Showing posts with label Cranky Flier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cranky Flier. Show all posts

US Aviation Review 2012: Vinay vs. Cranky Flier


by Vinay Bhaskara and Brett Snyder

Earlier this month, I had a chance to do a little bit of back and forth with Brett Snyder (a.k.a Cranky Flier) about some of the biggest news stories in US aviation from last year. While the idea was that we’d do a lot of debating, it became mostly a discussion (what was that line about great minds….?).

We started off with the potential US Airways/American merger.

Vinay: From a network perspective I really like this merger more than most for American (and of course for US Air) because it really plugs a lot of holes.

Domestically, there is still a lot of incremental value in secondary NE markets (ALB, ROC, SYR, BDL, et. al) connecting them north to south along the East coast. Philadelphia is a strong and stable origin and destination (O&D) market with limited low cost carrier (LCC) penetration and little room for LCCs to expand b/c of terminal space in the medium term. And Philadelphia is a strong connecting hub with a good European network. It is consistently undervalued as a hub in my opinion, and adding Philly would allow American to flow connections to Europe over Philadelphia, leaving the valuable slots at New York JFK for premium O&D flights.

Charlotte is a unique hub that fills a huge hole for American (even United would highly value a Charlotte hub). From a pure network perspective, there is no other hub in American’s network that can serve the traffic flows that Charlotte can’t; Miami is too far South and Dallas Fort Worth too far west. While Northeast-Southeast flying isn't high yielding in the aggregate there is some high yield traffic there. Flying from the rest of the country to the Southeast is plenty high yield. Plus, demographic and economic trends point to a rosier future for the South as well as for Charlotte. O&D may be a little low in Charlotte at the moment for a hub its size, but it is fast growing thanks to the banking industry, and more importantly high yield. Some international overlap is present with Miami, but the domestic scale means that Charlotte is a viable hub (or at least 85-90% of its current capacity is).

Do I even need to describe the value of Reagan? It’s the preferred airport for DC business travel and of huge strategic value.

Phoenix has questionable value; cost creep from the merger pushes a lot of its flying to unprofitability. The one good thing is that the main competitor Southwest is facing heavy cost creep as well, but even so it’s heavily squeezed by Dallas Fort Worth to the East and Los Angeles to the West.
The Delta/Northwest merger proves that fleets don’t matter to a merger of this scale.

A lot of synergies in terms of consolidated negotiating of contracts, as well as increased attractiveness to frequent flyers are often ignored. These effects number into the hundreds of millions of dollars annually.

From a labor perspective, it has the potential to be a nightmare, though the toxicity of AMR employees seems mostly directed at Horton and current management. I do like that AMR is waiting to complete bankruptcy before merging; this allows them to merge from a lower cost base and not push up US Airways’ costs too much.

It’s also important to note that US Airways management team is amongst the best in the business. Doug Parker and co. have taken an imperfect and challenging situation and turned it into record profits. Bringing that kind of strategic vision to AA’s more powerful network and customer base can only mean good things.

In summary, I’d say that neither US Airways nor American needs to merge. Rather, it adds a lot of value for both parties and would create a stronger airline.

Cranky Flier: I agree with nearly all of what you've said, but I want to focus on that last point.  It might be true that neither American nor US Airways needs to merge, but I would say that US Airways needs it less.

US Airways has found a profitable niche over the last few years.  It has been consistently profitable with a lower revenue base because it has been able to achieve costs to match.  But that is really what the airline is - a niche player.  It can help to complement other larger airlines, as it does in Star Alliance today, but it is not a world leader.

American, on the other hand, is supposed to be one of the big three.  It's the North American anchor of oneworld and it has powerful partnerships.  But when it comes to being a network carrier that serves the US, it falls short of its competitors.  With mergers, Delta and United have created networks that serve the needs of the US.  They are actively working to build partnerships to make sure that Americans can get anywhere in the world without leaving the family.  American doesn't have that.

