How Does Singapore Airlines
Fly So High?
As a professional
speaker, I often share stories and examples of companies
that deliver great service. One company that’s
easy to talk about is Singapore Airlines.
Profitable every year since the beginning, Singapore
Airlines (SIA) frequently wins international awards
for top service and in-flight quality. Here’s
how they do it:
1. Clarity
and Commitment.
SIA’s focus
on service is absolutely clear. The mission statement
and core values establish, without question, that quality
service to customers is a fundamental objective and
aspiration of the airline. Every major issue, question
or decision is considered in light of their commitment
to providing world-class customer service.
2. Continuous
Training.
Training is not
a one-time affair. SIA understands that daily customer
contact can be draining and that customer expectations
are always on the rise.
To meet this
challenge, four training divisions within the company
(Cabin Crew, Flight Operations, Commercial and Management
Development) offer a wide range of inspiring and demanding
educational programs. Whether in the classroom, through
full-scale simulations or on the job, SIA staff members
are continually motivated to upgrade, uplift and improve
their performance.
Training is not
conducted just during robust economic times. Even during
the downturns, SIA’s investment in training goes
on. This gives the airline a twofold advantage. First,
it allows SIA to surge ahead in quality service when
other carriers cut back. Second, it demonstrates to
all SIA staff that continuous learning and improvement
are essential principles for success, not just nice-to-have
bonuses.
3. Career
Development.
SIA staff are
regularly appraised for performance and potential. High-flyers
(high performance and potential) are identified early
and given every opportunity to learn and grow. Senior
managers are effectively developed with frequent rotation
through top positions in the company. This leads to
a management team with great breadth and depth, with
a shared understanding of ‘the big picture’,
and with a commitment to do what’s best for the
customers and the business, not just for one department
or another.
4. Internal
Communication.
SIA is a large
organization, with more than 28,000 staff (including
subsidiaries) located around the world. People from
different cultures work together to produce a seamless
and consistently positive customer experience. In the
pilot pool alone more than 25 countries are represented!
To keep everyone
on the same wavelength, SIA publishes a variety of department
newsletters, websites and a monthly company-wide magazine.
Regular dialogue
sessions between management and staff keep communication
flowing. A program called ‘Staff Ideas in Action’
ensures that new suggestions for improvement are constantly
put forward. Semi-annual business meetings provide another
forum for sharing and evaluating results in sales, marketing,
yields and customer satisfaction levels.
5. Consistent
External Communication.
Whether their
advertisement is about new destinations, new airplanes,
onboard cuisine, or new seats and entertainment services,
the legendary ‘SIA Girl’ is always featured.
Why? Because
the bottom line for SIA is not the plane, seat, entertainment
or destination. The bottom line is delivering high-quality
service, and the ‘SIA Girl’ is the brand
identity, the personification of that service.
Of course everyone
knows it takes the entire SIA team to deliver excellent
service, but showing a picture of a smiling engineer,
a competent pilot or a friendly telephone reservations
agent would not carry the same consistency in external
communication: The ‘SIA Girl’ represents
impeccable quality service. In the airline’s external
communication, she is always there.
6. Connection
with Customers.
SIA makes a concerted
effort to stay in touch with customers through in-flight
surveys, customer focus groups and rapid replies to
every compliment or complaint they receive. SIA then
consolidates this input with other key data to create
a quarterly ‘Service Performance Index’
that is very closely watched throughout the airline.
Frequent flyers
are kept well-connected with special messages, attractive
offers and publications sent regularly to Priority Passenger
Service (PPS) members. And very frequent flyers achieve
an elite ‘Solitaire’ status with a wide
range of valuable privileges: most convenient check-in,
additional baggage allowance, priority seating and waitlisting,
and more. (I am one of those very frequent flyers, and
I enjoy it!)
7. Benchmarking.
The airline industry
is intensely competitive with every carrier seeking
new ways to ‘get ahead of the pack’. SIA
tracks competitors’ progress closely. Even outside
the airline industry, SIA looks for new ways to improve
and grow. When hotels, banks, restaurants, retail outlets
and other service industries take a step forward in
their amenities, convenience or comfort, SIA watches
closely to see what can be adopted or adapted for the
airline industry.
8. Improvement,
Investment and Innovation.
From the earliest
days, SIA has built a solid reputation for taking the
lead and doing things differently, introducing free
drinks and headsets, fax machines onboard, individual
video screens and telephones in every seat, cutting-edge
gaming and in-flight entertainment, ‘book the
cook’ service for special meals in First and Business
Class, telephone, fax, e-mail and internet check-in,
innovative cargo facilities – the list goes on
and on.
This commitment
to continuous improvement is coupled with a cultural
determination to try it out, make it work and see it
through. Not every innovation succeeds and some are
eventually removed from service (the fax machines are
long gone), but SIA makes every possible effort to find
the key to success – or to create it.
9. Rewards
and Recognition.
While excellent
staff performance is rewarded with increased pay and
positions, the most prestigious award is reserved for
truly superior service.
The ‘CEO’s
Transforming Customer Service Award’ is given
annually to teams and individuals who respond to unique
customer situations with exceptionally positive, innovative
or selfless acts of service. This award carries no financial
benefit, but it is the most revered accolade in the
airline. Winners and their families are flown to Singapore
for a special dinner celebration, the story of their
efforts is published in the monthly magazine, and their
personal status as a ‘Managing Director’s
Award Winner’ remains a badge of distinction for
life.
10. Professionalism,
Pride and Profits.
The result of
these efforts is a staff culture vigorously committed
to customers and continuous improvement.
Staff pride and
sense of ownership are evident in the way they protect
the airline’s reputation and participate in programs
like the ‘aircraft adoption’ scheme.
Good profits
are also achieved, but not as an end in themselves.
Rather, SIA’s profits are ‘the applause
we receive for providing consistent quality and service
to our customers’.
Does all this mean that SIA is perfect? Of course not.
Even SIA cannot satisfy every customer every time. Bags
go astray, telephone lines become congested, and meals
at 39,000 feet are not always perfectly deluxe. There
will always be room for improvement.
With a track record of success, SIA must work doubly
hard to avoid becoming complacent. Managers must be
open to change and not become arrogant or defensive.
Staff must be proud of the airline yet remain eager
for passenger suggestions, recommendations and constructive
criticism.
The definition of a truly loyal airline customer is
someone who is pleased with the service, flies with
the airline again, recommends the airline to others
and takes the time and effort to point out ways the
airline can still improve.
I look forward to my flights on SIA and I use the carrier
two or three times each month. My speeches and training
programs are peppered with positive stories from the
airline’s history and lore. And my mail to SIA
includes plenty of ideas and suggestions to help them
improve.
Singapore Airlines has earned my loyalty on the ground
and in the sky. They’ve got a great way to fly
– and to run a highly successful business.
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