ELP_WN_Psgr
Senior
- Nov 29, 2003
- 419
- 0
- Thread Starter
- Thread starter
- #16
You miss the point. Completely.
Southwest is, has been, and presumably always will be about frequency.
If they get to where the load factor is too high (and they assume that if your load factor is generally above 67% you are losing traffic to someone), they don't raise the fare. They add a flight.
Go back and look at what Southwest's LF has been each and every year since about 1973.
Every time it has crept up above the magical 2/3rds.....you would see frequency added and the load factor knocked back down.
All the advertising, marketing, tv shows, what-have-you.....have the desired effect. They get people to fly Southwest.
And then Southwest adds enough flights to where everyone rides around on an airplane that is 2/3rds full and they make a profit for their shareholders and their employees ion the process.
Pretty cool, huh?
Southwest is, has been, and presumably always will be about frequency.
If they get to where the load factor is too high (and they assume that if your load factor is generally above 67% you are losing traffic to someone), they don't raise the fare. They add a flight.
Go back and look at what Southwest's LF has been each and every year since about 1973.
Every time it has crept up above the magical 2/3rds.....you would see frequency added and the load factor knocked back down.
All the advertising, marketing, tv shows, what-have-you.....have the desired effect. They get people to fly Southwest.
And then Southwest adds enough flights to where everyone rides around on an airplane that is 2/3rds full and they make a profit for their shareholders and their employees ion the process.
Pretty cool, huh?