Sure American has good partnerships with strong airlines around the world, but it still can't get anyone from Providence to Atlanta.  In fact, it doesn't even fly to Providence.  It has a real lack of connectivity up and down the east coast and that is a big problem for an airline that needs to compete for high dollar traveler loyalty.  And while it dominates Latin America with its partners, its European network is very weak.  Delta and United both have powerful jumping off points in New York that allow for single stop connections from much of the US to much of Europe.  American is forced to double connect people more often than not.

A US Airways merger rectifies these problems.  No, it doesn't give American a hub as powerful as that of Delta or United in New York, but it does give the airline Philly, a respectable hub which, as you say, has little low cost penetration and a strong local traffic base.  That Philly hub combined with National in DC and Charlotte means that there is tremendous ability to connect small and large towns alike all along the east coast.  Charlotte provides the only natural competitor to Atlanta, and that would give American a rare leg up on United in that region.

And Phoenix, while likely to shrink in a merger, still provides a crucial point for connectivity throughout the West.  Dallas/Ft Worth can't serve everything west.  That's very clear in the fact that American no longer serves places like Burbank or Oakland.  This is where Phoenix can make a difference.

A merger doesn't solve everything, but no merger can.  Sure, it fails to give American a Pacific presence, but that's not the point.  The point is that it brings American so much that there's no need to focus on what it can't deliver.

Will there be labor unrest in a merger?  To some degree, sure.  Are mergers all difficult?  Yes, of course.  But if American really wants to compete with Delta and United, then it needs more strategic heft.  And a US Airways merger gives the airline exactly that.

We then moved on to the IT issues with the United/Continental merger.

Cranky Flier: I don't know that they [United] did anything wrong with the original physical integration itself.  There were some minor issues but in the end, it went fairly smoothly.  The problems that followed were two-fold.

First, they just couldn't be bothered to wait until they had a graphical interface for SHARES.  Instead, they forced all the United folks who used graphical interfaces before to learn command-driven SHARES.  From what I can tell, training wasn't adequate, so you have a lot of agents that just didn't know what to do.  I believe the new graphical interface has been introduced (or is in process), but there was a lot of unnecessary pain just because they were in too much of a hurry.

The other problem is that they didn't bother to find out if SHARES could handle everything it needed to do.  Upgrades became a nightmare early on.  Then there have been all kinds of issues with reservations not ticketing, especially with partner airline awards.  It simply doesn't seem like it can handle the tasks that it needs to handle.  This seems very surprising because US Airways seems to be running alright on SHARES.  Granted, it's not exactly the same system, but you would really hope these problems would have been discovered before making the switch.

The end results is that customers are very uneasy.  You have people wanting to reconfirm everything multiple times because of how many problems there have been.  And the problems seem to have gotten worse over the last couple months, at least for our clients.  This can't continue.  People will keep having miserable experiences due to tech problems and they won't keep flying the airline forever.

Vinay: I don’t really have much more to add. I find it interesting that it was a training malfunction in that they didn’t give the United employees either sufficient training to work with Continental’s interface or didn’t wait for the new interface; I think that’s on United management for not planning properly.

Empirically, I can empathize with everybody who had to go through some trouble with the whole United reservations mess. This past summer, my father and I were flying out to Kansas City and there was a thunderstorm that turned Newark into a mess. There were literally hundreds of disaffected elites (let alone customers as a whole) packed into Terminal A where United has less than 60 flights a day, and I can only imagine how bad it was over in Terminal C. And it was taking the United customer reps 20-25 minutes just to deal with each customer and so we got in line at around 9 pm, and didn’t get rebooked till closer to 1 am.

But the more interesting question  is how much this affects revenue and profitability for United. Their Q3 and Q4 financial performance was rather poor from a revenue and margin perspective. Even while the aggregate operational performance has gotten better over Q4, as you’ve mentioned the issues have not completely subsided. When as a corporate customer/business traveler do you start to book away from United because you’re afraid of a lack of reliability? Because even if they only lose a few such customers at the margin, it has a tangible impact on PRASM and profitability.

