1 / 24

Airlines

Airlines. United Airlines Boeing 777-200 Los Angeles, California. By: Daniel Schiff. Don’t forget: You can copy-paste this slide into other presentations, and move or resize the poll. What is an Airline?. An airline is a company which offers air transport for passengers and cargo.

eve-oneill
Download Presentation

Airlines

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Airlines United Airlines Boeing 777-200 Los Angeles, California By: Daniel Schiff

  2. Don’t forget: You can copy-paste this slide into other presentations, and move or resize the poll.

  3. What is an Airline? • An airline is a company which offers air transport for passengers and cargo. • Establishes a series of regular routes along with a consistent schedule. Two Different Types: • Passenger Airlines • Cargo Airlines

  4. Airline Key Terms Domestic Flight: Flight that departs and arrives in the same country International Flight: Flight that departs one country, and arrives in another Transcontinental Flight: A flight than spans 90% or more of a Continents distance (Coast to Coast) • New York – Los Angeles; Miami – Seattle, Boston – San Francisco Merger: When a more financial stable airline buys out a less stable one to expand its own • United merged with Continental (March 3rd, 2012) • Southwest is merging with AirTran (Fall of 2012) E-Ticket: An electronic ticket that identifies the passenger and his/her travel itinerary on specified airline

  5. Careers in the Airline Industry • There are many Careers available in the Airline Industry: • Gate & Ticket Agents • Information Technology • Technical Engineer (online reservations, website design) • Management • Accountant • Analyst (cost control, passenger revenue, fleet management) • Quality Assurance • Reservation Agents • Flight Operations • Pilot & First Officer • Flight Attendant(s) • Maintenance • Baggage Handlers

  6. History of Airlines • Tony Jannus conducted the United States' first scheduled commercial airline flight • January 1st, 1914 for the St. Petersburg-Tampa Airboat Line. • 23-minute flight traveled between St. Petersburg, Florida and Tampa, Florida

  7. Cargo Airlines • Provide Expedited transportation of goods, information, and other resources from the source of production or warehouse to the client • Cargo Airlines: • FedEx, UPS (two major) • At a High Cost: • UPS: 4LBS. From Los Angeles, CA to Kent, OH • NEXT DAY AIR: $86.56 • GROUND: $16.95

  8. Passenger Airlines There are many distinct characteristics of each airline, but there are two primary company roles: • Low-Cost Airlines • Full-Service Airlines • Regional Airlines • Do Passenger Airlines carry Cargo? • Yes! However revenue of passengers exceeds that of Cargo

  9. Low-Cost Airlines • A low-cost is an airline that offers generally low fares in exchange for eliminating many traditional passenger services • Traditionally has one class of service • Coach (Economy Class) • Limited Airline Partnerships • Focus primarily on domestic travel within their country of origin • Sometimes will offer limited seasonal nearby International Flights • Examples? • Southwest/AirTran, jetBlue, Allegiant, Spirit, Frontier

  10. Low-Cost Airlines Pros: • Less Delays • Why? • Lower Airfare Cost • Why? • Fewer Routes • Non-Union Employees • Newer aircraft = less fuel consumption • Based more on availability • Book further in advance, better value (generally) Cons: • Limited Cities Serviced • Window of Reservation Period • Al la cart options: • Baggage Fees, Snack Items, Seat Assignments, Early Boarding Privileges

  11. Low-Cost Airlines • Dedication towards Customer Satisfaction: • Fresh Innovations • jetBlue Airways – First to offer DirecTV • Virgin America – First to offer WiFi across entire fleet - Moodlighting on all Aircraft • AirTran Airways – First to offer XM Satellite Radio jetBlue VirginAmerica

