Ryanair - 7
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Durham
Posts: 292
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Not sure Bremen-Berlin will do well against the train which is three hours city centre to city centre. It often takes an hour just to get from Schoenefeld to the centre of Berlin.
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Finland
Posts: 590
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
In Finland Ryanair "proudly announcing" today that due to high demand and success of sells, some flights will be added on the AGP - TMP route.
It's probably much to their surprise that a route between FIN and Spain (with no low-cost links existing so far) could become so popular several months before its starting date. Once again old good Ryanair, so hopelessly unaware of where the real opportunities are to be found. So hard to anticipate, really?
GRO, CIA, PSA, SXF etc. ... (guess what I mean)
It's probably much to their surprise that a route between FIN and Spain (with no low-cost links existing so far) could become so popular several months before its starting date. Once again old good Ryanair, so hopelessly unaware of where the real opportunities are to be found. So hard to anticipate, really?
GRO, CIA, PSA, SXF etc. ... (guess what I mean)
Last edited by pee; 3rd Mar 2010 at 15:06. Reason: wrong apt code
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: nirvana
Posts: 302
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Not sure if you can watch this outside of Ireland but here's last nights Primetime interview report on the Hangar 6 episode, a story that keeps on going..Hilarious stuff.
RT Player: Catch up with your favourite TV programmes online
RT Player: Catch up with your favourite TV programmes online
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Germany
Posts: 1,208
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
BRE-SXF 12 weekly from 11th May + BRE-ZAD 2 weekly from 2nd June.
Aktuelle Nachrichten : Ab Mai 2010 nach Berlin und Zadar
FAO and AGP will see one more a/c during July/August used for increasing existing routes.
Novidades : Ryanair celebra grande volume de reservas nos voos da base de Faro
Últimas novedades : Ryanair Aumenta sus Frecuencias en Málaga Durante el Verano
FR will give up 4 routes to/from Granada to GRO, STN, LPL and MAD by 4th May.
Últimas novedades : Ryanair Cancela 4 de sus 6 Rutas en Granada
Traffic:
passengers: 4.37 mln +6%
load factor: 75% -3pp
Aktuelle Nachrichten : Ab Mai 2010 nach Berlin und Zadar
FAO and AGP will see one more a/c during July/August used for increasing existing routes.
Novidades : Ryanair celebra grande volume de reservas nos voos da base de Faro
Últimas novedades : Ryanair Aumenta sus Frecuencias en Málaga Durante el Verano
FR will give up 4 routes to/from Granada to GRO, STN, LPL and MAD by 4th May.
Últimas novedades : Ryanair Cancela 4 de sus 6 Rutas en Granada
Traffic:
passengers: 4.37 mln +6%
load factor: 75% -3pp
Anyone know the reason for Angouleme being dropped ?
Poor loads, the local Govt declining to provide the marketing support that FR wants, a combination of the two, or something else ?
Poor loads, the local Govt declining to provide the marketing support that FR wants, a combination of the two, or something else ?
Join Date: May 2005
Location: UK
Posts: 228
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
STN-ANG loads
Hi,
The flown loads on STN-ANG were pretty decent. 2009 was a big improvement on 2008 (data from CAA):
2009 27,987 pax on 188 flights 79%
2008 24,792 pax on 179 flights 73%
However, loads and passenger numbers on STN-LIG (not that far away) have dropped from 83% in 2007 to 82% in 2008 and 78% in 2009, suggesting that FR may have been doing their favourite trick of competing with themselves and diluting their own loads.
The flown loads on STN-ANG were pretty decent. 2009 was a big improvement on 2008 (data from CAA):
2009 27,987 pax on 188 flights 79%
2008 24,792 pax on 179 flights 73%
However, loads and passenger numbers on STN-LIG (not that far away) have dropped from 83% in 2007 to 82% in 2008 and 78% in 2009, suggesting that FR may have been doing their favourite trick of competing with themselves and diluting their own loads.
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Leeds
Posts: 14
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Granada
First flight booked with Ryanair to Granada, now cancelled. Alternative flights at this point approximately double the price (and they weren't that cheap in the first place).
I won't be back and neither will any of the large group I was travelling with.
I won't be back and neither will any of the large group I was travelling with.
