(20 Apr 2020, 8:28 am)LeeCalder wrote If bus companies want to get people out their cars, in my opinion, they should be focusing on journeys which car users are likely to make, in order to temp them in.
Surely car users are more likely to catch a bus to Chester-le-Street, from Barley Mow (a 5 minute journey) to do a bit of shopping, providing the price is right, as opposed to get the bus into Newcastle, which would mean they're sat on a bus for ever and a day.
The pricing structure needs to reflect that, make it as cheap as you possibly can to catch a bus to the next town, CLS in this instance, and surely you will see passenger growth?
The pricing structure for single journeys is dire, and car users are never going to use the bus if it costs them £2.30 for a 5 minute journey.
I can see where you are coming from with this, but in the case of Birtley, you could be nearer Low Fell than Chester, depending on where you board.
Then there could also be the issue of taking trade away from the shops and facilities on Durham Road.
I do think that something needs doing, but if the main morning peak flow is towards Newcastle due to work reasons, if they lowered fares towards Chester, it wouldn't necessarily attract many more punters.
When the 26 ran between Newcastle and Barley Mow, it was given approx 30mins between Gateshead and Dorset Avenue. It was rarely late.
In the period since, the duration of the trip from Durham Road to Gateshead is a lottery, cos of all the traffic on the road. Bus use has decreased, yet car use has increased.
It doesn't take a genius to work out that fares will have played a part in that modal change.
The fare you were charged, is bonkers imo. Can't see any justification or reasoning for it at all and it certainly won't tempt people to make the switch. WiFi, tables or not.
(20 Apr 2020, 8:52 am)Ambassador wrote Why thank you, glad to see not much has changed. Yes there does seem to be a sort of 'blame the Labour Govt for overspending in 2010' vibe around the GNE response (this isn't a dig) but it's convenient.
Too convenient I think. Lazy perhaps.
A business needs to move and adapt (more so than paint jobs, logos and tables).
Value for money being a key part of that change. If punters don't think the purchase is value for money, they won't buy it.
'Illegitimis non carborundum'