Cities to be served by ExpressJet
" Albuquerque, N.M.
" Austin, Texas
" Bakersfield, Calif.
" Birmingham, Ala.
" Boise, Idaho
" Colorado Springs, Colo.
" Corpus Christi, Texas
" El Paso, Texas
" Fresno, Calif.
" Jacksonville, Fla.
" Kansas City, Mo.
" Louisville, Ky.
" Monterey, Calif.
" New Orleans
" Oklahoma City
" Omaha, Neb.
" Ontario, Calif.
" Raleigh-Durham, N.C.
" Sacramento, Calif.
" San Antonio
" San Diego
" Spokane, Wash.
" Tucson, Ariz.
" Tulsa, Okla.
ExpressJet, which used to fly solely for
Continental as Continental Express, started selling tickets Feb. 1
under its own brand name for new nonstop, 50-seat regional jet
service between small and midsize communities.
ExpressJet began
the sales on its Web site at www.xjet.com and contracted with Alpine Access to
allow at-home reservations agents to begin taking phone bookings at
the same time.
But ExpressJet
also is planning a big travel agent push, sending representatives
this week to meet with agents in the 24 start-up cities to sell
them on the new air travel option, airline spokeswoman Kristy
Nicholas said.
"We just want to
tap into the involvement they have in the community and the
networks they have in the community and explain what we're
offering," Nicholas said. "We're trying to do things that save
their customers time on their trips and also offer a nice onboard
product."
Nicholas said the
airline has reached agreements or is in the final stages of
negotiations with all of the major GDSs, and agent sales should
start by March. But she said it would not pay
commissions.
A spring start for service
ExpressJet said
its branded service to 24 cities in the West, Midwest and Southeast
would begin in April and May, using 44 Embraer 145 aircraft (see
chart for cities). The service will feature free XM satellite
radio, advanced seat assignments, no middle seats and complimentary
snacks and meals on longer flights.
"We're not trying
to be low cost," Nicholas said. "The basic strategy is to connect
communities that have not had good service since
deregulation."
She said
ExpressJet's fares would be competitive with the prices travelers
are paying for connecting service on other airlines.
The marketing
push included the Web site launch, local advertising, signage and
same-day press conferences in all 24 cities.
Nicholas said
ExpressJet had been studying the branded-service option for three
years. But the big push came after Continental sent back to
ExpressJet 69 aircraft it no longer wanted for Continental Express
service.
ExpressJet still
is flying 205 aircraft as Continental Express.
Of those 69
returned aircraft, ExpressJet decided to use 15 for corporate
charters.It sought to use some of the aircraft in feeder service
for Midwest, but that carrier instead selected Skywest to operate
up to 25 regional jets from Midwest's hubs in Milwaukee and Kansas
City beginning in April.
That left
ExpressJet looking for another use for the aircraft.
Success is not a
given. In June 2004, regional carrier Atlantic Coast Airlines
relaunched as a go-it-alone airline called Independence Air. It liquidated in January 2006.
The ExpressJet
service, however, will start with several differences.
When Atlantic
Coast launched as Independence Air, it gave up its code-share
relationship with United. ExpressJet still flies most of its
aircraft as Continental Express (which is why its branded service
cannot fly to the Continental hubs at Houston, Newark and
Cleveland).
Independence
offered ultra-low fares even though it flew 50-seat regional jets
that weren't considered cost-efficient enough. Independence also
had so many of the jets that it felt compelled to operate multiple
flights to small markets, and it faced fierce competition from
United at Dulles.
ExpressJet's
branded service won't be low fare, it plans fewer frequencies and
it has chosen routes where it won't be competing against any other
nonstop service, at least initially.
To contact reporter Andrew Compart, send e-mail to [email protected].