767jetz
Veteran
- Aug 20, 2002
- 3,286
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Not quite sure what that means or how it's relevant to what I said.Everyone loves the Kool-aid...
Whatever.
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Not quite sure what that means or how it's relevant to what I said.Everyone loves the Kool-aid...
Time for US define what they want to be once and for all. If they do not want to be the "quailty" airline that STAR and our "customer" codesharing would like, then it is time to leave STAR. US has made it clear that they are a LCC in the making. That has NOTHING to do with quality. That is a choice and unfortunately for those of us who like alot of service, one we must live with. There is no shame in that. It just may not be for Star or those who prefer a full service airline. Believe me, we at US have had to adjust as well.
I might add that I spent the better part of a week at World Headquarters in Chicago interfacing with UAL's Senior Executives from every department, very recently. Each executive, from Glenn Tilton himself, to Jane Allen, to Peter MacDonald, and Sean Donahue; all echoed the same theme in different meetings: They are all accutely aware of United's product and operational deficiencies, based upon customer feedback and customer input. Now that the restructuring process is behind them (us), they articulated that they are making it their mission to address and correct United's weaknesses.
That is exactly the same thing that Doug Parker and his team did at AWA and are starting to do at US Airways. They do first have a bunch of mergers issue as a top priority but I can tell you service is still the number one focus and certianly will be once the dust settles. As for UA good for you that you are improving becuase from 1998-2004 you where w/out a doubt the worst US carrier from an operational point of view and are making a turnaround much like DP did with AWA, which was really bad also from 1997-2000.
Time for US define what they want to be once and for all.
I think Doug has been pretty clear about his vision and it is as a hybrid. He has said many time that you can't out LUV SWA and that the big old bloated legacies are not working either. So the niche in essence is to by close enough to LUV, AIA etc but have some if not most of the benifits of a legacy. And being close to LUV will mean being frugal and provide excellent service. It is not an easy ballance but it can be done.
I will not be suprised that once the merger is done some of the improvements/upgrades a lot of people would like to see will actualy start to happen. We won't be the biggest and fanciest for sure, think more of a steady eddy right down the middle.