Cranky Flier: I think any bookaway will be temporary.  They will get this fixed and they will start firing on all cylinders.  It's just taking longer than it should have.  And longer than it did with Delta/Northwest.

Our focus then shifted to the Delta/Southwest deal for 717s

Vinay: Shifting gears a little bit, I’d like to talk a little bit about the Delta/Southwest 717 deal.
First, from a Delta perspective, it’s pretty much a continuation of the same strategy that brought them the MD-90s (and before that with Northwest the DC-9s and DC-10s) at dirt cheap rates. I know you described it as a “Moneyball” style of strategy earlier this year, and I’d agree. Delta is taking assets (airplanes) that are undervalued and thus relatively cheap on the world market, and then using them profitably. The strategy to minimize capital costs makes a lot of sense in the current environment and Delta is happily paying off its debt, even as the other US carriers commit to huge capital commitments in the form of massive aircraft orders (even Southwest). I also wonder if Delta will apply this strategy to A320s and 737NGs as those end up on the used market and their valuations fall in the face of the re-engined products? I know that the 737-900ER order is ostensibly supposed to partly replace the A320 fleet, but there is a chance that a deal too good to pass up on A320s will arise at some point over the next 3-5 years. Because of current trends in US and global oil production, especially the rise of alternative sources like shale oil and tar sands, the long run trend in oil prices looks to be declining, though oil prices are obviously quite volatile and there’s always the potential of environmental regulations driving up prices. So the downside risk for Delta of having a fuel inefficient fleet and being hit with a huge oil spike is relatively low in my opinion. From a network perspective, the 717s slot right in. They help backfill some of the lost capacity from the 50 seat regional jet reductions, and I think they’ll be especially useful for larger markets from La Guardia.

It’s the Southwest side of things that’s much more interesting in my opinion. Right after the merger, the thought was that AirTran’s international ops and the 717s would open up new windows of expansion for Southwest in international flying and smaller domestic markets. We're finally seeing some of the international flying, but the smaller cities have been a bust. In fact much of AirTran domestic has been culled. Atlanta is more than 40 daily departures off its AirTran Pre-merger levels. The 717s are cheap, paid off, and more fuel efficient than the 737-500s. Yet Southwest could not make them work because the CASM rose too high. And I think that comes back to Southwest's rising labor costs. For the past 30 years they've been granting steady pay and benefit increases to front line workers and offsetting that with steady growth and high productivity as well as fuel hedges. But now they've saturated the US, the hedges have expired, and productivity has slipped. And the end result is a rising cost base to such a degree that Southwest is now being forced to jack up fares; they aren't really an LCC anymore. And there's no real easy solution either. they could do what US legacies did and force wage freezes and benefit cuts down the unions' throats, but Southwest has extremely good labor relations and it's employees do tend to enhance service more than those at most US airlines (empirically). Another answer might be more fees a-la the legacies; but given Southwest's marketing strategy that's a no-go in the short term. More international flying and Hawaii flying will help buoy revenues but overall, the 717 deal points to broader structural issues within Southwest. Your thoughts?

Cranky Flier: Yeah, if we look at Delta, this acquisition really is just a continuation of a successful policy.  But I would argue that the 737-900ER is more of the same.  It's a new airplane but it's not the MAX, so I bet they were able to get a good deal simply because of that.  Delta really is opportunistic.  If the ability to pick up other airplanes for cheap arises, I'm sure it'll pounce.  But I would be shocked if they found something as sweet as this 717 which allows them to ditch a bunch of fuel inefficient 50-seaters and bring more flying in-house making employees happy.  The cherry on top is that Southwest is paying to outfit them in Delta's configuration, doing all maintenance, and painting them.  They'll be delivered like new to Delta ready to go.  Beautiful plan.

As for Southwest, I just don't know what to think.  I was excited about the possibility of Southwest being able to service smaller cities - it could open new opportunities I thought.  But Southwest pulled out of nearly every small city AirTran served.  It also went and ditched the 717, paying dearly for the privilege, effectively saying it can't do it at all.

