RE: Go North East - Latest
(15 Dec 2013, 8:56 pm)andreos1 wrote Is it about enthusiasts giving a toss or the ordinary passenger?
Who benefitted during the celebrations this year?
Go North East benefited from the publicity which came with the company's centenary year, owing to the marketing and promotion which came with the acts of celebration carried out this year.
One of the acts of celebration was to invest in one hundred new buses for the one hundredth year, as we all know. Passengers benefited from the centenary year in that respect, but I can't think of any other ways they would have benefited from Go North East celebrating their centenary year?
(15 Dec 2013, 8:56 pm)andreos1 wrote A business needs to keep an identity that is recognised and established.
Constantly changing names, brands, routes, numbers and colours doesn't do that (particularly in Sunderland).
Northern has been established 100 years, Go North East as a brand about 15? (give or take).
The brands on individual services, 6 or 7 years since they were introduced - with regular updates, changes and temporary ones since, which have all incurred extra cost.
It does, but what if your identity has a reputation for being old, tired and unreliable? Surely Go North East, as a company, will want to get rid of that reputation? They will achieve this by purchasing 80 brand new vehicles each year (including brand new 'spare' buses, similar to Optare Versas 5389/90, to phase out older 'spare' buses).
All of this should be recognised as actions of Go North East rather than Northern, as Go North East will not use the Northern name for marketing and promotion anymore.
(15 Dec 2013, 8:56 pm)andreos1 wrote Having one modern vehicle showing that despite all of the marketing, that the company is proud of its history, heritage and routes - is certainly worth keeping, from a business perspective more than anything else.
While I do agree in some respects, this vehicle should not be a vehicle which is required for a branded service. It should be a modern vehicle which is spare.
That was the point.