djfuzz
Established Member
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2007
- Posts
- 1,412
Agreed, one thing to be insulted by someone, its another to sit there and take it.
Hmm, have to agree with what danielribo did on this one - as a passenger, being on an aircraft in mid-flight is the last place in the world I'd want to escalate a customer service issue unless it was seriously objectionable (and even then, with a fair degree of caution).
As many would point out, you are entirely at the mercy of the crew during the flight, and quite frankly until you've safely deplaned at the other end, I can't see how the benefit of starting the grievance process on board would outweigh the risk of an escalating confrontation with the crew, which ultimately could lead to action being taken by the captain (see the AA orange juice incident - OJgate: Asking For Orange Juice On AA May Violate Federal Law / AA Investigating FA - FlyerTalk Forums). Indeed, it may be better to try to initiate the process in an unobtrusive manner once you have landed, but again there are circumstances in which this may be either difficult or not practically possible.
So at the end of the day, the feedback / customer service process is probably the most appropriate way for customers to deal with such grievances, and if it's not particularly effective then it's hardly the customer's fault for trying to do the right thing. Regardless of who the airline trusts, it's in their interests to take on board the feedback and do what they can to try to appease the customer (with at least a degree of sincere contrition, as opposed to self-congratulatory assumptions of the customer's restored faith).
As for the crew members alleged to have treated them badly, a minor isolated incident may be dealt with softly; but for anything serious or established by a consistent pattern of behaviour across a number of complaints, it's in the airline's interest to take a harder look at what is happening.