So that puts all of Southwest's eggs in the international basket.  There is limited opportunity in the US for the airline.  Hawai'i and Caribbean/Latin are really the only growth opportunites that are big enough with high enough fares to support Southwest's higher costs.  That can tide them over for awhile, but it's sad to think that's the only thing out there.

You would imagine that Southwest would have to start adding new fees seriously at some point.  They have danced around that point with some minor fees like charging you if you no-show for a flight, but they haven't touched bag fees and change fees.  They've really dug themselves a hole if they even try at this point because marketing has really drilled it into people's heads.  I think they can still get away with charging for a 2nd bag, so that would be something.  But they are in a very sticky situation now.

Editors Note: After I wrote about Delta getting used A320s/NGs, Richard Anderson on Delta's Q4 earnings call:

"Given the glut of narrow-bodies coming on the market right now, we think that there is going to be significant opportunities because residual values on eight to ten year old narrow-body airplanes are on a significant downward slide. And we will continue to be with the glut of airplanes there."

And we finished up by discussing the drama surrounding United, Southwest, and the fight for international service at Houston Hobby.

Cranky Flier: The whole thing seemed absurd to me.  Southwest only flies to Hobby in Houston and it wants to push internationally.  It stands to reason that it would want to operate those flights out of Hobby instead of splitting its operation into two airports.  That would just be stupid.  But the response United gave to this plan was simply absurd.  It trotted out all these consultants to do studies saying how it would ruin the entire Houston area and United would have to slash and burn everything.  Oh please.  Southwest might do some Caribbean and Latin flying but that's about it.  Yet United acted like it would have to lay everyone off and stop flying to Houtson altogether.  (Yeah, that's only a slight exaggeration to how silly they sounded.)

Even after Southwest won the battle, United tried to blame flight cuts and staff lay offs that were in the works on the decision.  Southwest isn't even starting to fly for some time and nobody knows exactly where they'll go.  To blame the addition of a customs/immigration facility at Hobby for the cuts is just a joke.  I imagine United might pay for this for quite some time with local Houston politicians.  I don't think they should be expecting any favors.

Vinay: I agree that it was very much a knee-jerk reaction from United, and probably a bad one in terms of the Houston market moving forward. But it is important to point out that United is far and away the leader in the US-Latin America market in terms of profitability, with a superb 29.9% net margin (though American has the highest yields thanks to its Miami hub) as per DOT data for Q3. And for the most part, United’s Latin American network is through Houston. They command extremely high fares on some of the O&D monopoly markets to and from Latin America. When you throw Southwest into the equation, it takes away a lot of the VFR and leisure volume, as well as potentially some of the incremental business travel. And some of the connections to Mexico that are very competitive through Houston will be lost to Southwest at Hobby.  Will all of this kill United? No. But it is a significant threat to what is one of their cash cows. I think we all saw with the annual results last week that United is not in tip top financial shape. Regardless of their methods, I think it is understandable that United would strike out and try to shunt this in whatever way possible. Houston is a large and growing city with a large enough O&D base to sustain these two operations simultaneously. And we’ll likely see United manage its capacity allocation to Latin America better; large RJs versus mainline to Central American and Mexico for example. And all of this assumes that Southwest is able to get an international operation with all related reservations infrastructure in place by 2014; far from a sure bet.

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The financial mess that is Kingfisher (Guest Post at Cranky Flier)

Recently, Cranky Flier author Brett Snyder has begun publishing a series of guest posts as he and his wife are expecting their first child this week. I wrote a guest post for him on Kingfisher Airlines, and you can see the results below.

Link to the post
Could there ever be an airline as bad as Air India, who Cranky named the worst airline ever in August of 2011? Well, at least from a financial perspective Kingfisher Airlines is approaching that level. Yes, that Kingfisher Airlines; the one with a 5 star rating from Skytrax.

Now some of you might be shocked at this statement, and I am engaging in a bit of hyperbole; but since Cranky named Air India the worst airline ever in August of 2011, the fiscal situation at Kingfisher has denigrated to such an extent, that it can be placed in the same ballpark as the mess at Air India.

