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What should a tour operator do when the routing or the locomotive has to change ?

Тема в разделе 'What's Going On', создана пользователем ADB968008, 9 июн 2011.

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What should a tour operator do when the routing or the locomotive has to change ?

  1. Cancel the tour (They should never change)

    2 голосов
    2,7%
  2. Change the date (Keep the route or locomotive)

    20 голосов
    27,4%
  3. Change the Locomotive / Route to another suitable / related

    41 голосов
    56,2%
  4. Change the Locomotive / Route to anything available (ie non/any-steam / no related destination)

    4 голосов
    5,5%
  5. Other ?

    6 голосов
    8,2%
  1. ADB968008

    ADB968008 Guest

    Title says it all.

    If a tour operator stumbles on a situation where their is a significant routing / destination change, or the requested locomotive is unavailable, what do people prefer the tour operator to do ?

    I'm refering here to more "routine" railtours / locomotives (i.e. not one offs, unique trips or "first time" since 196x) tours.
    Examples include: Line Closures, Paths unavailable, Weather, Failures etc.

    This is a generic preference.

    Please dont make this an opinion expressed about any one specific tour.
    Also keep it free from Compensation, Money Back etc... it's merely about preference.

    For clarification:

    Cancel the tour (They should never change) - maybe run a new tour at a later date but as a new or different tour.
    Change the date (Keep the route or locomotive) - Keep the tour, just find another date.
    Change the Locomotive / Route to another suitable / related - locomotive or destination - keep the date if there's somewhere appropriate or an available steam locomotive.
    Change the Locomotive / Route to anything available (ie non/any-steam / no related destination) - if there is nothing suitable, then run the tour to "somewhere" else or with "something" but do not cancel or change the date.
     
  2. Oakfield

    Oakfield Guest

    Any of the above could be appropriate, what is necessary in this age of instant communication ( the vast majority of tour passengers have e-mail addresses) is to keep the passengers up to date and not let them find out second- hand, by which time antagonism may well have already started and to ensure that their front of house staff have reliable, up to date information.

    In my view that is all that is required.
     
  3. malc

    malc Part of the furniture

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    I haven't voted in the poll because I don't this there's a single answer. It all depends on the circumstances and what alternatives are available. I'm sure every tour promoter and operator will try to finf for the best alternatives when what was originally planned is not available. It's easy to sit in front of a computer monitor and say that they should have done this and that, but we don't usually know the full picture with regard to alternative pathings, loco and crew availability etc. With regard to Oakfield's comments, yes, I agree that the promoter should keep the passenger informed, but we have to give them time to get all of the alternative arrangements in place before informing passengers. It would be even worse if then send out an e-mail one day, saying sorry, loco A is not available, we'll be using loco B, following by another e-mail the next day saying sorry, B is out of gauge for the route, we'll try loco C, then sorry a support crew can't be found for C, so we'll use D etc.
     
  4. ADB968008

    ADB968008 Guest

    I agree and thanks for the reply, though I wasnt asking for pontification (it wouldnt be right)..

    I was seeking peoples preferences...all votes are in confidence (even I cant see who voted where).

    Seems the predominance are that if change happens it needs to and people dont mind, but also note that communication (in advance) is the thing..

    so in the case of something short notice (or even if it's only a risk of it happening) would people be happy with a communication that was very vague ? - say something like "in a few weeks this may happen, if so then there may be a plan B, but if it doesnt we'll stick to plan A" - wouldnt that be rather confusing ?.. and what happens if Plan B falls apart, should they then send a Plan C email ?, and again what if they revert to plan A anyway ?

    I think personally I wouldnt mind knowing in advance if there is a "risk" of something happening but little details (no news is good news), but when it's short notice or a confirmed change.. i'd rather wait for the full facts of a plan B - conjecture causes sometimes unfounded concern....
     
  5. MarkinDurham

    MarkinDurham Well-Known Member

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    Surely there's never going to be a 'hard & fast' rule - too many variables at play here, I suggest
     
  6. Hemerdon

    Hemerdon Member Friend

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    From a personal view, if there had to be changes, I would want the train to run with some steam to any destination.

