Brand Change

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LiamR

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Has anybody heard about this?

Brand Change | Virgin Australia

[h=3]We're changing our name and we look forward to welcoming you to the new Virgin Australia.[/h]In the coming weeks, our international airlines V Australia and Pacific Blue will be relaunched as Virgin Australia.
It is another exciting step we're taking towards our vision of becoming Australia's airline of choice.
Please be assured there will not be any changes to your travel booking as a result of the relaunch, however there will be some changes to the look and feel of the airline, including:
  • Fresh new Virgin Australia signage at our international ports
  • New-look travel documents
  • One consolidated Virgin Australia website where you can make bookings for all of our airlines
Therefore, if you are flying V Australia, Pacific Blue or Polynesian Blue, please check the flight information displays for the correct check-in desk and flight number when you arrive at the airport. Directional signage and our friendly ground crew will be there to help you on your journey.
We are looking forward to bringing you an exceptional, seamless experience as we continue to roll out our new look and feel across our aircraft, lounges and terminals in the months ahead.
For more information, please refer to the Frequently Asked Questions below.
p_006770.jpg
[h=3]Frequently Asked Questions[/h]Q: Why are the V Australia, Pacific Blue and Polynesian Blue brands changing?
A: In 2000, the Virgin brand entered the Australian aviation market for the first time, bringing competition to the leisure sector of the market. Ten years later, we are now repositioning ourselves to become the airline of choice for all market segments.
Launching the new Virgin Australia brand across our domestic and international operations is a key part of this repositioning. Having one brand allows us to build global recognition and to represent the seamless first-rate travel experience that guests will receive on all of our services.
Q: What is changing in December 2011?
A: The change in name for the airlines, V Australia, Pacific Blue and Polynesian Blue will be reflected, over time, in updated airport signage, itineraries and flight documents, website and other forms of collateral. The program will continue to be rolled out during 2012 and we have some further exciting product and service initiatives to come.
The following will change in December 2011:
  • The domestic operations will be referred to as ‘Virgin Australia – domestic’ in certain forms of collateral.
  • The operations currently covered by Pacific Blue (NZ), Pacific Blue (Aust) and Polynesian Blue will be referred to as ‘Virgin Australia – international short haul’ in certain forms of collateral.
  • The operations currently covered by V Australia will be referred to as ‘Virgin Australia – international long haul’ in certain forms of collateral.
  • Polynesian Blue Ltd will be renamed (name to be announced).
Q: What isn’t changing?
A: The following will NOT change:
  • The Australian Company Numbers (ACN) and Australian Business Numbers (ABN) of the airlines will not change. This means that they are not new companies; they are the same companies with new names.
  • The names and logos of Velocity Frequent Flyer and Blue Holidays.
  • The use of the Virgin Australia brand in the domestic environment.
  • The arrangement between the Virgin Australia group of airlines and the Samoan Government for the management of Polynesian Blue.
[h=3]Guest Service Experience[/h]Q: Will my experience on V Australia, Pacific Blue or Polynesian Blue change now that you have changed your name or will it still be the same service that I am used to?
A: We will still provide the high level of service for which Virgin Australia [V Australia, Pacific Blue, Polynesian Blue] is renowned. We are overhauling the experience in the air and on the ground to provide a more seamless, comfortable experience for all guests.
Q: Will all references to V Australia, Pacific Blue and Polynesian Blue be removed on the launch day?
A: No, it will not be possible to change over all items on the day to the new brand. While all key collateral, such as itineraries and boarding passes, will change over on the launch day, there will be some items that are part of a larger program, such as airports and aircraft repainting, which will be rebranded over a period of time.
Q: As a traveller on an international flight, will I be able to clearly find my way to the correct check-in gates during the changeover period?
A: To counter any possible uncertainty, way-finding signage will be placed in international ports displaying all the current logos for V Australia, Pacific Blue and Polynesian Blue and the Virgin Australia logo. Guests will be reminded to check the Flight Information Displays to ensure they approach the correct check-in desk. Ground Operations staff at airports will also be ready to assist during the changeover period.
Q: As a traveller or Velocity member, will I be notified of the upcoming changes?
A: Yes, all guests who have an existing booking, guests who book flights with Virgin Australia and all Velocity members will be advised via email that the brands will be changing in December. This will be supported by banners on the website, redirect messages from the existing websites, informative signage at airports and formal media releases.
Q: I am seeing some planes which still state Virgin Blue, V Australia, Pacific Blue, Polynesian Blue; will these be changed to reflect the new name?
A: Yes, our aircraft will have new livery with the entire fleet scheduled to be completed within 4 years.
Q: Why will it take 4 years to change the livery on the entire fleet?
A:Virgin Australia has scheduled new livery and interior changes over an extended period to minimise the operational impact for our Guests and keep up with demand to have our aircraft in the air. Additionally, we’re upgrading our fleet with new aircraft over the next four years, which will be delivered with new interiors and livery.
Q: Are my current bookings on V Australia, Pacific Blue, Polynesian Blue flights still valid?
A: Yes, all flights booked with the Virgin Australia group of airlines will remain valid.
Q: Will your fares increase to pay for the change?
A: No, we are committed to maintaining competitive airfares and we have factored the costs into our budgets.
Q: Does this mean you are no longer a low cost carrier?
A: Virgin Australia will continue to offer great value fares in economy class. Introducing Business Class will allow us to offer more choice to Australian travellers, bringing competition back to business travel.
Q: Do the Velocity Points or Status Credit earn rates for V Australia, Pacific Blue and Polynesian Blue change with the change to the brand?
A. No, all earn rates remain the same following the rebrand.
Q: Can I earn Velocity Points on the airline replacing Polynesian Blue?
A. Yes, Velocity Points and Status Credits can still be earned.
Q: I am a Velocity Gold and accessed the Koru club when flying Pacific Blue between New Zealand and Australia. Do I still have access now that Pacific Blue is known as Virgin Australia?
A. Yes, you can still access the Koru Club when travelling on Virgin Australia between Australia and New Zealand. Access is not permitted when flying to and from other Pacific Blue destinations.
Q: Will Velocity Members now be able to use points to upgrade to Virgin Australia international long haul flights?
A. No, upgrades will continue to only be available on eligible Virgin Australia domestic and Virgin Australia international short haul flights (formerly known as Pacific Blue and Polynesian Blue).
[h=3]Contacting Us[/h]Q: Will the contact number to the Guest Contact Centre change?
A: Some of the international numbers for the Guest Contact Centre will change to the current Virgin Australia number. However, for a short time, calls to the existing numbers for Pacific Blue and Polynesian Blue, will be redirected.
One Brand Guest Contact Centre details from December 2011
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[TH="width: 91, bgcolor: #A5ACB0"]Virgin Australia
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If calling from...
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Contact Number
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Australia (all airlines)
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13 67 89
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New Zealand​
[/TD]
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0800 67 0000​
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United States of America​
[/TD]
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1-800 444 0260​
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United Arab Emirates​
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[TD="width: 175, bgcolor: transparent"]
8000 170 050​
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United Kingdom​
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0843 104 7777​
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South Africa **
(**being decommissioned on 22nd Feb 2012)​
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+27 11 461 6444​
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Anywhere else in the world​
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+61 7 3295 2296​
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Q: Will your website address change?
A:Yes, you will find information and be able to make bookings on all our airlines from the Virgin Australia website www.virginaustralia.com
Q: What do I need to do to tweet to you via Twitter?
A: Our airline Twitter account is @virginaustralia, and for those in New Zealand, they can tweet to @virginaustraliaNZ
Q: Where do I watch Virgin Australia on YouTube?
A:Our Youtube channel can be found at youtube.com/virginaustralia
Q: Will there be any changes to your Facebook pages?
A:Yes, there will be a new look to our Facebook pages with areas tailored for our audiences in New Zealand and USA
Q: Do you have a Google+ page?
A:Yes we do. Just Google search for Virgin Australia.
Or enter this link into your web browser http://plus.google.com/105888846306683033614/posts

