(Redirected from First-come first-served)
'First come, first served' (sometimes 'first-come, first-served' or simply 'FCFS') is a service
policy whereby the requests of
customers or
clients are attended to in the order that they arrived, without other
biases or preferences. The policy can be employed when processing
sales orders, in determining
restaurant seating, or on a
taxi stand, for examples.
Festival seating (also known as
general seating and
stadium seating) is seating done on a FCFS basis. See
Riverfront Coliseum for details on a December
1979 disaster involving "festival seating" at a concert by
The Who in
Cincinnati, Ohio.
The practice is also becoming common among low-cost airlines in Europe where seats cannot be reserved either in advance or at check-in. These airlines allow passengers to board in small groups based upon their order of check-in and sit in whatever seat on the aircraft they wish to. On the basis of first come, first served, the earlier you check-in the earlier you board the aircraft to get the seat you want.
Southwest Airlines and major European low-cost airlines such as
easyJet also apply first come, first served seating. Passengers are sequentially (on a first come, first served basis) assigned into one of three "boarding groups." The passengers then are boarded onto the plane in group-order.
See also
★
FIFO (first-in, first-out) for the technical concept of the same policy
External links
★
''first come, first served'' as defined by
NIST.