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'Check in clients, but charge'

12 Apr 2017 - by Chana Boucher
Comments | 0

WITH travellers able to

go online and arrange

every step of their trip

themselves, it is increasingly

important for travel consultants

to offer service that goes

beyond clients’ expectations.

A recent discussion on agent

collaboration platform, Open

Jaw – whether or not agents

should check in their clients –

brought mixed responses.

While some consultants said

they checked clients in as an

extra value-add, not all agreed.

“I am happy to offer checkin

when clients are struggling

with it or if it is a good repeat

client and they ask me to help

with it,” says Bronwyn Pienaar,

consultant of Trav Essentials.

“If we offer it as a free service,

though, clients will expect

it. Often it has to be done

outside work hours and on

weekends and I am not always

in a position to perform this

service, especially when I am

away with no signal,” she says.

Another agent, who wishes

remain anonymous, says:

“I would rather spend my

time sourcing the best travel

deal and if they want the full

service, it is there for them at

a fee. I am running a business

at the end of the day.”

Marco Micci, fares and

technical manager of XL

Sandown Travel, says because

of the number of tickets

issued on a daily basis, doing

online check-in for all would be

too time consuming.

So, just how much is the

service worth? According to

Marco, it’s R228. “We have

agreed fees with clients

who want us to do it on a

contracted basis.” Bronwyn

charges R150 per person

per leg, while the anonymous

agent charges R100.

Bronwyn says if clients do

it themselves, they are in a

better position to request their

preferred seats. “We pre-seat

on window or aisle as per

passenger request, and email

the boarding pass to them,

which you can do from the

check-in website,” says Marco.

But according to the

anonymous agent, sometimes

there are technical issues,

particularly when a codeshare

is involved, that can take time

to sort out. Another concern

raised by Bronwyn is that by

doing the check-in on a client’s

behalf, the agent is accepting

responsibility for what is in the

passenger’s luggage.

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