With a couple of full months of travel looming, I applied for my KTN — Known Traveler Number – so I can use the TSA approved line. Why I should even have to apply for it is beyond me, as, for many reasons, I am clearly not a threat to anyone.
But I paid my $85, got my background checked, and now am afforded a faster security line at airports with the luxury of not removing my shoes or my laptop from its bag. I proudly sport my TSA PRE label on my boarding pass and in my frequent flyer profile!
Before you comment on here about the need for heightened security and profiling and any other cage I may have rattled, know that isn’t what is important in this blog. What IS important is what happened at the last airport I visited, and how it applies to media sales.
As I stepped up to the security line, I noticed that the TSA PRE line was closed. No one was staffing it, and there was a barrier preventing me from taking my rightful place. I moved to the line with the masses. When my boarding pass was being checked, I was informed that while I would not have to take my shoes off or be subject to the body scan, I would have to take my laptop out and remove my jewelry. So I still had some benefits, but only a few.
And of course, my bag was now pulled out for a full check and swabbed for explosives, as the brownies I was carrying home for my family were clearly suspect. When I smiled politely at TSA Agent, I was met with a stone-faced silence as my bag was handed back to me and I was allowed to move along.
So much for my 85 bucks!
For those moments, I felt like my investment was not a wise one. Do your customers ever feel this way?
If you give your key clients what they expect when they expect it, and remember that they paid for the privilege of doing business with you, you will find it smooth sailing with your top customers.
By Kitty Malone, Efficio Solutions Manager of Client Services