Don’t believe me? Well let’s play a little game. Pull up Cranky’s post from August and read these next few statements and compare them to some of the events in the Air India.

  • On July 18th, 12 Kingfisher flights were cancelled due to non-payment of fuel dues to 3 Indian fuel companies (Air India has had more than 25 flights cancelled for this same reason over the past 4 months.
  • In August, Kingfisher deferred payment of salaries to its employees due to a lack of cash.
  • Over the summer, Kingfisher had its in-flight entertainment shut off for non-payment
  • Up to 13 Kingfisher flights were cancelled on September 27th for “Scheduled Maintenance”
  • In late September a report from Veritas Investment Corp proclaimed Kingfisher to be bankrupt.
  • Over the past 3 months, Kingfisher have had 7-15 of their fleet of 27 ATR turboprops grounded due to “maintenance issues” which has prevented Kingfisher from returning these aircraft to lessors.
  • In late November, lessors began to re-possess Kingfisher aircraft, starting with a pair of AerCap owned A320s.
  • Kingfisher lost a ton of money during the US 3rd quarter period, paying nearly 22% of its quarterly revenue in interest and finance charges; their debt situation makes American’s look positively appetizing.
  • In early December, Kingfisher was put on a cash and carry operation at its hub in Mumbai; under which the carrier has to pay for its operations (landing and parking amongst others) at the beginning of the day in cash, or they will not be permitted to operate flights from Mumbai on that day. Airlines typically pay for larger blocks of time (at least a month) using checks, but enough of Kingfisher’s checks bounced that the airport decided that it couldn’t afford to rely on Kingfisher’s shoddy credit.
And just to top it all, in early November, Kingfisher pulled an almost Qantas-esque move, announcing plans to cancel more than 30, then 50 daily flights; representing around a 15% capacity cut. While these types of schedule changes are not unprecedented (see Delta pulling down a ton of trans-Atlantic flights during this fall period), Kingfisher’s management of the whole situation was pretty bad. They gave their passengers no advance notice that the cancellations would hit . . . . None. Passengers were literally informed the day of; leaving thousands stranded around India. Certainly business travelers were alienated by the move; business travel in India does not work exactly the way that it does in the US, but reliability is still hugely important to such passengers. This sort of surprise move tends to spook most travelers (like Qantas’ fleet grounding did), and could affect Kingfisher’s revenue performance moving forward. Given that Kingfisher was in dire financial straits at the time (and is still looking for an equity partner), the move might not have been so bad had Kingfisher not stated less than a month before that it planned to re-align its strategy to capture a larger share of the business travel market.

In mid October, Kingfisher announced that it would be dropping its low-cost arm Kingfisher Red; and focusing on the full service business. This move was almost universally criticized by aerospace analysts in the region who pointed to the fact that air travel growth in India is mostly occurring in the low cost sector. However, I believe that it was the correct move. Kingfisher has such high unit costs (even at their “low cost” subsidiary), that any attempt to match India’s true LCCs on pricing would basically be selling tickets at a loss. Aiming for high value business travelers to offset higher costs makes sense; but not if you alienate those very passengers with your next move.

Given the picture I painted above, one might question whether Kingfisher will be in business for very long, and if OneWorld really wants Kingfisher in its alliance. Neither question is much of a concern. See [Kingfisher CEO] Vijay Mallya is a bit like Richard Branson in that Kingfisher is his pet dream project, not the core business. As with Richard Branson’s various Virgin media brands, the true source of funding behind Kingfisher is Mallya’s United Breweries conglomerate, which makes some of India’s most popular alcoholic beverages among other things. But the UB Group has tired of paying for Kingfisher’s sustained losses and accumulated debt, so Mallya is looking for an outside investor. However, Vijay Mallya is a very well connected businessman both in financial and political circles. There is no doubt that Kingfisher will get the funds it needs to stay in business for the immediate future.

