USA TODAY US Edition

Get attention during travel-complaint season

These tips will help you stand out from the chorus of gripes

- Christophe­r Elliott Elliott is a consumer advocate and editor at large for National Geographic Traveler. Email at chris@elliott.org.

It’s complaints season in the travel industry, as Adeodata Czink will tell you.

Her favorite summertime gripe? The tourist who waved a brochure in front of her face, vowing to sue because her expensive hairdo had been ruined. Czink, an etiquette expert and tour guide from Toronto, couldn’t fix the problem.

“We were in Niagara Falls,” she laughs. “I can’t control the mist.”

Czink wasn’t dragged into court. But ridiculous complaints such as the one she heard are as common as summer thundersto­rms. I ought to know: I see copious quantities of travel industry complaints through my consumer advocacy website and a companion syndicated column. Believe me when I tell you that now, more than ever, people love to vent.

It’s getting worse, researcher­s say.

“There just seems to be so much more to complain about,” says David Aron, a marketing professor at Dominican University who has studied consumer complaints, grudge-holding and retaliatio­n.

“The media frequently covers negative issues like crowded planes, delays, people getting thrown off planes,” he says. “The tension levels, and levels of dissatisfa­ction, begin to rise before the experience even begins.”

Rather than adding your voice to the chorus of pointless gripes and loud bellyachin­g, which is often ignored by thick-skinned travel companies that have developed a form response for everything, why not do something effective this year? To figure out how to do that, you need to review the bad complaints and learn from them. This is going to be fun.

This is no laughing matter, though. If you’re worried about the coming onslaught of negativity, the travel industry should be deathly afraid.

“The effects are undeniable,” says Ben Jost, CEO of TrustYou, which helps hotels analyze and respond to guest feedback. Travel companies that ignore the negative feedback suffer a measurable decline in booking.

At the same time, a lot of the gripes miss the mark — badly. Here are a few phrases that automatica­lly send your email to the recycler:

“I demand a free first-class ticket anywhere your airline flies.” I searched my complaint file for this phrase and found thousands of cases that referenced this particular request for a free first-class ticket. It’s such a complaint cliche that I’m convinced customer service agents are trained to ignore it. I have the denial letters as proof.

“I’m telling everyone how terrible you are!” Threats to “take my case to Twitter” or “get the media involved” are also so overused that they induce a reflexive eye roll for the average travel industry employee. Part of the problem: It’s often impossible to please these angry customers, short of refunding their entire vacation.

“If you don’t do what I want, I’ll sue.” This one’s even worse than taking a gripe to the media. How many travelers actually take a travel company to court? Only a few. Complaints of this nature are not ignored. Instead, they’re forwarded to the legal department — which ignores them.

“Don’t you know the customer is always right.” That’s a common sentiment among summer vacationer­s, who tend to travel infrequent­ly. Their expectatio­ns-meter is set somewhere in 1975, when the American travel industry — particular­ly the airline industry — was a standards-setter in the customer service department. When the service isn’t perfect, they make outrageous demands. Or they complain about waterfalls.

What do you say, instead? That’s easy. File your complaint in writing, if possible. Keep it brief, unemotiona­l and polite. Write in complete and grammatica­lly correct sentences. Above all, make sure your expectatio­ns are reasonable.

No, your tour guide can’t control the mists of Niagara Falls, any more than your airline or hotel can control the weather.

If you ask for the moon, your complaint will just find its way into the bulging digital trash can on a company server. You can do better.

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