Q: I have the [V Australia, Pacific Blue, Polynesian Blue] website saved in my favourites, will this still work?
A: Yes, you will automatically be redirected to the virgin.australia.com website however should save the new web address to your favourites.
Q: Who should I contact if I have any questions relating to the new name and brand?
24-hour media enquiries: 1800 142 467 (within Australia) or +61 7 3333 9666 (International) or you can make an online enquiry via our Contact Us page on our website.
 
What stands out to me is that they've stayed all aircraft will be repined within 4 years.

Q: I am seeing some planes which still state Virgin Blue, V Australia, Pacific Blue, Polynesian Blue; will these be changed to reflect the new name?
A: Yes, our aircraft will have new livery with the entire fleet scheduled to be completed within 4 years.
 
I guess its not a small deal...

Wonder how much the cost is per plane for the paint and labour plus down time not carrying passengers and earning revenue???
 
I guess its not a small deal...

Wonder how much the cost is per plane for the paint and labour plus down time not carrying passengers and earning revenue???

I am pretty sure it would be in the millions - I'll try to find something on it....

*edit* ah here, a post by Liam:

I was speaking with a V Aus pilot last week, apparently they won't be repainting the 777s for a while. It costs $1m just to repaint a single 777 in the new livery

(http://www.australianfrequentflyer....s-and-trip-photos/va-11-va-12-good-33216.html)
 
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Hmmm, if in that ball park, then definitely makes sense to work it into schedule maintenance/downtime... As nice as shiny planes with the same livery are... :)
 
What stands out to me is that they've stayed all aircraft will be repined within 4 years.

Is impressive given the new Qantas roo came out in mid-07 and there are still a lot of old roos out there.

I'd like to see an aircraft in pine!
 
Got a personal email yesterday from Virgin Australia (lol - not personal, but not sure why I received it as I have no Intl DJ flights booked post the change).

Was going to post, but got caught up with other things.
 
Is impressive given the new Qantas roo came out in mid-07 and there are still a lot of old roos out there.

