Dear Aurigny’s new agency: let’s start with strategy, please?

Olly Browning
5 min readAug 15, 2016

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Image: Aurigny

UPDATE: Euan Mahy from Aurigny was kind enough to call me this afternoon and talk about my post. Rest assured, in Aurigny’s original press release, some of the issues I raised below indeed got a mention, and were scoped in the new agency contract in the first place, which I’m pleased to hear. I urge you to read the full release so you can gather a clear picture of what we (hopefully) have to look forward to as the brand evolves.
My comments below are still ones I’d been wanting to raise for some time, and to me, should still be the highest priorities for Aurigny. I look forward to seeing these take shape for the future of the airline.

Today I learnt that Aurigny, the inter-island airline brand owned by the States of Guernsey, has appointed a new marketing agency. In a post by the Beeb on Facebook, the contract reportedly includes “refreshing the airline’s brand and [consider] the possibility of renaming it”. And that’s all I know so far. At the moment, I also don’t know which agency has won the work — so I’m proud to now give you my completely impartial opinion on what the devil we need to do with Aurigny.

1. Make the web experience better.

So let’s talk about Aurigny’s website:

I mean, look at it. That thing looks like it was made on Angelfire back in 2001 on a dial-up modem, and I don’t think it’s changed much since. I’m trying to remain sincere, but really— if you’ve tried to use it before I think you’ll agree it’s a horrible user experience that isn’t intuitive; there’s buttons all over the place, GIFs AND scrolling text — this website is like the jack of all trades yet the master of none.

Looking at this site, I genuinely don’t know what they’re calling my attention to. So many buttons and screaming colours, and the actual key booking panel nearly gets lost in a midst of buttons and other yellow panels. I’d hate to think how this site would work for a partially sighted person, if at all. And in some cases, the website is just broken. I mean, look at the bizarre way it gets you to sign up for their email newsletter:

Let’s compare that with Virgin America. Yes, obviously Virgin are working with a MUCH bigger budget here and operate a much bigger service. But even still, look how well they’ve nailed the booking journey:

That’s the sort of thing we could be having. Instead we’re stuck with javascript and radio boxes. And that’s not even mentioning point 2, the other big, huge, major, very important elephant in the room:

2. It’s time to catch up and go mobile.

Yes, despite the first iPhone coming out over 9 years ago, Aurigny’s site still isn’t mobile responsive. Trying to book a trip on your mobile is painfully difficult, if not impossible due to the site’s outdated build standards. What you saw in my first picture is exactly what you see on your phone. Nothing changes, nothing optimises. But here’s the thing:

In 2016, 51.8% of travelers who book trips via digital means will do so using a mobile device (eMarketer)

That’s potentially half of Aurigny’s audience. Half of the people booking flights are trying to so on their phone, and they’ve been neglected; for years. It’s a real shame, and mobile, to me, is something that should be essential to any modern airline— especially when Aurigny’s flights are treated more like commutes rather than big-holiday-spends.

3. Service, please.

I really believe that Aurigny operates a great airline service. The only times I’ve had a problem with a flight, or for it not to run, have usually been because of extraneous circumstances like fog.

However, when those occasions have happened, I’ve noticed some real opportunities for Aurigny to better their customer service side — particularly in digital. When a flight I was booked on earlier this year was cancelled due to fog, service updates in the airport were rare, so I took to Twitter to try and find an update and contact Aurigny customer service.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, it turned out Aurigny has no customer support on Twitter. There were no emails about the status of my flight, no texts, and no aftercare. I had to go out of my way to find a post on Facebook (which wasn’t updated), or speak to staff at the airport (after waiting in a long queue where everybody was waiting to ask the same thing).

Here’s what upsets me: there’s an app in the App Store for En Route — Aurigny’s in-flight magazine. I can’t get my head around it: they’ve developed an app for the in-flight magazine (which is just a re-skinned PDF viewer, by the way), instead of first making an app for, oh, I don’t know, their product?

4. Loyalty

In case you didn’t know (because it’s not really advertised, so I couldn’t blame you), Aurigny actually have a loyalty scheme. But I’m going to keep this one short: I think it’s a nonsensical, farcical waste of time, which needs a complete overhaul and radical re-thinking. I’ve been signed up for ages, but even I as a regular traveller have never really known how I accumulate points or what those points are worth. Just trying to make it through the FAQ section makes my head want to explode like in that scene from Scanners.

And yet there’s so much potential for Aurigny to create a compelling loyalty scheme here, especially when it deals with such a large audience like the Channel Islands. Just think about how much more powerful those £29 seat sales could be if they ran across all channels: email, web, social, SMS, together.

In conclusion

You’ll notice throughout this article I’ve not even raised the issue of Aurigny’s branding or naming. I don’t really think there’s a problem with it. Sure, I wouldn’t say it’s particularly enthralling, memorable, or personable, but it’s fine. It’s the only damn airline that operates between Guernsey and London anyway, so why get so het up on what we call it?

To Aurigny’s new agency: congratulations, you’ve scored a seriously great account, with a huge reach and a lot of potential. I’d love to work on it. But please — and use me as your scapegoat if needs be — let’s convince Aurigny to sort the fundamentals — the customer experience, first. Then we can perhaps talk about a new identity.

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Olly is a creative marketer and occasional writer. Follow @yourolly on Twitter and Facebook for the latest posts. Contact: olly@yourolly.com.

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Olly Browning

A freelance writer and graphic designer in London. Follow me on Twitter @yourolly.