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Probably the most apparent moves will involve connecting the dots between existing airports on the WN route system. Watch for accelerated moves into transcon and semi-transcon markets.
Big-Time Loser: Wild Turkey Sales. What not to expect is a rash of new cities on their route system. .... Forays into risky new cities is not in the cards. Any airport that doesn't have a million enplanements and the potential of generating or capturing another 300,000 to 400,000 passengers can now commence singing the blues: The odds of getting Southwest service are neck and neck with a meteor strike.
So smaller airports should face realities. Southwest is out of reach. They aren't coming. Regardless.
FDJ2 said:Hot Flash - November 3, 2003
After almost ten years of being able to pretty much call its own shots up and down the East Coast, Southwest now has to look over its shoulder. JetBlue is now firmly in the game, and it's a factor that will change the way Southwest plans its operation in the months and years ahead.
Up until now, they had no significant, well-focused, and large-scale low-fare competition in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions.
This guy ever hear of Airtran?
Not just between mega carriers and Southwest, but between competing low-fare airlines. Specifically, between Southwest and jetBlue.
I guess all the other airlines that we have competed with for years in the east will go un-named..
Some of the usual lightweight analysts will spout that it's an attack on US Airways. Forget it,
So..Anybody bold enough to disagree with this guy gets dismissed as a "lightweight analysts".
Southwest is a tough, well-run airline with management that knows the business. Especially the low-fare airline business.
I finally agree with something this man has said!
And that means they do not take the jetBlue threat lightly.
It's clear now that jetBlue will be a long term player.
Id say the jury is still out on that one..ATL anyone?
Let's look at what Southwest is probably considering in regard to jetBlue:
This guy doesnt have a clue what SWA will do about any airline..Much less JB..
Big time jetBlue expansion is inevitable. Southwest knows that jetBlue has over 200 airplanes on order. A lot of iron that will need to go someplace.
Got gates?landing slots?
.the reverse leakage driving out of Boston to fly WN is fixin' to get re-reversed back to Logan,
Maybe inner city folks..But..I dont see anyone outside of the city driving all the way to Logan when you have both PVD and MHT for choices..
Cost-focused consumers in eastern Nassau and in western Suffolk Counties didn't have significant low-fare options from LGA or JFK. Now they do, and dodging potholes on the Long Island Expressway toward JFK becomes much more attractive.
After having lived and worked on LI for years I can safely say that it will take alot more than a nice TV screen and Blue chips to get anybody to drive to LGA or JFK that lives anywhere near central or eastern LI..I know people that would rather take a car service to EWR than deal with JFK or LGA..
and yes, seat assignment.
I have to give him this one..We can do it with little or no cost..Its the time factor we need to work on for boarding..
This time, it's for real - jetBlue is serious competition. This is not the United Shuttle. This is not Continental Lite. This is not MetroJet.
So..UL,CL,and MJ were not competition.Of course not..Otherwise his slant towards JB being the first real player wouldnt make sense...
that minimizes the chances of ending up with a middle seat between two people from a culture that has not yet discovered soap. So..What does JB do?ask each person whether or not they know what soap is?Or was that just in the data base they sold..
Another dangerous competitive sign coming from jetBlue is that carrier's recent attempt to enter the Atlanta market from California. Apparently, it failed.
Duh!?Oh..But it was a sign of a well run business plan..
For those of us who have actually been on the Embraer 170 prototype, it's very clear that the -190 is a 100-seat mainline jet that will put jetBlue in a position to enter markets and adjust capacity with extreme flexibility.
Can you say"not even built yet?"
The airline can be expected to move quickly over the next 18-months to shore up its position in key Eastern markets. Probably the most apparent moves will involve connecting the dots between existing airports on the WN route system. Watch for accelerated moves into transcon and semi-transcon markets.
Weve been connecting the dots for over thirty years..Increases in trans cons have been in the works for years as well..
Forays into risky new cities is not in the cards.
Come to think of it..Its NEVER been in the cards..
For almost a decade, Southwest has had pretty much free reign.
Then who the he11 owns all those da#@ planes I keep seeing on the TCAS?
For Southwest, it means adjusting and responding to competition that wasn't there before.
Again..Easy to say because its old news..Weve been doing just that for over thirty years..HELLLOOO!!
Mike
QUOTE]
MLB,MLBWINGBORN said:B6Busdriver..
My comments were not a slight of JB..More a responce to Mike Boyds ranting about the cat fight between JB and SWA..
I happen to think that JB has a great product but its still too early to tell where they will fit into the market IMHO..
If i have offended any of you great B6 folks then i am truly sorry..
Mike