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-   -   Passenger satisfaction with TOCs (https://www.londonbanter.co.uk/london-transport/4931-passenger-satisfaction-tocs.html)

Dave A January 29th 07 09:02 PM

Passenger satisfaction with TOCs
 
A recent post on uk.railway offers the latest passenger satisfaction
survey, sampling 25,000 rail users.

http://www.passengerfocus.org.uk/new...e.asp?dsid=845

The overall picture is pretty upbeat - 81% of passengers nationally were
satisfied with the service, although this hides variations at the level
of TOC and of the aspect of service.

In London and the south east, the report shows a marked uplift over the
least four years in overall satisfaction for many of our operators -
most notably Southern, Southeastern, Silverlink and South West Trains,
and to a lesser extent c2c (where they started at a higher level
anyway). First Capital Connect (incl. predecessors, I believe)
satisfaction levels have risen but are now tailing off, and One, First
Great Western and Chiltern are all fluctuating around the same levels
(Chiltern's level being somewhat higher).

Opinions on punctuality and reliability have shot up since 2002 for
Southern, Southeastern, Silverlink, South West Trains, First Capital
Connect and c2c. However, customers have been and remain fairly poorly
satisfied by the TOC's methods of dealing with delays.

Satisfaction with information provision has risen slowly for most, but
with a clearer rise for SWT and a drop over the last couple of years for
Chiltern.

Satisfaction with connections to other public transport has increased
pretty well for all London TOCs - I find this interesting as I'm not
sure why - perhaps better buses in London, or better integration using
PlusBus outside.

Despite overall high satisfaction levels, London rail users are
unsurprisingly poorly satisfied by value for money (more so than
anywhere else). Chiltern appears to consistently stand ahead of the pack
on this at around 50% satisfied. The low is One with only about 30%
satisfied.

Opinion on crowding is (surprisingly to me) mixed, with the high being
Chiltern at around 70% satisfied, and the low being Southeastern at just
over 50% satisfied.

The stand out operator is Heathrow Express, with 96% of customers
satisfied (and 0% actually dissatisfied). Its weaknesses were pparently
car parking (although I'm not sure why anyone would expect to park and
ride on Heathrow Express) and value for money. Strengths were speed
(scheudled) and "the ease of being able to get on and off".

Chiltern is pretty high at 90% satisfied, weaknesses being availability
of staff and value for money, strengths being punctuality/reliability
and "the ease of being able to get on and off".

The low is One, with 10% dissatisfied (75% satisfied), top weaknesses
being availability of staff and toilet facilities. Strengths were
connections to other public transport and speed.

--
Dave Arquati
www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London

Ian Jelf January 29th 07 10:14 PM

Passenger satisfaction with TOCs
 
In message , Dave A
writes
"the ease of being able to get on and off".


I wonder what this phrase meant specifically?
--
Ian Jelf, MITG
Birmingham, UK

Registered Blue Badge Tourist Guide for London and the Heart of England
http://www.bluebadge.demon.co.uk

Dave A January 31st 07 05:49 PM

Passenger satisfaction with TOCs
 
Ian Jelf wrote:
In message , Dave A
writes
"the ease of being able to get on and off".


I wonder what this phrase meant specifically?


My mind did boggle a bit. If I were asked how easy it was to get on a
train, I'd think firstly of the gap (both horizontal and vertical)
between the train and the platform, and secondly of the number of people
crowded in the doorways - although the latter may not be relevant.

For example, a DLR train would be very easy to get on from the first
perspective (minimum possible gap) whereas the SWT train I got on this
morning at Wandsworth had a massive step up from the platform onto the
train.

--
Dave Arquati
www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London

asdf January 31st 07 11:53 PM

Passenger satisfaction with TOCs
 
On Wed, 31 Jan 2007 18:49:03 +0000, Dave A wrote:

"the ease of being able to get on and off".


I wonder what this phrase meant specifically?


My mind did boggle a bit. If I were asked how easy it was to get on a
train, I'd think firstly of the gap (both horizontal and vertical)
between the train and the platform, and secondly of the number of people
crowded in the doorways - although the latter may not be relevant.

For example, a DLR train would be very easy to get on from the first
perspective (minimum possible gap) whereas the SWT train I got on this
morning at Wandsworth had a massive step up from the platform onto the
train.


Perhaps it was interpreted as how easy it is to turn up at a station
and get on a train (i.e. whether you have to queue for ages and buy
tickets, faff around with barriers, etc). This might explain why HEx
scored highly (you can just walk straight on board, and buy the ticket
on the train).

Michael Hoffman February 1st 07 12:14 AM

Passenger satisfaction with TOCs
 
[Dave A]
"the ease of being able to get on and off".
I wonder what this phrase meant specifically?


[asdf]
Perhaps it was interpreted as how easy it is to turn up at a station
and get on a train (i.e. whether you have to queue for ages and buy
tickets, faff around with barriers, etc). This might explain why HEx
scored highly (you can just walk straight on board, and buy the ticket
on the train).


That's what I figured as well.
--
Michael Hoffman


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