Wow, American Airlines is Doing Something Brilliant With Inflight Internet

When American Airlines introduces two different providers for fast satellite internet, gogo and ViaSat, Gogo monthly internet subscriptions will work on both systems.

American has started the process of introducing fast satellite internet to their mainline fleet. The first plane with fast internet started flying back in July, a retrofit legacy US Airways Airbus A320.


Speed Test Onboard Gogo’s 737 ‘Jimmy Ray’

American’s domestic fleet will be served by two satellite internet providers:

  • When American announced their plan for satellite internet, 140 planes were announced for Gogo’s 2Ku. and they indicated that regional jets would keep their current air to ground Gogo installations.

  • In addition to Gogo, which provides the current air-to-ground internet for American’s planes, they’re buying satellite internet from ViaSat. We’ll see some Boeing 737-800s with ViaSat this fall and the new 737 MAX aircraft will be ViaSat-equipped as well.

This is in addition to international widebodies with Panasonic internet.

I’ve been a critic of 3 internet providers (and four technologies) as bad for customer experience, never knowing what you’re going to get. I love my Gogo monthly subscription. With one flat fee I get internet on all of American’s domestic fleet. I log on even for short Dallas – Austin hops, and it’s a lot cheaper and also faster than buying it flight-by-flight.

Monthly internet subscriptions are also a great deal for the airline’s competitiveness. Since I buy my internet monthly for American I’m more locked into flying American. If I fly Southwest, Delta or United I need to buy the ticket and buy internet. If I fly American there’s no marginal cost for internet. That makes American $8 – $29 cheaper even when tickets are priced the same. It’s the same lock-in idea as Amazon Prime.

So when the three provider plan was announced I shook my head. The most American would say at the time is that they planned to try to offer some kind of ‘single sign on’ that would work across both Gogo and ViaSat.

It turns out they’re doing more than that. The Forward Cabin tweeted and American confirms forme that Gogo monthly subscriptions are going to include ViaSat access. It won’t matter to the customer whether you’re on a Gogo-equipped or ViaSat-equipped plane, your monthly plan will still work for internet.

That’s great for customer experience, and great for the airline to promote lock-in of its monthly internet customers.

I don’t yet know how they’re going to validate credentials on the ViaSat-equipped planes yet but we’ll soon have faster internet onboard and it won’t come at the expense of customer confusion or frustration over plans.

About Gary Leff

Gary Leff is one of the foremost experts in the field of miles, points, and frequent business travel - a topic he has covered since 2002. Co-founder of frequent flyer community InsideFlyer.com, emcee of the Freddie Awards, and named one of the "World's Top Travel Experts" by Conde' Nast Traveler (2010-Present) Gary has been a guest on most major news media, profiled in several top print publications, and published broadly on the topic of consumer loyalty. More About Gary »

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Comments

  1. I would also wonder if the US Mobile WiFi plan you’ve previously posted about (which allows access to gogo) will work with this offering?

  2. To me the Gogo experience is one of my least favorite parts of flying. The service is brutally overpriced and is a crapshoot at best (although finally some signs of life with their new internet). At least it helps pass the time trying to get a stable signal and chatting with their customer service.

  3. TMobile gives you a free hour of Gogo per flight on their basic phone plan. (plus free text and data in 140 countries) For $10 more a month it’s unlimited Gogo plus other advantages such as faster free data abroad and unlimited HD streaming in the US.

  4. Flew to Phoenix 2 weeks ago. The crew couldn’t get the WiFi to work. On the transfer flight to Hawaii, no WiFi because there are no cell towers in the Pacific. The sysytem requires cell support. On the return from Phoenix for half the trip it said my fairly new iPad was not a recognize device even though it was listed on the no service advisory web page as a supported device. I think “brilliant” is overstating the quality of the offering.

  5. Hope they find a better way of handling this than Virgin did – to get on to ViaSat I would have to chat with ViaSat customer service on the flight, confirm my Gogo account with them and then I would be given a voucher to use for the flight. On many SFO-LAX flights this would take 1/3 of the flight to do.

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