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What's
ticked? a l s o Ticked e-mail Visit Tripso Referring sites Home s e a r c h Find a story.
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Expecting
the Worst Have you ever had a business trip where everything - and I mean everything - went perfectly? Me neither. Yet while
paging through a periodical that targets business travelers, I noticed
that the people in the ads appear to be on trips that couldn't be more
pleasant. I fly
with the same airlines as the pictured passenger who is sitting next to
an elegant seatmate while being attended to by attractive and cheery flight
attendants. I rent from the same rental car agency as the driver who is
standing in the sun in his perfectly pressed suit next to his flawlessly
detailed, shiny new vehicle. I stay in the same hotels as the guest who
is shown to be checking with the help of a smiling and eager desk clerk.
My experiences
are typically different - much different - than those depicted. Where is the beater that I sometimes get stuck with at the rental car agency? Where is the apathetic clerk that I must deal with when checking into a hotel? Where
are the delays? Where is the rain? Where are the lines? Where is the aggravation?
No elegant
seatmate, no shiny new car, no eager desk clerk. For instance,
departing 10 minutes late is one thing; having your flight cancelled is
another thing altogether. Being switched from a Ford to a Chevy is one
thing; moving from a full-size sedan to a sub-compact is also another
thing altogether. Being assigned a hotel room in the East wing instead
of the West wing is one thing; shuffled from a suite to a standard room…
well, you get the idea. Or as
Dr. Pratkanis puts it, "If a service provider acts to correct a problem
that occurs as a function of a significant difference between what a traveler
expected and what was provided, then the traveler's sentiment about the
company will become more positive. Well, if you want to return from a trip feeling good about the experience, go ahead and hope for the best... but expect the worst.
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