{"id":17252,"date":"2019-03-02T08:30:53","date_gmt":"2019-03-02T08:30:53","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.railbusinessdaily.com\/?p=17252"},"modified":"2019-03-02T08:30:53","modified_gmt":"2019-03-02T08:30:53","slug":"the-bradshaw-address-by-keith-williams","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/news.railbusinessdaily.com\/the-bradshaw-address-by-keith-williams\/","title":{"rendered":"The Bradshaw Address by Keith Williams"},"content":{"rendered":"

Independent Chair of the Williams Rail Review delivers the annual Bradshaw Address.<\/p>\n

Introduction \u2013 the case for change<\/h2>\n

It is a privilege to be here to deliver the 2019 George Bradshaw address and to such a distinguished audience – and to be given the opportunity to offer some preliminary thoughts on the Rail Review.<\/p>\n

First of all, it has been particularly pleasing to see the level of interest in the Review. I gather for many that the demand for tickets for this evening has been such that not everyone has been able to get a seat. In my last job I would have seen that as a yield management opportunity but I now see it as an overcrowding problem. But more of that later.<\/p>\n

I have been treated with every kind consideration since I started with the review only the very rare exception. Early on I was quizzed by one individual who asked: \u201cwhat can someone from the airlines do for the rail industry\u201d. Perhaps it was a rhetorical question. It could have been worse \u2013 given my background he might have asked more pertinently what can an accountant could do for the rail industry? So I\u2019ll take what I can get.<\/p>\n

Well 5 months into the review I have learned that if the airline industry is like a game of chess, then today\u2019s complexity in the rail industry is more like a Rubik\u2019s Cube and (by the way) only 5.8% of the world\u2019s population can solve a Rubik\u2019s Cube.<\/p>\n

So why, you might ask, would anyone want to take on the job of sorting out the seemingly entrenched problems of this, the most complex of industries. Problems that have endured despite many separate rail reviews in recent years.<\/p>\n

The answer, I believe, is in a shared belief that we are at a crucial juncture where public trust crosses the industry\u2019s ability to deal with change. I believe that for the railway to be successful it needs to put passengers at its heart. And in summary that is what I am going to talk to this evening.<\/p>\n

But first one opening comment. Whilst there have been multiple reviews over the last decade this is the first full-blown rail review to be supported by government for some considerable time – with a very clear commitment from the Transport Secretary and from Bernadette Kelly and the whole of the department\u2019s executive to encourage myself, the expert panel and my team to bring in root and branch change. That is the context on which we are working.<\/p>\n

The case for change has been building<\/h2>\n

The case for that change has of course been building.<\/p>\n

It is far too simplistic (I believe) to say that this is driven purely out of recent events – franchise difficulties, the timetable fiasco, recent studies into passenger trust or the tail off in passenger growth. They clearly don\u2019t help the industry\u2019s case but there are also longer-term catalysts for the review.<\/p>\n

On any measure there is a huge amount of determination within the industry to respond to recent events \u2013 and actions are already in hand in many cases.<\/p>\n

The industry is not blind to the issues it faces yet has found it hard to address them. Customer satisfaction is declining and there is widespread lack of public trust. According to Which\u2019s latest consumer insight tracker, only car dealers are more distrusted by customers than train travel.<\/p>\n

This is not new. Speakers who have addressed this audience over the years have called it out.<\/p>\n

As far back as the very first George Bradshaw address in 2011 Rick Haythornwaite spoke about the gap that existed between what the industry thought it was delivering and what the public thought of what was being offered. And last year Sir Peter Hendy spoke about the need for public confidence in the railway.<\/p>\n

This has for too long been a recurring theme and we have reached the point at which some uncomfortable truths need not only to be acknowledged but acted upon\u2026 that while the industry has achieved enormous success over the past decades:<\/p>\n