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Airlines are scrambling to work out how to tell passengers they're flying on a 737 Max when it finally returns to service, and avoid the 'chaos' it could cause if they get it wrong

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  • Airlines are trying to figure out how to deal with passengers who say they don't want to fly in a Boeing 737 Max when the plane returns to service after two fatal crashes that killed 346 people.
  • Some airlines say they will let passengers switch to other planes, but are still debating how to tell passengers what plane they are scheduled to fly on, while others say they are still working on their overall plan to deal with concerned passengers.
  • Airlines have a choice about whether to let passengers to rebook flights on 737 Max planes, and also when and how to tell passengers their plane type and different methods could cause different types of chaos for the airlines.
  • Airlines are expressing continued confidence in the plane, and Boeing says it will be one of the safest-ever planes when it returns.
  • Crisis communications experts, however, say they need to be transparent with passengers to avoid "chaos" when it returns to service.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories .

Airlines are scrambling to work out how best to let their passengers know that they are due to fly on a Boeing 737 Max once the stricken aircraft returns to the skies after more than six months on the ground.

Travelers have expressed fears about flying on the plane, even after new updates from Boeing, when it returns after being grounded around the world since March following two deadly crashes in October 2018 and March 2019, which killed 346 people.

Some airlines have publicly committed to allowing concerned passengers to switch their flights to other planes free of charge when the 737 Max is back in action, but have so far stopped short of committing to directly alerting passengers of the plane model that they have booked.

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Southwest Airlines and United Airlines said that they will allow passengers to switch flights, but neither airline has announced a full plan for telling passengers what type of plane they are on, either when they are deciding on their flight or after they book it.

A Southwest spokesperson told Business Insider that the airline has added the plane type to its app and on the flight status section of its website "for additional awareness."

Southwest does not currently show the plane type on its website before you pay for the flight.

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"Nothing else is planned right now," the airline said. Southwest has 34 Max planes more than any other airline in the world.

United Airlines has not announced any plans publicly, but its CEO Oscar Munoz said in May that the airline would be transparent with passengers, and allow them to rebook.

"We will make it very transparent that you are on that type of aircraft and if people need any kind of adjustments we will absolutely rebook them in any way shape or form," Munoz said.

United has 14 Max planes in its fleet.

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While the likes of Southwest and United have plans in place, many airlines who have 737 Max, or who have ordered them for their fleets, said they have not yet decided what they will do when the plane returns.

  • Norwegian, which has 18 Max planes in its fleet, said: "While the aircraft is still grounded with no clear return to service date, it's still too early to provide these details."
  • WestJet, which has 13 Max planes, said it understands passengers may have concerns and that it is still working out its plan. It said it "will be entirely transparent in communicating which aircraft our guests will be on, making them fully aware of whether they will be on a Max for their flight."
  • Korean Air, which has ordered 30 Max planes, said that "we have not made any decision" as none of its Max planes have been delivered yet.
  • Air Canada said it is "developing our return to service plans," but did provide Business Insider with any more specifics.

Other airlines said they were waiting to reveal their plans, and did not answer questions from Business Insider about whether or not they will let passengers change flights booked on 737 Max planes.

American Airlines, which has 24 Max planes, said that it had "not made any announcement regarding specific rebooking policies once the MAX comes back into service."

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It did, however, say that the plane type will be listed on its website, mobile app, and at the boarding gates features that are already in place when using the airline.

FlyDubai, which has 14 737 Max, said that customers can already see the model of their plane when booking flights, and said that "when the MAX is certified to reenter service, we will roll out a full suite of customer communications and we plan to contact passengers and provide transparent updates."

TUI also said it would not discuss any plans until the plane is coming back to service. The carrier has 15 Max planes.

The 737 Max is unlikely to return to service before the end of this year. Helio Fred Garcia, a crisis management professor at New York University and Columbia University and president of crisis management firm Logos Consulting, said that how prepared an airline should be to deal with passengers at this stage depends, at least in part, on how many Max planes it has in its fleet.

