not just in to board a flight, they browse, record their experience­s and chatter about the facilities (or the lack of) on social media. An airport cannot afford to not be a part of their social network. At last count, there were over 60 million passengers travelling through Delhi airport, the majority on some social platform—talking to friends and the authoritie­s for help, complaints and other issues.

Rao says: “Airports are more than standalone aviation infrastruc­tures. They are now multi-modal, multifunct­ional enterprise­s, like a mini city with all the convenienc­es.” The social media team at the Delhi airport has been focused on building a brand that understand­s the new social mores. And on February 13, 2018, it led the Asia table on Twitter with 78,658 followers, Changi had 72,895 and RGIA, Hyderabad had 62,178. It still has a long way to go on the global scale, but it is among the top five in a list headed by Heathrow Airport (4,69,083 followers).

Sanjiv Kapoor, Vistara’s chief strategy and commercial officer, says: “It shows that they are taking social media seriously and we are very happy. It is important. For example, if there is a fog in the airport, not only the airlines, but also the airport can inform the customer proactivel­y. It is good to have other stakeholde­rs visible and accessible to the public.”

Engaging with passengers Followers alone do not make a social media star, response time to complaints and the ability to engage with passengers, to guide them through the facilities or provide them with necessary informatio­n, matter as much.

For the Delhi airport, Rao says, response time is 30 minutes for direct complaints and 45 minutes for indirect complaints received via social media. Apart from swiftness, he says, the responses are personalis­ed and humane. And this is despite the fact their team is smaller when compared to Changi and Schiphol (Amsterdam) airports.

B Govindaraj­an, chief operating officer, Tirwin Management Services said that airports are leaving nothing to chance to be customer (airlines) and consumer (passenger/users) friendly. “Airlines can be attracted by lower tariff, more aircraft parking slots, faster baggage in-line screening etc., for passengers they focus on shopping and informatio­n,” he says. Klout, an online social media analytics and ranking platform, has placed the Delhi airport on top in the Asia Pacific region with a score of 74 out of 100 and third globally where Los Angeles Airport tops with 88 points.

The shop-and-fly experience

The digital content buckets are divided into shop, eat, relax and fly. Besides the advisories and assistance required for emergency situations. The social media team tracks celebritie­s and human interest stories too. Tirwin says, “People use social media is to know the availabili­ty of select products and price.” The airport is now a mall that caters to diverse interest groups and the team keeps an eye on customer choices.

Celebrity spotting is another big draw. The Delhi airport handle regularly posts images of celebritie­s passing through its portals; PV Sindhu posing next to the Sun God statue, Saina Nehwal enjoying the Christmas décor and Bollywood star Kareena Kapoor just outside T-3. It means that the social media team has to be on its toes night and day. After all an airport never sleeps, not on the ground and not on social media either.

 ?? PHOTO: ISTOCK ?? New Delhi’s Indira Gandhi Internatio­nal Airport responds within half hour for direct complaints and 45 minutes for indirect complaints logged in via social media
PHOTO: ISTOCK New Delhi’s Indira Gandhi Internatio­nal Airport responds within half hour for direct complaints and 45 minutes for indirect complaints logged in via social media

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