    Where I live it invariably means an overnight stay before and after the tour, especially if my wife is with me. This means hotel bookings, which I try and book early to get the best rates. If the tour was cancelled then I would have wasted money on the hotel bookings. If the locomotive was changed to a diesel for the complete tour then i would prefer not to travel and waste my hotel bookings (Western Champion excepted). I would guess that most tour customers travel to the train on the day and their preferences may be different.

    And herein lies the problem for tour operators in laying out hard and fast rules, as every customers’ situation and preferences are different.
     
  7. nanstallon

    nanstallon Part of the furniture

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    We should remember that a cancelled tour could ruin the organiser - as long as the organisers are doing their best, we should be reasonable about things not going totally to plan.
     
  8. Guest

    Guest Part of the furniture Account Suspended

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    A quick and dirty answer is that Network Rail should not agree to itineraries that they later withdraw except, in cases of force majeure. From the outset, once a route is signed for for a particular class of engine, on a particular date, to an outline set of timings, then all parties should be 100% sure that it can happen.

    The problem is that this basic set of legal and contractual rules that would underpin any other consumer product is simply missing from the railtour business. Any cancellations stemming from a failure to observe these simple principles falls foul of the Sale of Goods Acts, and the Unfair Contracts Acts, as the reasonable level of skills due from Network Rail who accept and validate the proposal is not present in acceptance of the TOC proposal as things presentlystand

    Equally there needs to be realism from promoters and TOCs that their own proposals are deliverable and realistic from the outset. Locos should not be advertised as contracted for when they aren't even in ticket - when a pool "choice" that could turn up and haul should be substituted. Plainly unrealistic schedules should never be requested - they simply muddy the waters and bring the whole setup into disrepute etc. Cancellations and delays arising from errors in planning should be compensated as they are avoidable long before a tour goes on sale.

    However, at the end of the day there are the fifty ninth minute of the eleventh hour alterations that exclusion clauses are meant to cover and that no-one can validly complain about, FTR refusals, loco failures, line closures for unavoidable engineering reasons etc, fire risk, snow, etc, which leave no time for alternative plans. Then of course there are failures on the road.

    Some of these should surely be insurable risks thus protecting the promoter etc from direct exposure to costs, albeit that at the end of the day there must also be an element of uncoverable and uninsurable risks.

    These latter risks are what exclusion clauses actually cover, and accordingly it is impossible to simply tick a box in a poll to give an answer to a fluid set of circumstances just to make up a meaningless statistic.

    Railtouring is a multimillion pound business - not playtime.
     
  9. acorb

    acorb Part of the furniture

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    I fully agree that it is becoming increasingly difficult for promoters to advertise a particular loco for a trip. I think from the outset there should be more of a 'pool' policy for tours, i.e if 'X' isn't available we intend to use 'y' or even 'z'. This isn't being awkward or dishonest but is being straight from the start. There are pools of locos around country e.g Crewe, Carnforth, Southall, Bristol. If someone is booking for a particular loco then they should be made fully aware that 'y' or 'z' will be used in event of unavailability of 'X' and be aware of this when booking. An exception maybe significant anniversary, first visit to Shap / devon banks etc, then rearrangement of date should happen. A pool loco policy should always be the case when advertising an under overhaul loco which hasn't even run yet, though I think there is a big question mark over whether promoters should even be advertising these. If a loco still has it's boiler off when being booked for a tour no promoter could be even vaguely confident of it's availability (unless it's a Riley Black 5!). As for route then I fully expect to reach the destination that I booked for, minor adjustments as to how I get there are acceptable but not as acceptable if the whole point of the tour was to go via somewhere unusual, e.g book to go Central Wales to Newport but end up going via Hereford and Abergavenny. The promoter should also be realistic when promoting tours, don't promote a route that can only be done with only one loco or circumstances for instance, especially when said loco may not even be available to them on the date or when the route isn't yet available (e.g new connections to heritage lines). Lastly, if there are significant changes to a tour (such as substantial loss of mileage, new destination, not visiting important route etc) then a no quibble transfer to another tour or partial refund if you choose to travel should ALWAYS be offered. At the end of the day it is down to personal preference what is an acceptable change or not - there are 101 reasons why people book on a tour. I think as enthusiasts we fully understand that there are many difficulties facing tour operators, how promoters handle them and treat customers makes the difference as to whether we choose to travel with them and clearly some are better than others. Joe Public isn't as understanding but probably far more interested in meal, destination and quality of service than route, loco or steam miles. What we both want though is a fair, good quality AND most importantly HONEST service from the promoter.
     
