I use TVMs▸ regularly – but either for a regular and simple journey, eg Bath or Gloucester, or when I've already looked up the possibilities online and know what ticket I want. But I was surprised to see how few people use them according to the stats in the GWR▸ document that was linked to somewhere earlier in this thread. Or I suppose I should say how few tickets are sold from them, as number of tickets does not necessarily equate to number of unique passengers.
There are 4 measures and I suspect different ones get quote
- the number of sales transactions
- the number of tickets sold
- the number of journeys sold
- the total value of tickets sold
So I walk up the the ticket window in Trowbridge. No - correct that - it's closed due to staff shortage. I walk up to the ticket window in Chippenham and I buy two off peak day returns for the following day, on senior railcards, for my wife and I, from Melksham to Bicester Village.
1 transaction
2 tickets sold (or is it 4?)
4 journeys sold
£26.10 ticket value
or I buy a one week season for myself from Melksham to Swindon:
1 transaction
1 ticket sold
10 journeys (notionally) sold
£49.30 ticket value
I would be very interested in comparative stats.
RDG‡ talked about 12% of sales at the ticket office, but on Friday John Glen told us of 13% of revenue coming through ticket offices. Is the difference just a rounding error, or an indication that higher value fares tend to be proportional higher at the ticket office?