In a statement on Monday, low-cost airline FlySafair announced it would be adding more seats to its annual sale, set for Tuesday, which has had travellers in an online buying frenzy every years since 2015.
The sale began with R1 tickets, including airport taxes.
“The fifth of these annual FlySafair sales will commence tomorrow at 9am, where the airline will be selling 45,000 tickets on flights departing up until the end of September for just R5.”
Since they had bought new aircraft and grown their business by almost 40% over the past year, they decided to up the number of R5 seats from 30,000 to 45,000, said Kirby Gordon, head of sales and distribution.
To prevent their website going down, the company now uses what it calls an online “Waiting Room”, effectively a holding area that allows a random selection of users on to the site every five minutes to avoid their website from being overwhelmed by the demand.
FlySafair has provided this step-by-step video detailing the random selection process.
“The solution works well, and it adds an element of random selection to the sale, which feels like it makes the sale somehow seem fairer,” said Gordon.
He said consumers had in the past tried to increase their chances of gaining access to the site by using multiple devices to access the site, which he confirmed was a strategy that’s likely to help.
“There were images of entire boardrooms of people basking in the glow of our site, it was awesome,” said Gordon, adding that they wanted to avoid a repeat of 25 August 2015 when their website went down due to all the demand.
“We managed to get the servers up and sell out the tickets in the end,” said Gordon, “but social media was on fire.
“People were going crazy, which wasn’t much fun at the time, but in hindsight we’ve had some awesome laughs because South Africans were so creative in their Twitter responses in particular,” added Gordon, referring to the barrage of memes aimed at the airline.
He said that despite the fact that last year was the fourth time the airline had run this sale, there were several people who claimed the sale was a massive scam.
“We’re not sure if it was just because the sale went off really smoothly last year, or whether this sudden scepticism spoke more to the national psyche at the time.”
One consumer took the airline to the Advertising Standards Authority requesting they investigate.
“It was no surprise to us, because it’s an amazing offer and of course it sounds too good to be true,” Gordon said, “but we shared the sales data with the authority and they obviously ruled in our favour.”
Competitions will be running in the waiting room for those hoping to get a chance to buy tickets.
The company also offered the following tips for those hoping to snap up a ticket or two.
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