July 15, 2008

User Experiences - airline check-in at Jet Blue

jetblue-kiosk-120.jpgNice writeup on check-in experience with airline check-in kiosk.

My Ugly Experience with the JetBlue Kiosk

As I write this, I'm waiting for my connecting flight to New York on the way to Berkeley for the workshop on Integrating Computing into the Statistics Curricula. I'm taking JetBlue, which I normally only have good things to say about, but right now I'm very displeased with their service. Here's why I might consider a different airline next time and the design lesson I got out of it.

jetblue-kiosk1-530x255.jpg

Checking in at the Kiosk

Most are familiar with the cluster of kiosks that let people check in themselves via touch screen. Kiosks eliminate the need to go thru the slow person at the desk who types with his index fingers, has to look for each letter, and then look back up at the screen to see if he typed the letter correctly. Needless to say, I love the kiosk.

So naturally, I went straight to the kiosk to check-in. I bypassed the long line of thirty or so people waiting to check in with the desk lady. There were zero people at the cluster of 10 kiosks. I figured the kiosks were left unused because an initial small group of people lined up for manual checkin, and then a bunch of people followed. That tends to happen a lot, no?
When Check-in Went Awry

The kiosk did what it was supposed to do just fine. It scanned my barcode, I confirmed, and I got my boarding pass.

The kiosk then asks, "Do you have bags to check?"

"Yes, I have one."

"Okay. After you take your boarding pass, plop your bag at the baggage drop-off."

"Got it. Thanks, kiosk."

This is when Jet Blue dropped the ball. I patiently walk to the side of the stupidly long line and wait for the next desk lady to free up. I walk up to her, with boarding passes in hand, and innocently ask, "Do I just drop my bags here?"

She glares at me and sneers, "You weren't next."

"No, but I just checked in at the kiosk," I said while showing her my boarding passes.

"No, I don't think you were next." She directed her eyes and voice to the front of the line while pointing her finger at me. "Was this guy standing in front of you? Was he the next in line?"

"No, I wasn't. I checked in at the kiosk."

Once again, she snarled, "We don't have bag drop off here. You have to wait in line like everyone else!"

I then rolled my eyes, thought nasty thoughts and went to the back of the line. After about 10 seconds, I decided that my face wash is not a liquid and brought my bag as a carry-on as I walked towards my gate.

The Data Viz Lesson

I suppose if I were that desk lady, and I thought I was dealing with a cutter I'd be mad too. Although, from a customer service standpoint, she didn't have to be such a witch about it. If I were that person at the front of the line watching some guy "cut" in front of him, I would be mad at me too.

It all comes down to that kiosk. If there's no bag drop-off, don't offer it. Don't show it to me or dangle it in front of my face. Be clear. Similarly, when you visualize data, pay close attention to detail, because oftentimes it's the small things that can lead to big misunderstandings.

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Posted by staff at July 15, 2008 02:26 PM