I'd like to see an aircraft in pine!

driving up to the VA terminal with aircraft in pine would be like driving in LA with the station wagons in pine...

roadmaster.jpg
 
So the DJ or VA mystery remains unsolved...... :confused:

I flew DUD-BNE-SYD Tuesday and the arrival and departure monitors in the lounge in BNE were showing all flights prefixed with 'VA' rather than 'DJ'. VA seems like the logical choice if you ask me!
 
I flew DUD-BNE-SYD Tuesday and the arrival and departure monitors in the lounge in BNE were showing all flights prefixed with 'VA' rather than 'DJ'. VA seems like the logical choice if you ask me!

One wonders why VA wasn't taken by Virgin Atlantic or Virgin America! I would prefer VA.
 
What stands out to me is that they've stayed all aircraft will be repined within 4 years.

Personally I think pine is a bad choice.. It looks so LCC.. Surely Mahagony or Jarrah says Premium airline?? :mrgreen:
 
One wonders why VA wasn't taken by Virgin Atlantic or Virgin America! I would prefer VA.

I was wondering the same thing, being in serious procrastination mode I did some interwebs research. It seems the VA IATA code was originally used by Venezuelan airline Viasa which was founded in 1960 and ceased operations in 1997. Virgin Atlantic was launched in 1984 so at the time Viasa still had a hold of the VA code, not sure how they arrived to use VS however. When the then Virgin Blue launched in 2000 it did not have an 'A' in its name at all. Virgin America does predate V Australia, Virgin America began flying in August 2007 and was founded in 2004, while V Australia started to fly in 2009. The V Australia name was decided on on 25 July 2007. I am not sure why Virgin America did not get the VA code Virgin America was originally going to be Virgin USA, not sure when that was changed but I would assume it was more than 2 weeks before they started to fly (ie when V Australia decided on its name). The bigger mystery is where did DJ come from that doesn't correlate to anything in the then Virgin Blue name. VB is currently used by a Mexican airline but was free in 2000 (as far as I can tell)

And yes I would very much prefer to see the VA code rather than the DJ code across the whole network
 
Q: Will Velocity Members now be able to use points to upgrade to Virgin Australia international long haul flights?
A. No, upgrades will continue to only be available on eligible Virgin Australia domestic and Virgin Australia international short haul flights (formerly known as Pacific Blue and Polynesian Blue).

That is a disappointment I would like to see consistency across the common brand. The rebranding was enough for me to move over my domestic travels (having OOL as a home base was a major part of that). Personally however I have not been compelled to transfer international travels, this doesn't help in that respect.
 
The following will change in December 2011:
  • The operations currently covered by Pacific Blue (NZ), Pacific Blue (Aust) and Polynesian Blue will be referred to as ‘Virgin Australia – international short haul’ in certain forms of collateral.
  • Polynesian Blue Ltd will be renamed (name to be announced).

What's the deal with Polynesian? Don't these two dot points seem a little contradictory?

While on the Pacific, VA must be taking a little bit of a gamble with the name. Surely Virgin Oceania must have been more encompassing? Also, can anyone give the reason for the lack of reciprocal Lounge access when flying to the Pacific Islands?

(DISCLAIMER - No, I'm not Polynesian, Micronesian nor Melanesian)
 
What's the deal with Polynesian? Don't these two dot points seem a little contradictory?

For the way I read that and understand the situation Pacific Blue (NZ), Pacific Blue (Aust) and Polynesian Blue are separate companies with Virgin Blue Holdings (wonder when they will get renamed) as the parent company or in the case of Polynesian one of the Joint Venture parents. All airline operations of companies that fall under Virgin Blue Holdings will operate under the Virgin Australia Banner.

Separate to that the company Polynesian Blue Ltd will have a change of company name. If had to guess the reason the new company name has not been announced is there needs to be agreement between the joint venture partners and that has not yet been reached
 
Polynesian Blue is not a wholly owned company of the Virgin Australia group, they only hold 49%.
 
I believe Dulux are offering a special at the moment, free tin of jelly beans and a stuffed toy. It might be an offer VA won't want to miss out lol

(http://www.australianfrequentflyer....photos/va-11-va-12-good-33216.html#post494691)

As per the thread Noob linked to, I just found this video. I didn't go looking for it, Youtube suggested it.

[video=youtube_share;OAu2k-yh3jo]http://youtu.be/OAu2k-yh3jo[/video]

Dulux / TAA - Australian TV commercial (1970) - YouTube
 
Q: Will Velocity Members now be able to use points to upgrade to Virgin Australia international long haul flights?
A. No, upgrades will continue to only be available on eligible Virgin Australia domestic and Virgin Australia international short haul flights (formerly known as Pacific Blue and Polynesian Blue).

That is a disappointment I would like to see consistency across the common brand. The rebranding was enough for me to move over my domestic travels (having OOL as a home base was a major part of that). Personally however I have not been compelled to transfer international travels, this doesn't help in that respect.

yeah still no upgrades for international :(
 
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