Southwest Airlines started from a simple concept. “Rollin King, a San Antonio entrepreneur who owned a small commuter air service, marched into Herb Kelleher’s law office with a plan to start a low-cost/low-fare airline that would shuttle passengers between San Antonio, Dallas, and Houston” (Thompson, Strickland and Gamble, 2010, pg C-401). “His business concept for the airline was simple: attract passengers by flying convenient schedules, get passengers to their destination on time, make sure they
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is communicating with and when he is communicating. When the CEO is communicating with members of his team he has been known to use the participating style, which is where leaders and followers share in the decision s about best to complete a high-quality job. This style was evident when Larry Page urged his team to “dream big” at the Google Faculty Summit in 2009. He told his team to believe in audacious ideas. He stated by tackling big ideas a person could change the world. This was an example
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Mergers and Acquisitions Mergers and Acquisitions: - Assuming rationality from all players, mergers and acquisitions deals originate out of specific strategic corporate requirements. In reality, the advisors (both legal & financial) and middlemen also play a significant role in the original activity. Acquirers / targets may focus on competitors for a potential acquisition/sell off. Buying competitor implies horizontal integration. There are lot of risks (financial as well as operational) involved
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STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT (EBS5103) CASE STUDY INSTRUCTOR: Dr. Ahmet Beşkese BAHÇEŞEHİR UNIVERSITY May 2015 1. INTRODUCTION This report is based on strategic analysis of JetBlue from it’s the establishment date to year 2003. In order to the analysis, a precise strategy is decided upon for JetBlue Company. 2. HISTORY David Neeleman was born in Brazil, Sao Paulo in 16 October 1959. He attended the University of Utah for three years then he dropped out university and served a mission
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Southwest Airlines Kaushal Desai Vaishali Patel Debra Quach Introduction Although the airline industry is no longer experiencing the rapid growth it exhibited before 1990; commercial air travel in the U.S. remains the preferred method of transportation for a majority of Americans due to cost-effectiveness and timesaving characteristics. From 1980 to 1990 the number of passengers traveling by air increased by approximately 72%, in contrast, in the 1990-1998 period, the airline industry only
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Introduction: JetBlue is a low-fare airline established in 1999 by David Neeleman, a veteran in airline start-up. By adopting a high frequency, short-haul, point to point strategy that leverage on technology advantage, together with an experience management board. In April 2002, JetBlue Management decided to price the IPO of JetBlue at despite that it was during one of the worst periods in airline history. The IPO was initially priced at $22-24 per share, it was later adjusted to $25 to $26
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Southwest Airlines1 Southwest Airlines was formed in 1971 to serve inter-city routes in three Texas cities. By 1998, it had grown to approximately 24,000 employees serving 25 states with approximately 2,500 flights per day. Southwest operates as a low-cost, no-frills but high customer service airline flying point-to-point, rather than establishing the hub-and-spoke system common to its larger competitors. A key to its success is the achievement of low turnaround time—the time required for a plane
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was able to dominate the welding market by focusing on reducing costs and raising quality. These goals were achieved by rewarding employees with an innovative financial incentive program. Lincoln Electric paid their employees a base salary that was slightly lower than market. However, all employees were included in a merit-based profit sharing program. This program rewarded hard-working, efficient, and quality-conscious employees with big bonuses that could potentially equal up to 100% of their
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Classic Airlines and Marketing Solution Your Name Here MKT/571 December 12, 2012 Instructor Stuart Ringer Introduction The standard method for solving a problem primarily will involve defining the problem, understanding the problem in relation to the current developments, and assessing what in fact needs to change. In the case of Classic Airlines, budget restrictions, decreased sales, low employee morale, diminished customer satisfaction, and the need to cut costs are the issues that plague
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Southwest is an impressive organization because it’s the most flown airline within the United States and has been consistently profitable (Northouse, 2009). Southwest is ranked 205 in the Fortune 500 and their profits in 2011 were 459 million which exceeded their 2009 profits of 363.6 million (CNNMoney, 2011) Against industry problems and business pressures-air-traffic congestion, merger of rivals, stricter government regulations regarding aircraft safety and maintenance, and mounting customer dissatisfaction
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