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: On the flightpath
Age: 61
Posts: 355
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Not sure Bremen-Berlin will do well against the train which is three hours city centre to city centre. It often takes an hour just to get from Schoenefeld to the centre of Berlin.
Ryanair's choice of airports has caused much comment in the past; but some passengers' journeys are inevitably going to be easier without a slog into or out of a busy city centre.
Join Date: May 2005
Location: UK
Posts: 228
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Malta base ... finally?
"Ryanair will also operate six new routes between Malta and European destinations where the airline currently does not have a base. The services will start by the summer, pushing the number of Malta routes on the Ryainair network to 18."
timesofmalta.com - Agreement reached on Ryanair base in Malta
One of those new routes seems to be MLA - Billund:
Ryanair åbner rute til Malta - TV SYD - TVSyd - Nyheder - Lokal - Billund
timesofmalta.com - Agreement reached on Ryanair base in Malta
One of those new routes seems to be MLA - Billund:
Ryanair åbner rute til Malta - TV SYD - TVSyd - Nyheder - Lokal - Billund
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Finland
Posts: 590
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Granada, cancellations and schedule changes
I won't be back and neither will any of the large group I was travelling with.
Without any profit for myself, I also used to organize some group tours flying Ryanair. Four different flights, bus- or rail transfers between them, hotels booked in advance and so on. There is still one such a trip coming. The last one. Hopefully FR will not mix all schedules just before we leave. With some good luck it won't happen. But observing how often cancellations and schedule changes happen, I'll not risk any more, it's not worth my nerves. Coming to Stockholm aboard the ship in the morning... oops! The plane scheduled to depart at 11:30 will actually leave earlier. To disembark from the ship while the plane is departing? No, thanks.
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Finland
Posts: 590
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
@Malta.
The first route from new Malta base will be announced today (they say). Probably MLA - KRK.
@St. Petersburg-West
On the first flight from Lappeenranta to Düsseldorf the vast majority of passengers were Russians (as anticipated).
Source: YLE.fi (Finnish Radio).
The first route from new Malta base will be announced today (they say). Probably MLA - KRK.
@St. Petersburg-West
On the first flight from Lappeenranta to Düsseldorf the vast majority of passengers were Russians (as anticipated).
Source: YLE.fi (Finnish Radio).
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Finland
Posts: 590
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Malta
KRK and 5 more: Valencia, Bologna, Seville, Billund in Denmark and Marseilles.
Source: Times of Malta
Source: Times of Malta
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Manchester
Posts: 1,106
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Ryanair Strategy
M62 / pee / All,
Sadly, Ryanair has a history of playing politics with its routes and bases. That is unlikely to change. The company has demonstrated a preference for playing "bullyboy" with airports and regional governments rather than working in partnership with them to build up sustainable and profitable networks. The company's disregard for its own customers' travel plans is legendary. 'Common Sense' seems to be an alien concept at Ryanair; it is simply 'meet our demands' or 'toys out of pram' with them. As you point out, the customers do (eventually) notice. And a sustainable business needs repeat business.
Here in Manchester, Ryanair pulled its network (except for the ultra-profitable DUB operation) in a fit of rage when the airport refused to provide use of its valuable services for less than £3 per passenger journey. A reasonable sum for use of facilities requiring millions to run each year, and one which passengers would not baulk at paying as part of their fare. Warning to Ryanair: in these tougher economic times you may run out of airports and local governments willing to operate as a charity.
I am sure that there remain afew customers who will dutifully follow Ryanair to a distant field of its choosing when these games are played. But many will not. When you abandon a large conurbation on a whim you abandon many customers too, and their negative impressions are ingrained (and communicated to others) for the long term. Ryanair's run of success through its growing years has allowed hubris to build, but ultimately customer disaffection (loathing?) will eat away at the business. Customers don't just forget and move on. They learn - and avoid businesses which have let them down in the past. A mature company increasingly NEEDS a positive relationship with its customer base.
In my case, I do not have an agenda against Ryanair or any other no-frills operator. (Surprised?!!!). On the contrary, it frustrates me to see a potentially great business which is prepared to jeopardize its whole future by stitching up its customers, and, publicly slagging off its industry partners to the media. Alienating customers, p*ss*ng off airport operators, squashing essential suppliers, bullying local authority officials ... a business which does this will eventually see the backlash impact its bottom line (and the share price). Once those city boys turn against you - watch out! Especially if your company has no friends left amongst its industry partners.