  12. Full-Service Airlines • A Full-Service Airline: • Flies to many Domestic and International Destinations from its Country of Origin • Extensive Airline Alliances • Persuasive loyalty programs • Complex food and beverage service (select flights) • Regional airline affiliates • Examples? • United/Continental, Delta, American, US Airways • British Airways, Cathay Pacific, Singapore Airlines • Has Multiple Classes of Service • Coach (Economy), Business, First • Airlines will name them differently • Envoy, Upper Class, World Traveler

  13. Full-Service Airlines Pros: • More available destinations • Why? • Fleet Capabilities • Regional Airlines • Alliance Affiliations • Supply & Demand • Hub & Spoke Cities • Premium Service • Business and/or First Class • Extensive International Meal Service Cons: • Higher Cost • More Delays • Revenue Service Minded

  14. Full-Service Airlines

  15. Full-Service Airlines Food Service – Domestic Flights (Including Caribbean, Mexico, Hawaii) • Economy (Coach) • 0.0 hours – 12.0 hours • Beverage Service • Complimentary Water, Soda, Juices, Coffee • Specialty Drinks: Energy & Alcohol – For Purchase $4-$9 • “Fresh” Meals & Snacks for Purchase • Range from $2.99 - $15.00 • Pringles, Turkey Sandwich, Cheeseburger • United Food For Purchase • First Class/Business Class • 0.0 hours – 2.0 hours • Complimentary Enhanced Beverage Service • Complimentary Snacks • 2.0 hours – 4.0 hours • Meal Service (determined by departure time) • 4.0 hours + • Multiple Course Meal Service (determined by departure time)

  16. Full-Service Airlines Route: New York-Kennedy (JFK) – Los Angeles, CA (LAX) Distance: 2,466 Miles Time: 6 Hours, 10 Minutes

  17. Full-Service Airlines Route: Washington D.C (IAD) – Los Angeles, CA (LAX) Distance: 2,280 Miles Time: 5 Hours, 51 Minutes

  18. Full-Service Airlines Food Service – International Flights • Economy (Coach) • 0.0 hours – 8.0 hours • Complimentary Meal Service (based on departure time) • 8.0 hours – 13.0 hours • Complimentary Meal Service • Two Full Meals • 13.0 hours – 21.0 hours • Complimentary Meal Service • Three Full Meals • First Class/Business Class • 0.0 hours – 8.0 hours • Complimentary Meal Service (Three-Choices) • 8.0 hours – 13.0 hours • Complimentary Five-Course Meal Service (Three Choices) • Two Full Meals • 13.0 hours – 21.0 hours • Complimentary Five-Course Meal Service (Five Choices) • Three Full Meals & Pre-Arrival Brunch

  19. Full-Service Airlines • Fleet Capabilities • Range from 75 miles to 10,375 miles • Airline Alliances • Star Alliance • Continental/United, US Airways, Air Canada, Lufthansa, South African Airways, Air New Zeleand • oneworld • American, British Airways, Iberia, Cathay Pacific, FINNAIR, Quantas • SkyTeam • Delta, KLM, Air France, Air Europa, Alitalia, China Eastern, Korean Air, Kenya Airways, Aero Mexico

  20. Regional Airlines • Fly to smaller cities to connect passengers with hub cities • Akron/Canton (CAK) – Chicago (ORD) • Syracuse, NY (SYR) – New York-Kennedy (JFK) • Fly under Full-Service Airline Name • Won’t know you’re actually flying on one • United Express, Delta Connection • What percentage of flights are operated by Regional Airlines? • 52% of all flights are operated by a Regional Airline • Chances are; you’ve been on one, and didn’t even know Challenges facing Regional Airlines: • Fatigued Pilots/Crew Members (Crash Pad) • Underpaid – First 5 Years: $17,000-$22,000 • Aircraft Turn-Around Ratio • How many flights operated per day? • 7-10

  21. Regional Airlines

  22. Airlines & Customer Service • One of the most cut aspects of air travel has been service • Recently, more airlines have begun improving the needs and wants of travelers; by recognizing, meeting, and exceeding passenger expectations

More Related