His connections in politics have also paid dividends; already the Indian government is re-considering its stand on Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in Indian airlines of up to 26%. He has also managed to at least start discussion about the burdensome regulations and taxes levied on the Indian aviation sector. In fact, there is plenty of noise around a potential joint OneWorld equity investment in Kingfisher. Which brings me to my second point, OneWorld needs an Indian partner too much (after going 0 for China) to simply give up on Kingfisher. Moreover, Kingfisher is still a superb service airline. Their flight crew is top notch, and the IFE on their domestic flights is as good as, if not better than that of most US carriers. In fact, Kingfisher’s service will remind you of the 80s and 90s in the US, when checked bags were free, and in-flight meals plentiful. Thus you shouldn’t regard my discussion of their finances above as an admonishment not to fly Kingfisher. They are in no danger of going out of business any time soon, and financial relief is forthcoming (hopefully) from the Indian government. Kingfisher is currently scheduled to enter the oneworld Alliance on February 10th, 2012, and unlike Air India I’m almost certain that Kingfisher will seal the deal.


Sadly, this post was written before the DGCA's most recent report was made public, but please do enjoy the post and let me know your thoughts via a comment below.
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Guest Post: What is a Travel Concierge?

When I tell people about my company, Cranky Concierge, I always explain that we specialize in air travel assistance. Want to guess what the usual reaction to that is?

“What do I need that for?”

Building a business that’s not something people even realize they might need can be a challenge, so I’m grateful to Vinay and Devesh for letting me guest post about what we do.

The short answer is that you need us if something goes wrong with your flights, but you might want us around just in case.

Part of what we do is similar to what a travel agent does. In fact, we are agents so we can not only book your flights but also hotels, car rentals, vacation packages, etc. We’re affiliated with a larger network, so we can get access to great rates from time to time. If you’re traveling internationally in a premium cabin, then the chances of finding better rates goes up.

But it’s what we do after everything is booked that really helps us to stand out. In fact, many if not most of our clients come to us after their flights have been booked. When a client signs up, we ask for all the flight details for the upcoming trip. We put that into our system and we monitor the flights for any problems. A couple weeks before departure, a concierge is assigned to each client. That concierge follows the entire trip him/herself so there is no call center. You never have to explain the history of your trip or what your preferences are. Your concierge will already know.

Before departure, you’ll get an update from your concierge via email, text message, tweet, or really any method you prefer. Your concierge will give you gate information, let you know where your airplane is coming from, and monitor the weather. If everything goes as planned, then think of our service as more of an insurance-style policy. You’re paying for a guardian to keep an eye on your flights and help if something goes wrong.

And when it does go wrong, we spring into action. We’ve had client miss flights and we’ve had to help them find alternates. We’ve had weather cancellations, volcanic eruptions, mechanical problems, you name it. Our concierges are all self-proclaimed “airline dorks,” so they’re very good at navigating through problematic situations.

For example, we recently had a client flying from London to Honolulu via San Francisco. His first flight had a mechanical and he was going to miss his connection. We worked with United to get him booked on a connection the next day. We contacted his hotel at his destination and spoke with others who need to be know that he would be delayed. Though this client is well-traveled and knows his way around the airlines, he was very grateful to have had us there to help get everything fixed so he didn’t have to worry.

Sometimes, it’s the concierge’s creativity that really helps us stand out. One client absolutely had to be in Nice, France when the Icelandic volcano shut down most of Northern Europe. Their flights were canceled and they were afraid that they wouldn’t be able to get there . . . until we stepped in. We had to route them from Los Angeles to Tel Aviv, then connect back to Madrid. From there, they took an overnight train to Barcelona and then drove the 600km to Nice. It wasn’t an ideal way to get there, but if people need to be somewhere, we can almost always find a way.

Our service is global. We can help you wherever you are, including India, of course. In fact, as I write this we have someone heading for Mumbai this very evening.