Returning to the case of Ryanair specifically, I actually believe that fundamentally it is a good business, but one which is making major blunders which will return to haunt it in the future. The whole 'hardman' act and "we're just a bunch of Paddies and we don't care" routine works fine for a youthful company in its growth phase. But Ryanair is a mature business now. It must recognize the need to realign its priorities. Build loyalty with the regular customers - don't abandon them, cancel their bookings, or enrage them with hefty charges disguised as penalties for minor infringements (online check-in errors etc). Develop a positive relationship with airport and ground-handling partners - acknowledge that their businesses need to pay their way too. There is a finite number of airports in Europe - and they are all now well aware of Ryanair's hardball reputation. How long can they afford to offer free service? Regional Governments across Europe are in fiscal crisis - sweetheart grants for airlines and subsidies for basket-case airports will become impossible to justify to voters whilst core local authority services are facing the axe. Tourist Authorities will be cut back or scrapped entirely. Wake up, Ryanair! The free ride is coming to an end ... you are going to start needing some friends!
Speaking personally, I am still prepared to book with Ryanair if they offer me a service which is cost-effective and convenient for my travel plans. Unfortunately (for Ryanair's bookings), I am in Manchester - one of the conurbations which Ryanair abandoned because it failed to 'persuade' the airport with its "offer which we could refuse". As a result, my own 27 current flight bookings at the time of writing include NO sectors operated by Ryanair. In the months leading up to Ryanair's tantrum at MAN, I flew 22 sectors with them. I am the epitome of Ryanair's problem going forward. I am one of those would-be customers left marooned by Ryanair's preference for playing politics with airports rather than developing a mutually beneficial relationship with customers. No service? No booking!
Ryanair may kid themselves that their abandoned customers will obediently follow them to the inconvenient airstrip fifty miles away. Some will - if the deal is amazingly cheap (margins, anyone?). Many won't. I would happily pay MAN's £3 passenger charge to use its facilities ... in fact, I am doing so by making bookings with Ryanair's competitors who still offer me a convenient service from there. What I will not do is waste my day traveling to Ryanair's favoured 'airport-du-jour', paying avoidable fares, charges and hotels along the way (alot more than £3!) to make the whole thing work. Many others think as I do.
It is far easier for a business to retain an existing customer than attract a new one (if it offers a positive experience). With money tight in both the public and private sectors, a wise business will take customer retention to heart. Take a look, Ryanair. Read the comments of M62, pee, those on customer review sites. What is the message? Never again? Can't trust them not to change things? They ripped me off 'cos my boarding pass wouldn't print? Is this the path to customer loyalty? Perhaps the time has come to make the choice between endearing yourselves with your clients, or facing a slow decline by a thousand cuts.
Are you going to make yourself indispensable to customers, or irrelevant to customers? [In the case of my own example, flying from MAN or from some place miles away].
Good luck with that decision.
SHED.
Sadly, Ryanair has a history of playing politics with its routes and bases. That is unlikely to change. The company has demonstrated a preference for playing "bullyboy" with airports and regional governments rather than working in partnership with them to build up sustainable and profitable networks. The company's disregard for its own customers' travel plans is legendary. 'Common Sense' seems to be an alien concept at Ryanair; it is simply 'meet our demands' or 'toys out of pram' with them. As you point out, the customers do (eventually) notice. And a sustainable business needs repeat business.
Here in Manchester, Ryanair pulled its network (except for the ultra-profitable DUB operation) in a fit of rage when the airport refused to provide use of its valuable services for less than £3 per passenger journey. A reasonable sum for use of facilities requiring millions to run each year, and one which passengers would not baulk at paying as part of their fare. Warning to Ryanair: in these tougher economic times you may run out of airports and local governments willing to operate as a charity.
I am sure that there remain afew customers who will dutifully follow Ryanair to a distant field of its choosing when these games are played. But many will not. When you abandon a large conurbation on a whim you abandon many customers too, and their negative impressions are ingrained (and communicated to others) for the long term. Ryanair's run of success through its growing years has allowed hubris to build, but ultimately customer disaffection (loathing?) will eat away at the business. Customers don't just forget and move on. They learn - and avoid businesses which have let them down in the past. A mature company increasingly NEEDS a positive relationship with its customer base.
