FBO Customer Expectations: How High Should You Set the Bar?
/“Start early, and begin raising the bar throughout the day.” –Bruce Jenner, Olympic athlete
Is the level of customer service expectation set high enough at your FBO? Does it meet or exceed the standards of the industry, or are you doing just enough to get by?
Recently, I was reading a customer service-related blog titled: “Did You Know You’re Competing with Apple?” The premise piqued my interest. Could it be possible the level of service a customer expects to receive at an FBO can be properly compared with the expectation of service offered by the top brands in their respective industries — companies like Apple, Virgin America and Amazon?
I was hooked on the notion. So I read on, and the more I thought about it, the more it made sense. Customers who walk into any FBO have already been exposed to the highest level of customer service possible because they are all consumers. They probably have been exposed to how Apple can make the mobile computing experience easy. Or to the way Amazon aids online customers in the selection process and then delivers the product in the blink of an eye.
I was on board when the blogger mentioned how Virgin America can customize the in-air experience by delivering food and in-flight entertainment the way you want it when you want it. So I reasoned, why can’t professional pilots and crew members expect a similar level of service when they deliver a CEO to his or her destination?
What Pilots and Passengers Expect
Remember, your customers, the pilots and crew members, have customers of their own. They’re the VIP passengers who are often the most well-heeled, high-net-worth individuals on the face of the planet.
You think an FBO manager’s job can be tough? Try keeping track of what each passenger likes to read, eat, listen to and watch. And, oh, by the way, remember to be the passenger’s confidant, and know their family history and names of children and pets. And while you’re at it, fly the airplane flawlessly!
Passengers on business aircraft are used to receiving the highest levels of service available. They dine at the finest restaurants, golf at the nicest country clubs and vacation at the swankiest resorts. Do you think their customer service bar is set high?
So once the world’s movers and shakers are carefully transferred from the comforts of the jet cabin to the perfect 72° interior of a waiting limo, what level of customer service should the crew expect when they set foot inside the FBO?
Hopefully the answer is the same level of service they just gave their passengers. Anything less is simply unacceptable.
As an FBO owner or operator, you can do several things to instill in your employees the level of service you would like to see and customers expect. One suggestion is to take small groups of employees, on occasion, out to eat at a very upscale restaurant. Let them see firsthand how a high level of service is delivered.
Maybe once a month, or once a quarter, reward an employee and his or her spouse with a night at the best hotel in the area. Have them take mental notes of the level of service and share their experience with the rest of the customer service team.
Occasionally issue a gift certificate to a deserving employee for a day at a spa at an upscale resort. The experience will probably transform the employee in a positive way.
What are you doing to raise the bar of customer service expectation at your FBO? I’d like to hear from you. Ron@thejacksongroup.biz.
Ron Jackson
Ron Jackson is co-founder of ABSG and president of The Jackson Group, a public relations agency specializing in aviation and FBO marketing. He has held management positions with Cessna Aircraft and Bozell Advertising and is the author of Mission Marketing: Creating Brand Value and co-author of Don’t Forget the Cheese!, the Ultimate FBO Customer Service Experience.