Big Slick
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 18, 2004
- Posts
- 284
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Southwest – Grow or Stumble[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Competitively, Southwest is the most fearsome carrier in existence going into 2006. [/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Not because of its strengths, which are considerable, but because of its weaknesses. It has a challenge with labor costs. It has a challenge with a no-frills product that is starting to look frayed compared to other LCCs. It has increasing competitive pressure not only from restructured legacy carriers, but more dangerously from other LCCs. It's got a gaggle of new airplanes coming on line at a time when other LCCs are starting to get expansively frisky, too.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]The point is that Southwest has vulnerabilities. What will make it a fearsome competitor in 2006, however, is the fact that it's fully aware of these weaknesses, and is likely going to employ very different strategies and tactics as it moves to resolve these challenges. [/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]That means it's going to change and adjust from its past modus operendi. Big time. Inevitably, a lot of its competitors will miss this, to their detriment.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]More ASMs Needed. Just Make Sure There's RPMs To Match. Expansion is paramount for WN. It knows that the erosion of its fuel hedges over the next three years leaves it vulnerable to other LCCs and legacies with lower labor costs. The point is that Southwest needs to grow to spread its costs over more seats. That also requires that there are people in the seats, which means that the airline can't risk opening many more alternative airports such as Manchester. [/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]The New Southwest Effect: Nail The Competition. It also means that they can no longer rely solely on "the Southwest effect," which generates new passengers via low fares. [/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]See, low fares are no longer the exclusive province of Southwest - they're now the norm. That means that Southwest will need to go after other carriers' existing market share. No more Mr. Nice Guy - Southwest will need to go for its competitors' jugular.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Competitively, Southwest is the most fearsome carrier in existence going into 2006. [/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Not because of its strengths, which are considerable, but because of its weaknesses. It has a challenge with labor costs. It has a challenge with a no-frills product that is starting to look frayed compared to other LCCs. It has increasing competitive pressure not only from restructured legacy carriers, but more dangerously from other LCCs. It's got a gaggle of new airplanes coming on line at a time when other LCCs are starting to get expansively frisky, too.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]The point is that Southwest has vulnerabilities. What will make it a fearsome competitor in 2006, however, is the fact that it's fully aware of these weaknesses, and is likely going to employ very different strategies and tactics as it moves to resolve these challenges. [/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]That means it's going to change and adjust from its past modus operendi. Big time. Inevitably, a lot of its competitors will miss this, to their detriment.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]More ASMs Needed. Just Make Sure There's RPMs To Match. Expansion is paramount for WN. It knows that the erosion of its fuel hedges over the next three years leaves it vulnerable to other LCCs and legacies with lower labor costs. The point is that Southwest needs to grow to spread its costs over more seats. That also requires that there are people in the seats, which means that the airline can't risk opening many more alternative airports such as Manchester. [/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]The New Southwest Effect: Nail The Competition. It also means that they can no longer rely solely on "the Southwest effect," which generates new passengers via low fares. [/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]See, low fares are no longer the exclusive province of Southwest - they're now the norm. That means that Southwest will need to go after other carriers' existing market share. No more Mr. Nice Guy - Southwest will need to go for its competitors' jugular.[/FONT]