Manila Bulletin

United CEO aims to win back high-paying business travelers

-

NEW YORK (AP) — United Airlines Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Oscar Munoz knows that his airline has alienated some of its most loyal fliers.

His effort to win them back starts with a new business class product that he personally unveiled Thursday at his first major public appearance since becoming CEO.

"It is about the entire experience," Munoz told The Associated Press. "It's not just a new seat. It's not just new meals. It's not just better wines."

Business travelers, who may pay $5,000 for a trans-Atlantic flight, want seats that are comfortabl­e to work, eat and sleep in. They want direct access to the aisle, particular­ly on overnight flights where nobody wants to have to crawl over a sleeping passenger to use the bathroom. So, United is giving its business class seats their first upgrade in a decade — and removing middle seats from those planes still have them in the premium cabin.

Passengers will also get “do not disturb” signs and more storage space. There will be dedicated lounges in key airports just for business class fliers. It's all part of a new service called Polaris.

Munoz says the product represents "the new spirt of United" and is part of "winning back the trust of our customers."

He acknowledg­es more work needs to be done.

"Airline travel has become like going to the dentist," he told the crowd gathered in a Manhattan event space for the unveiling. The goal is to improve it from "lounge to landing."

Seth Kaplan, managing partner of industry newsletter Airline Weekly, says the new seats will let United match business-class offerings from American Airlines and Delta Air Lines.

"United has been a financial laggard for a long time," Kaplan says. "United hopes that reinvestin­g in the product will help bring it up to speed."

But Munoz knows that updating the physical product isn't enough. That's why flight attendants are getting a new level of training for internatio­nal flights, which he says will filter down to the domestic trips some also take.

Traditiona­lly, in the airline industry, some of the more-senior flight attendants — the ones who often get internatio­nal flights — aren't as enthusiast­ic or friendly as passengers hope.

"It's a never-ending battle," Munoz says, acknowledg­ing that United has a history of testy relations with its unions.

United involved flight attendants early on in the design of Polaris, a move Munoz hopes will encourage them to gladly take on the additional work such as offering three sets of wine instead of just one.

"You give them a product they can be proud of and a little momentum and a labor contract that they are happy with ... and I think that's what carries the day for us," Munoz says.

United has yet to reach a joint contract with the flight attendants following the 2010 merger with Continenta­l Airlines. The flight attendants union said Thursday that a new contract would improve both employee morale and the customer experience.

"Products and services are meaningles­s without the people who introduce them to customers," the union said in a statement.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines