Marysville Appeal-Democrat

American tries to learn from United’s mistakes in incident

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NEW YORK (AP) – Another day, another cellphone video of a conflict on an airplane.

American Airlines said it grounded a flight attendant who got into a verbal confrontat­ion with a passenger on a Friday flight from San Francisco to Dallas-Fort Worth.

Spokeswoma­n Leslie Scott says the airline is looking into whether the male flight attendant violently took away a stroller from the female passenger just before she boarded a Friday flight from San Francisco to Dallas. He has been removed from duty in the meantime.

In an age of cellphone videos and social media, airlines are learning the hard way that it is essential to deescalate tense situations that occur during air travel, even as there are more passengers, less room and fewer flight attendants than ever before.

The incident comes less than two weeks after video of a man being violently dragged off a United Express flight sparked widespread outrage .

United initially blamed its passenger, Dr. David Dao, before finally apologizin­g days after the incident, fanning the public’s fury. American, by contrast, seems to have learned from United’s mistakes: it immediatel­y said it was sorry, that it had grounded the flight attendant while it investigat­es the incident, and that it had upgraded the passenger involved and her family to first class.

“American doesn’t want to become the next United, but then, United didn’t want to become the next United,” said Henry Harteveldt, travel industry analyst at Atmosphere Research Group. “No airline wants to be seen as being anti-consumer or anti-passenger.”

Smartphone cameras and social media are shifting power to consumers who can share customer relations gaffes with the world. They’re increasing­ly making confrontat­ions with customer-facing staff headline news, making it harder for companies to sweep complaints under the rug. The faster companies own up to mistakes, the quicker they can start to do damage control.

American’s fast reaction to the incident could be help- Associated Press ful, said brand consultant Allen Adamson, CEO of BrandSimpl­e.

“The quick reaction will prevent it from escalating further, but it won’t mitigate the perception among flyers that flying is becoming a less enjoyable experience every day,” he said.

Overall, airlines must start to put more of an emphasis on customer service, he said.

“It’s another example of airlines struggling to treat their passengers with the traditiona­l ‘customer is always right’ attitude,” he said. “Good customer service is finding a way to deescalate a situation and he (the flight attendant) was throwing gasoline on it.”

 ??  ?? An American Airlines passenger jet takes off from Miami Internatio­nal Airport in Miami. Nearly three years after its merger with US Airways, American Airlines will roll out a flight system covering all its pilots.
An American Airlines passenger jet takes off from Miami Internatio­nal Airport in Miami. Nearly three years after its merger with US Airways, American Airlines will roll out a flight system covering all its pilots.
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