  10. spindizzy

    spindizzy Member

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    That sums up pretty much how I feel about the situation, good post.
     
  11. Oakfield

    Oakfield Guest

    Must say I totally agree with both TBirdFrank and acorb's posts.
     
  12. RalphW

    RalphW Nat Pres stalwart Staff Member Administrator Friend

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    I can see one small problem, and this is devils advocate, tour planning often start many months ahead, because of this should the tour be put in the brochure with no loco listed at all, or a list of options that may be available, or take the bull by the horns and commit to one loco.
    Someone will moan about all these scenarios.
    Why no loco offered??
    Why a choice, I want the be certain which one is going to run???
    The one loco suffers a problem and has to be withdrawn, more moans...
     
  13. Big Al

    Big Al Nat Pres stalwart Staff Member Moderator

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    This sensible debate illustrates clearly the complexity of the current situation. I'm old enough to remember when steam was around across the network and even then it wasn't always possible to guarantee a specific loco (or route) on a tour. The factors that prevented this then are still present now and the pool of available loco's (if in fact there is a pool!) is, of course, much smaller. This is prompting me to wait until very close to the date before booking anything so as to try and minimise risk. But of course, if everyone did that, few trips would operate (except UKRT who state that they will not cancel because of lack of support on the small number of steam trips they run).

    I actually think that with a little more tightness from everyone concerned in planning plus some flexibility with the use of locos, we'll get over this problem. A loss of confidence will help no-one.
     
  14. Guest

    Guest Part of the furniture Account Suspended

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    I take Ralph's point, but there have been too many instances recently of getting bookings in by promising locos that are never going to appear, or promising locos that will never run on routes advertised - leading to postponements and eventually cancellations when reality sets in.

    Honesty is always the best policy and if that means A preferred choice from Pool A but if it goes LBU another one from that pool its far better then playing Russian roulette with the loco that never was
     
  15. RalphW

    RalphW Nat Pres stalwart Staff Member Administrator Friend

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    So in respect of a loco undergoing overhaul and due to be finished in 6 months, should they never be considered for a tour say 10 months away when the past record of work being done at that particular shop is a good one for delivering on time?

    Duchess of Sutherland is expected back early next year, are plans to use her not to be considered until she has been outshopped and running?

    There obviously has to be some risk taken by the tour companies, but where is the line drawn?
     
  16. saltydog

    saltydog Part of the furniture

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    This one next Saturday highlights some of the difficulties faced by tour operators when planning a tour. http://www.tyseleylocoworks.co.uk/tours/tr_2011_0618.htm
    First the tour was postponed because of engineering works, when a new date was found one of the proposed engines was unavailable due to other commitments. Another engine was added so as to keep the tour double headed, then shortly before the tour is due to run it's found that the substitute engine is out of gauge at one of the passing stations.
    None of it the fault of the tour operator but some people will be disappointed that the tour won't be run as originally advertised. But at least the tour is still going ahead.
     
  17. buseng

    buseng Part of the furniture

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    A strange forum thing here? The thread listing for this topic says last post by Saltydog at 11.36am & highlighted in bold. Yet when you open the topic the last post was Saltydog's at 9.50am which I have already read.
     
  18. ADB968008

    ADB968008 Guest

    Someone voted.
     
  19. RalphW

    RalphW Nat Pres stalwart Staff Member Administrator Friend

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    When someone comes to the thread and casts a vote, but does not post a comment, it still updates the time as if it were for the last post, I think....
     
  20. buseng

    buseng Part of the furniture

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    Thank you & ADB for the explanation.
     

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