This might seem like an expensive service, but it’s really not. If you sign up in advance, short haul flights start at only $15 each way with longer haul trips at $30. For last minute assistance, if you get stuck, it’s only $150. You can find out more by visiting our website at crankyconcierge.com, emailing us as info@crankyconcierge.com, or calling us at +1 707 797 7474.

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Brett Snyder is the author of the award-winning Cranky Flier blog. He is also the President and Chief Airline Dork of Cranky Concierge air travel assistance.
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Guest Post: Top 10 US airline stories of 2011

There was plenty of airline action in the US this year, so when I was asked to come up with the ten biggest stories of 2011, I quickly realized that was a tough task. After much thought, here is my list of the ten biggest stories to hit the US airline industry in the last year in chronological order.

Southwest Overhauls Rapid Rewards

It had been rumored for years, but at the beginning of 2011, Southwest finally rolled out its new Rapid Rewards frequent flier program. The new program is dollar-based, so it swept aside the standard Southwest had used since inception of the program. Many fliers were angry at the change, but the bigger issue involved all the technical glitches after launch.

American Takes On the GDSs

This fight has really been going on for years, but it heated up early in 2011 with lawsuits flying back and forth between American and the Global Distribution Systems (GDSs). Airlines have been unsuccessful so far at truly altering the relationship with the GDSs, but it’s not for lack of trying. This fight will continue for years to come.

Premium Economy Grows in Importance

United had its Economy Plus offering on the airplane for years but nobody responded. That all changed in 2011. First, Delta announced it would put Economy Comfort on its international fleet. It later followed that up with an announcement that the domestic fleet will get it as well. Meanwhile, the new United confirmed that it will keep Economy Plus on its airplanes. Even American got into the act by vaguely mentioning that there will be a premium economy product on its newest international aircraft, the 777-300ER.

Delta Tracks Bags Like FedEx


Airlines had begun boosting their bag tracking capabilities awhile ago, but Delta finally became the first airline to give travelers what they wanted – FedEx-style bag tracking throughout the travel process. The airline even came up with a nifty little iPhone app that lets you scan your tags and automatically follow them along the way.

The Rise of Streaming Video

In the inflight entertainment world, wifi-based entertainment systems finally took center stage. American announced it would start streaming video on some flights while others jumped on the bandwagon as well. This is only going to grow in popularity.

Delta and US Airways Finally Swap Slots


It seemed to take forever to find the right mix, but Delta and US Airways did eventually propose a deal that the Department of Transportation liked. Delta took most of the US Airways slots at New York/ La Guardia airport while US Airways took most of Delta’s at Washington/National. It’s not completely finished yet, but we’re in the home stretch. The landscape of commercial aviation in both cities is dramatically changed for the better.

Spirit Gets Aggressively Domestically

Little Spirit Airlines has thrived with its ultra low cost carrier model in Florida and the Caribbean, but it made a big push this year to bring it to the domestic market with new flying in Vegas, Chicago, Dallas/Ft Worth, and Phoenix/Mesa. This trend has thrived in Southeast Asia and Europe, but it hasn’t quite caught on in the same way in the US . . . until now.

Delta Cuts Small Cities

Delta decided that the time had come to cut a slew of small cities from its network if it couldn’t get more government subsidies. That’s just one little move in a growing trend. As economics change, small cities feel the brunt of the pain. They’re going to keep losing service at alarming rates.
The Illegal US Airways Pilot Slowdown

It’s no secret that US Airways pilots haven’t been happy with their contracts, but they’ve done very little themselves to fix that problem. Instead, they’ve done counter-productive things, like putting together an illegal slowdown. The courts got involved and told them to back off. They have for now.

American Files for Bankruptcy Protection


The final story is a big one. American, the airline that long touted its pride in being the last of the giants to have not filed for bankruptcy, finally lost that battle. It filed for bankruptcy protection and the process of cutting costs began. We don’t know what American will look like in a year, but it’s going to look different than it does today.

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Brett Snyder is the author of the award-winning Cranky Flier blog. He is also the President and Chief Airline Dork of Cranky Concierge air travel assistance.
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