In my case, I do not have an agenda against Ryanair or any other no-frills operator. (Surprised?!!!). On the contrary, it frustrates me to see a potentially great business which is prepared to jeopardize its whole future by stitching up its customers, and, publicly slagging off its industry partners to the media. Alienating customers, p*ss*ng off airport operators, squashing essential suppliers, bullying local authority officials ... a business which does this will eventually see the backlash impact its bottom line (and the share price). Once those city boys turn against you - watch out! Especially if your company has no friends left amongst its industry partners.
Returning to the case of Ryanair specifically, I actually believe that fundamentally it is a good business, but one which is making major blunders which will return to haunt it in the future. The whole 'hardman' act and "we're just a bunch of Paddies and we don't care" routine works fine for a youthful company in its growth phase. But Ryanair is a mature business now. It must recognize the need to realign its priorities. Build loyalty with the regular customers - don't abandon them, cancel their bookings, or enrage them with hefty charges disguised as penalties for minor infringements (online check-in errors etc). Develop a positive relationship with airport and ground-handling partners - acknowledge that their businesses need to pay their way too. There is a finite number of airports in Europe - and they are all now well aware of Ryanair's hardball reputation. How long can they afford to offer free service? Regional Governments across Europe are in fiscal crisis - sweetheart grants for airlines and subsidies for basket-case airports will become impossible to justify to voters whilst core local authority services are facing the axe. Tourist Authorities will be cut back or scrapped entirely. Wake up, Ryanair! The free ride is coming to an end ... you are going to start needing some friends!
Speaking personally, I am still prepared to book with Ryanair if they offer me a service which is cost-effective and convenient for my travel plans. Unfortunately (for Ryanair's bookings), I am in Manchester - one of the conurbations which Ryanair abandoned because it failed to 'persuade' the airport with its "offer which we could refuse". As a result, my own 27 current flight bookings at the time of writing include NO sectors operated by Ryanair. In the months leading up to Ryanair's tantrum at MAN, I flew 22 sectors with them. I am the epitome of Ryanair's problem going forward. I am one of those would-be customers left marooned by Ryanair's preference for playing politics with airports rather than developing a mutually beneficial relationship with customers. No service? No booking!
Ryanair may kid themselves that their abandoned customers will obediently follow them to the inconvenient airstrip fifty miles away. Some will - if the deal is amazingly cheap (margins, anyone?). Many won't. I would happily pay MAN's £3 passenger charge to use its facilities ... in fact, I am doing so by making bookings with Ryanair's competitors who still offer me a convenient service from there. What I will not do is waste my day traveling to Ryanair's favoured 'airport-du-jour', paying avoidable fares, charges and hotels along the way (alot more than £3!) to make the whole thing work. Many others think as I do.
It is far easier for a business to retain an existing customer than attract a new one (if it offers a positive experience). With money tight in both the public and private sectors, a wise business will take customer retention to heart. Take a look, Ryanair. Read the comments of M62, pee, those on customer review sites. What is the message? Never again? Can't trust them not to change things? They ripped me off 'cos my boarding pass wouldn't print? Is this the path to customer loyalty? Perhaps the time has come to make the choice between endearing yourselves with your clients, or facing a slow decline by a thousand cuts.
Are you going to make yourself indispensable to customers, or irrelevant to customers? [In the case of my own example, flying from MAN or from some place miles away].
Good luck with that decision.
SHED.
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: England
Age: 59
Posts: 516
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
SHED
Having read your last post I agree with most of it but for one
niggling thought....
Why would a large airline such as Ryanair have such a horrid
attitude towards its beautiful customers?
MM
Having read your last post I agree with most of it but for one
niggling thought....
Why would a large airline such as Ryanair have such a horrid
attitude towards its beautiful customers?
MM
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Manchester
Posts: 1,106
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Mickyman -
Ryanair can't choose its beautiful customers ... but its beautiful customers CAN choose another airline! Large airline or not, don't be horrid to those who pay the wages.
CHEERS.
Ryanair can't choose its beautiful customers ... but its beautiful customers CAN choose another airline! Large airline or not, don't be horrid to those who pay the wages.
CHEERS.