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Southwest Airlines Expands Atlanta Service With Two New Nonstop Destinations

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Really?? Cheap fares!. SWA is no longer considered a discount airlines. In fact, most of its regular fares are more expensive than other major airlines.

Grandpa...you are correct until you do the math...by looking at straight fares we are often higher. But you add all of the fees and we are usually the lowest by far. That is a fact. And when the new stupid passenger bill of rights pass all airlines will have to show their fees up front. Good for swa not so much for others.

You both have some valid points but miss others.

Southwest can be beat by other carriers most of the time for cheapest fare. Most that buy the cheapest fare usually pack the biggest carryon bag that they can to avoid baggage fees.

The big price difference is on unrestricted fares. I did a bit of flying IAD/BWI-SAT on my own dime. If I booked in advance, I could get a good fare on the legacies if I opted to not try nonrevving on United (as a furloughee, I could nonrev). The legacies - specifically AMR and DAL - always beat AirTran and Southwest's lowest prices. And I never checked a bag.

If I went the nonrev route, I would always buy a fully refundable ticket as a backup. That ticket was always purchased on AirTran or Southwest, although usually on AirTran. I never used any of those tickets; I always called in to cancel them once I cleared a nonrev seat.
 
it comes down to who has control over fares. Let's make no mistake that Delta will match and probably beat most domestic fares out of ATL, but...in the end who does that affect more. A $150.00 ticket on DAL will yield far less (if it even does that), than $150.00 on SWA. So DAL will match, but won't be making any money out of it. ATL has plenty of originating traffic, and that's what determines how big SWA gets in a particular city. SLC is a good example, like someone else brought up. DAL matches every fare to what Airtran charges, but DAL could afford to make up the difference in another market since Airtran is a blip compared to DAL. SWA... not so much. One telling way is the RJ distribution. DAL will soon figure out where it can compete, and where it can't. Those cities where they can't will become RJ cities (like HOU), where DAL is only interested in bringing the international Pax to ATL. DAL is not going out of business cause SWA is in ATL, but what it does do is pricing power is gone on many domestic routes. Training, maintenance, productivity are all things DAL can't beat SWA except with RJs.
 
it comes down to who has control over fares. Let's make no mistake that Delta will match and probably beat most domestic fares out of ATL, but...in the end who does that affect more. A $150.00 ticket on DAL will yield far less (if it even does that), than $150.00 on SWA. So DAL will match, but won't be making any money out of it. ATL has plenty of originating traffic, and that's what determines how big SWA gets in a particular city. SLC is a good example, like someone else brought up. DAL matches every fare to what Airtran charges, but DAL could afford to make up the difference in another market since Airtran is a blip compared to DAL. SWA... not so much. One telling way is the RJ distribution. DAL will soon figure out where it can compete, and where it can't. Those cities where they can't will become RJ cities (like HOU), where DAL is only interested in bringing the international Pax to ATL. DAL is not going out of business cause SWA is in ATL, but what it does do is pricing power is gone on many domestic routes. Training, maintenance, productivity are all things DAL can't beat SWA except with RJs.

Yield management is incredibly complex. It's a dark art best left to computer nerds using Cray supercomputers.
Don't waste the gray matter trying to make sense of it.
 
Yield management is incredibly complex. It's a dark art best left to computer nerds using Cray supercomputers.
Don't waste the gray matter trying to make sense of it.


yeah you are right, in the end I don't know how much damage SWA does to DAL in ATL beyond what it already does. Simply put, the bigger the network, the more damage SWA does. If I live in FLL and need to get to LAX then that's where a pax has choices between carriers. This doesn't change with SWA in ATL, just more cities that network carriers have to compete with SWA...that is about it.
 
Thanks to ALPA!

So the furloughed flight attendants, CSRs and other furloughed employee groups should have thanked ALPA for keeping nonrev privileges????? I'll let them know who to thank - I suspect that they'll quickly thank ALPA/me for summer 2000.
 
So the furloughed flight attendants, CSRs and other furloughed employee groups should have thanked ALPA for keeping nonrev privileges????? I'll let them know who to thank - I suspect that they'll quickly thank ALPA/me for summer 2000.

I said that half tongue in cheek. Your comment about summer of 2000 says a lot. I couldn't agree more that it was an embarrassment to the profession. But it was a United pilots decision, not an ALPA one. I'm sure they would have done the same if they were UALPA. Just like APA and USAPA have.
 
I said that half tongue in cheek. Your comment about summer of 2000 says a lot. I couldn't agree more that it was an embarrassment to the profession. But it was a United pilots decision, not an ALPA one. I'm sure they would have done the same if they were UALPA. Just like APA and USAPA have.

Gotcha on the TIC.
A lot of employee groups have very long memories. We could discuss the levels of blame for what happened but that doesn't matter to a cranky CSR or FA. The Public Relations machine worked and the pilots did not make an extraordinary effort to defuse the negative PR. PR is a huge achilles heel of all pilot unions; a small PR investment would go a long way to stem those attacks.
 
Days over for Southwest fuel cost advantage-CFO
Southwest Airlines, whose fuel hedges were once the envy of the U.S. airline industry, still uses them to manage volatile fuel costs, but the carrier no longer spends far less on fuel than rivals, Southwest's chief financial officer said on Wednesday. Speaking on a webcast of the Dahlman Rose & Co global transportation conference, Laura Wright said the cost of buying options to lock in lower fuel prices has risen and the instruments are best used now to blunt the impact of a sudden surge fuel prices. Southwest, the largest U.S. low-cost airline, enjoyed a major cost advantage over competitors in the middle of the last decade thanks to layers of hedges that ensured fuel costs that were well below market prices. The hedging program gave Southwest a significant advantage over unhedged rivals as fuel followed oil futures to a record high in 2008. Southwest's lucrative hedges have since expired and the industry playing field is more level.
Source: Reuters, Sept. 7
 
Wait till SWA lands on 28 and then has to taxi to ramp 3 at 9am for a 30 min. turn. They will feel the LUV then.
 

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