tadjr...
"assigned seat" - I book a flight a month in advance and I get an "assigned seat". Or are you saying that you all are misleading your customers who THINK that they have an "assigned seat" because the little "select your seat" window popped up when they made their reservation, so they "select" seat 12A, only to show up at the airport to find that they have been "assigned" seat 25B...last row middle seat??? Betcha they'd wish for open seating in that case.
I didnt say any such thing, you implied that people arent getting seats. I said I have seen it happen in a downsize situation and sometimes when people ask for a seat on the map it comes back unavailable to assign and they dont recheck their record and assume it was given to them when it wasnt. Since they might not be the only one requesting that seat at the same time or the computer might be processing someone elses request and it hasnt taken it off the map yet, they might not get it. That is why if they recheck their record later it will show if it was assigned to them or not then they can choose another seat. Just because you made a reservation doesnt mean you have "an assigned seat". They are two different things. That is why I didnt know why you were saying what you did since they are two different things and you were making it seem like one and the same. If you mean you make a reservation and think you have an assigned seat on the plane, you dont. You ask for a specific seat and then you have an assigned seat when its given to you. You print out your boarding pass and show up on time to board and you shouldnt have a problem. You dont ask for an assigned seat, show up and have a "you need a seat" boarding pass to get you to the gate, then yes, you might have a problem. They are two different things though.
"Boarding card" - can now be printed several days before the flight. This is to "help" the customer to avoid the long lines at check in. He prints his "boarding card" at home and shows up at the airport 25 minutes prior to the flight. Meanwhile, someone else checks in at the counter an hour early and and gets their boarding card.
If he printed his boarding card at home and ANY seats are available on the seat map, it will give him "an assigned seat number" and he is done as long as he gets to the airport in time to board. If he checks in at home and no seats are available, someone who checks in at the airport after him isnt going to get a seat either unless someone canx their reservation between the time the guy checked in at home and the one checks in at the airport. If the flight is full, its full. If the guy checks in at home 24 hours ahead of time and doesnt get a seat, when he checks in at the airport with an agent to get his seat and is put on the oversold list, he goes by time of checkin so he would jump ahead of the guy who checked in at the airport 1 hour ahead of flight time who also didnt have a seat.
Bottom line, you are trying to make it look like "assigned seating" would help Southwest avoid oversales. But the airlines who do assign seats still oversell theirs...they just put "gate check in required" on the reservation. If we want to be honest, why not put "you stand a good chance of not getting on this flight as it is already oversold and we are betting that the guy in 12A won't show up"? In fact, oversales on the big boys should be virtually nonexistant, since they now have $100 change fees on everything except full Y abnd F class tickets.
I wasnt trying to make it look like anything. Just trying to understand what you were saying with the terminology you were using since it didnt correspond with my experiences at work everyday. Inventory management has become very good at what they do most of the time. Very seldom in my station do we have flights overbooked by more than 10 and often times its in the single digits, yet, even with the nonrefundable ticket and change fees, people still refuse to canx their reservations and no show. Yes if everyone else who has a prereserved seat shows up, the last x amount of people (the oversales) wont have a seat assignment and we'll try to get volunteers. To avoid this though, there are several options. ASK for a seat assignment when reservation is made. If there is a seat available to assign, its yours. If no seat available, check in early at the airport since the rest of the seats are assigned day of departure starting 4 hours before a flight. If you didnt get a seat, it will be the last people to check in will be the ones who dont get seated. I never said or made it look like assigned seating would help WN avoid oversales and I dont have a clue where you think I said that. I was merely trying to figure out where you were coming from with "assigned seats" and boarding passes and reservations since you appeared to be using them all interchangeably. I think I understand what you were trying to say now, although they are 3 different things.