Paradies Lagardere Adds More Smileys To Airport Terminals
100 More HappyOrNot Smiley Terminals introduced in select airport retail locationsWest Palm Beach, Florida: Paradies Lagardère, the travel retail and restaurateur leader in the nation expands its efforts focused on improving the customer experience by adding 100 more HappyOrNot Smiley Terminals to select airport locations.
Operating more than 850 stores and restaurants in 98 airports, Paradies Lagardère’s goal is to create memorable and positive shopping and dining experiences for today’s travelers. HappyOrNot Smiley Terminals were originally piloted in retail locations in Palm Beach
Starting this week, citizens of Bonifacio Global City (also known as BGC, Global City, or The Fort) will be able to rate their satisfaction with the public services provided by the city.
BGC, the fastest growing financial and lifestyle district in the Philippines, has deployed the HappyOrNot Smiley Terminals in both the Ayala Market to measure satisfaction with their front-line services for city-wide permit processing, and across their entire bus service – the Market Bus – to measure passenger satisfaction.
Each day, around 48,000 passengers commute into the city via BGC’s own bus
New Zealand Aviation Security Service (AVSEC), the official provider of aviation security services in New Zealand, operating at all of the major airports, implemented the HappyOrNot service at all five locations they serve nationally across both domestic and international terminals.The launch of the globally-recognized Smiley Terminals comes as part of their continuous improvement initiative. AVSEC’s quality management policies and procedures are under constant review and tested on a continuous basis against well-defined and measurable performance measures – one of which being passenger
120 million passengers have given their feedback at 100 airports all over the world via the HappyOrNot® Smiley Terminal™, and the data shows that if you want to have a great airport experience during your travels, avoid Saturdays and Sundays, and reconsider late July and late August.There are many articles, such as those by farecompare , offering tips and advice for the best times and cheapest or most expensive days to book flights – of course, the starting point for travelling – yet few, if any, address the
Patient satisfaction is particularly high between 9am and 11amHappyOrNotⓇ, the global leader in instant customer and employee satisfaction reporting, has collected over 5.2 million patient satisfaction feedbacks in retail pharmacy, and is used by 136 pharmacy locations worldwide. The data collected with the HappyOrNot feedback terminals shows that patient satisfaction is the highest on Thursday and lowest on Sunday. Looking at the hour of the day, coming in between 9am and 11am would give patients the best experience.
HappyOrNot has been utilized in many of retail organizations across
New HappyOrNot study answers the age old question – are employees really happier on Fridays?Every employee has said at least once during their work life “Thank Goodness It’s Friday!” typically expressed in response to a long, stressful work week and the approaching weekend. However, is TGIF really true? HappyOrNot has researched its vast feedback database to look into the reality of this statement, and the results are telling.
Thousands of global customers are already using the HappyOrNot Smiley TerminalTM to measure customer satisfaction, and now many are starting to use them in
HappyOrNot's new service feature Real Time Alerts revolutionizes the speed in which companies can react to and fix customer dissatisfaction.HappyOrNot® has today announced the worldwide release of its Real Time Alerts feature, the world’s first fully wireless and instantaneous customer dissatisfaction alert notice. HappyOrNot, the global leader in continuous customer and employee satisfaction improvement with its feedback collecting smileys and web-based reporting service, understands the increased need of companies to react to service issues immediately in order to avoid escalation.
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