The Airports Council International (ACI) has announced the top performing airports
in its recently published Airport Service Quality Survey.
The ASQ rankings are based on the results from nearly 200,000 questionnaires
completed by passengers in 2007. The survey captures the passengers' immediate
appraisal of 34 airport service factors, from check-in through to departure
at the gate.
For the third year in a row, Asia Pacific airports garnered the three top positions
in the ‘worldwide’ category, with Seoul’s Incheon International
Airport coming in first, Kuala Lumpur International Airport second, and Singapore
Changi in third place. The official awards ceremony will be held on April 1st at
a gala dinner which will be hosted at the two-day ACI conference on customer service
and facilitation in Shanghai this year.
First place regional awards have gone to Oporto in Europe, Dallas Fort Worth
in North America, Johannesburg in Africa, Guayaquil in Latin America & Caribbean,
Tel Aviv in the Middle East and Incheon in Asia-Pacific.
In the five annual-passenger
traffic size categories, top honours were taken by Halifax (fewer than 5 million),
Central Japan (5 to 15 million), Kuala Lumpur (15-25 million), Seoul Incheon
(25 – 40 million) and Hong Kong (over 40 million).
Programme director Craig Bradbrook commented of the results that: “Service quality should
never be viewed as a ‘nice to have’ feature in managing airport
services, but as a key discipline in the airport management process. We see
a high correlation between management commitment to service and passenger satisfaction.”
Speaking with regard to the Asia Pacific performance sweep, Bradbrook explained: “At
Incheon, the management team takes pride in delivering quality airport service
and sees it as being part of the overall tourism value chain – good for
their airport and their nation. That means that the commitment is given very
high priority politically as well as operationally by the airport."
“In Kuala Lumpur, the management team has pursued a ‘world class
service’ objective firmly supported by a strategy that puts service quality
first and that has dovetailed with Malaysia’s ‘Visit Malaysia 2007’
tourism campaign."
“And the third place winner Singapore has pursued a determined objective
for 20 years, working hard to build a reputation that has become synonymous
with excellence and regularly introducing new services to better serve their
passengers. These are key factors that ensure year on year top performance levels.”
Additional categories include ‘best domestic airport’ where Halifax,
Austin and Ottawa took top honours this year, and ‘best improvement over
previous year’ which was awarded to Aberdeen.
Three airports - Southampton, Incheon and Halifax - were given the ‘airport
people award’. Each winner has developed a strong customer service culture
across the entire airport community, and has been rated by passengers as having
the most courteous and helpful airport, airline and security staff.
Robert J Aaronson, ACI Director General will present two special recognition
awards this year.
Wu Nianzu, Chairman of Shanghai Airport Authority, will be
recognised for his strong leadership in modernising and expanding the airports
under his direction.
The Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore and the Singapore
Changi airport will also be honoured, for outstanding leadership in airport business
for the past 20 years.
Aaronson stated: “It is a my privilege to recognise the dedication of
forward looking individuals and organisations who are paving the way for airport
excellence in times of growth and change. They are models for our industry,
and we wish to specially acknowledge their leadership, innovation and commitment
to quality in airport service delivery.”