Monthly Archives

Monthly Archives for February 2004.

USAirways’ Recovery Plan

USAirways has a plan to return to profitability, but I’m skeptical — both that they can pull it off and that it will matter if they do.USAirways wants lower costs. All airlines and almost all employers want lower costs, and employers facing strong unions have a hard time achieving those costs. Even after $1 billion in union concessions, USAirways has costs that by some measures are 2/3 higher than Southwest’s.Increased productivity by changing work rules. This is probably the most important thing that USAirways needs to do, and it will face some of the toughest union opposition.Leveraging strenght in the Northeast. If this is new, then I wonder what the airline has been doing for the past decade.Sell new amenities. Amenities have helped create the JetBlue brand, which has garnered fierce loyalty. JetBlue began selling…

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Ariana Afghan Airlines

After reading yesterday about U.S. involvement in the creation of a new Iraqi national airline, I tracked down the national airline of Afghanistan, Ariana Afghan Airlines.Ariana flies A300, Boeing 727, and Antonov 24 aircraft. The Antonov plane is 44 years old.The airline is pushing new ‘online booking’ which just consists of a fill-in form to enter your name and the dates you would like to travel. There’s no real-time availability or even online payment available. The same “online booking” for the Hotel Inter-Continental Kabul is offered. Under “Safety” the website discusses the history of Pan Am ownership and procedures in the 1950s, hardly inspiring for today. Then it skips to: At present Ariana posses four Boeing 727-200 and three Airbus 300B4 which are in good are reliable condition. Note that they say nothing about the…

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Trends in Online Corporate Travel Management

An interesting blog discussion on the economics of corporate travel and competition for corporate travel management by major online travel sites like Expedia and Orbitz.I recently participated in an online survey on the subject (handsomely compensated for my brief time), and it’s clear that the major online services are pushing into business travel management. While Orbitz snagging McDonalds as a client is big news, the more significant opportunity may be in small and medium size businesses that cannot create and inhouse travel department but that can outsource it online.

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ANA Offers a US-based Visa

ANA has a co-branded Visa for the U.S. market which comes with a $70 annual fee and 10,000 bonus miles with first purchase. Offer is valid through September 30, 2004. Details are also available on the ANA website.For U.S. domestic flyers, bear in mind that ANA is a partner of United Airlines (and the rest of the Star Alliance) so there are plenty of redemption options for ANA Mileage Club miles.

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You get what you pay for

I haven’t verified this myself, but a reader writes that Jay Leno’s monologue on Thursday night included the following: Police in Miami have detained 3 men who entered the U.S. by shipping themselves in a container on a cargo flight. Don’t worry, they weren’t with al Qaeda. They were with Priceline.com.

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Prospect for an Iraqi National Airline

The US is pushing to create a new Iraqi national airline and Delta has surfaced as a potential codeshare partner. Delta is already Royal Jordanian to provide air-mail service to Iraq.The expected case is that the existing Iraqi carrier will be liquidated, along with its outstanding debts to Kuwait and Airbus, and that it would lease aircraft with USAID and World Bank financing.

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Low Fares, Low Perks, But They’re Supposed to be “Fun”

The Wall Street Journal‘s Weekend Journal carries a piece on low fare carriers and their perks.While American Trans Air is adding a business class cabin to their planes, United’s TED carries no first class offering. Ted’s introduction at Dulles, where flights will go as far as Las Vegas, is a real disappointment to this United flyer.I told the Journal’s Paula Szuchman that gimmicks and marketing wouldn’t get me to fly Ted, and that the loss of a first class cabin was a huge disincentive. For Gary Leff, it’s no contest. Low-fare carriers rarely match the majors on offerings that matter most to him, the 29-year-old finance director says, and he won’t be tempted when Ted expands flights to his hometown airport, Washington’s Dulles. He’ll fly Continental to earn flier miles and get business-class upgrades not…

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Double BA Miles for Starwood Conversions

It’s really a good idea to read WebFlyer’s Notiflyer regularly. There’s a new one revealing a huge conversion bonus for moving Starwood point into British Airways miles. Through March 31, 2004, Executive Club members who convert Starwood Preferred Guest points into Executive Club miles will be able to do so at a 1:2 rate (one Starpoint converts to two BA miles), double the standard 1:1 conversion rate. What’s more, British Airways will also double the standard 5,000-mile bonus Starwood awards when transferring in 20,000-point increments, meaning a transfer of 20,000 Starpoints, which would normally convert to 25,000 Executive Club miles, will now convert to 50,000 miles. In effect, this calculates to a 150 percent conversion bonus! Before you rush to convert all your Starwood Preferred Guest points, be aware, British Airways has set a limit…

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