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"If you've got thousands of planes and 20 of them are Max's, you're not in that bad of shape. But if you're a smaller airline and half of your fleet is Max's and then you've got a different search circumstance."

Airlines have a number of ways they can deal with the passengers, including choosing not to emphasise the plane type beyond the normal level of information it gives customers typically a small listing on the website when booking, which customers often do not pay attention to.

But choosing not to alert customers could result in more problems if passengers express concern after they have booked particularly if the airline has stated a policy of letting passengers change their flights.

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Concern remains among flyers about the safety of the 737 Max when it returns, despite Boeing's pledge that it will be one of the safest planes ever to fly when its updates have been scrutinized and tested by regulators.

A June poll by investment bank UBS found 41% of Americans said they wouldn't consider flying on a Max plane until it had been back in service for six months. The plane is unlikely to return before the end of this year at the earliest.

Garcia told Business Insider: "There's the potential for a lot of chaos where people book their flights [and] don't pay attention to the plane type."

"It is in the airline's best interest to sort of give people an alert while they book and say: 'Hey, this is the type.' Or they can hope they don't notice and then a month before the flight people might start panicking."

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For airlines that do decide to give passengers an additional alert, that information could come in a variety of different ways including an alert on the website, an email after booking, an email closer to the flight date, or a combination of these.

"My advice to the airlines would be that if you're doing it sincerely to quell passenger concern, then you need to go out of your way to be as transparent as possible. And if they think that they were told one thing but got something else, then they will feel betrayed," Garcia said.

He also said that airlines have a choice when it comes to tone: "Airlines sort of have an option between just stating it, like: 'Here's your confirmation of your fight. Your flight number is X, your flight type is a 737 Max' Or they could make more of an alert."

Most important, he said, was making the information easy to find: "For communicating to people who are concerned about something, you should put the announcement where they expect to find it."

"They would expect to find it on the booking website. They would expect to find it on the building packer, they would expect to find it on the app. So they may expect to get it in an email.

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Garcia said that airlines already send a lot of information to customers, so it should not be difficult, or unpleasant for a customer, to receive the information.

"You're going to be swarming them in information anyway. They're going to get a confirmation email, they're going to get the boarding pass, they're going to get the notice on the app that it's time to check in.

"So wherever the eyeballs are likely to go for information about their flight that's where the information about the Max ought to be."

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Airlines are continually delaying flights involving the plane, some until the start of 2020, but many are still selling flights on the Max and are publicly stating their confidence in the aircraft.

Airlines are losing millions as they deal with cancelled flights and planes that sit idle, making them eager for its return as soon as possible.

Many of the airlines that Business Insider spoke to reiterated their confidence in the plane, even as they debated their policies for dealing with concerned passengers.

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But experts say that some could be presenting a conflicting and confusing narrative between their confidence in the plane and desire to widely use it, and their decision to allow passengers to swap planes.

"What I worry about is," Garcia said: "They shouldn't be flying the plane if they aren't completely confident in the plane's safety."

"One of the possible takeaways from saying that: 'The plane is safe but if you're not comfortable flying on it, you can find something else,' is that people may not believe it's all that safe."

Rupert Younger, the director of Oxford University's Centre for Corporate Reputation, told Business Insider that airlines' plans to let passengers rebook their flights is a bad idea, as it leaves them to make their own decision over the safety of the plane.

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"I don't think this is a good idea at all," he said.

"Passengers don't really want to analyse or think and worry about the details of which plane is safe or not. They rely on the professional insights of the pilots and crew, whose safety is also equally at risk from a faulty aircraft.

"And once you start to offer passengers choices over aircraft types, where does it stop?"

Do you work at Boeing or the FAA, or are you a pilot? Got a tip or a story to share? Contact this reporter via encrypted messaging app Signal at +353 86 335 0386 using a non-work phone, or email her at sbaker@businessinsider.com, or Twitter DM her at @sineadbaker1.

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