Title: The Flag Carrier Challenging
1- The Flag Carrier Challenging
- the Low-Cost Concept
- Vagn Soerensen,
- Chairman, AEA
- CEO, Austrian Airlines
- Copenhagen
- August 30, 2004
2Todays Agenda
1. The No Frills Carriers phenomenon
2. The Changing Market Place for European Air
Transport
3. Full Service Network Carriers, an
essential macro-economic factor
4. The Way Forward
5. Conclusion
3No Frills Carriers (NFCs) in Europe a few key
points
- NFCs operate in /- 400 markets ca 150 airports
(2003) - NFCs do develop new markets
- local services
- non-stop routes
- Explosive growth could be capped
- Network/Full Service Carriers find the right
response narrow the competitive disadvantage - Both business models converge
- NFCs complement products and services offered by
Full Service and Network Carriers - Air Travellers have clearly benefited from the
mutual influence of both market approaches
4NFCs in Europe market segment dominated by two
players
5Overcapacity in the NFC segment
- Example
- Ryanairs expansion is predicated on the notion
that their business model can be applied anywhere - 14 Ryanair (FR) routes were abandoned since
Summer 2003 - 37 FR routes were introduced since Summer 2003
- These 14 withdrawals show that the FR model
doesnt work everywhere
- ...there is going to be the Mother and Father of
all Fare Wars. There is going to be a ferocious
bloodbath... Micheal OLeary, 25 April 2004
6The Changing Market 1 Greater Flexibility and
Simplicity of the Traditional Model
Cost reduction
Towards an Efficient European Air Transport
System
Strategic repositioning
7The Changing Market 2 Customer behaviour is
changing
- Customer expects Internet to provide the
best/lowest possible fare offer - Price becomes the decisive factor
- Destination is not (always)!
- NFCs develop routes according to costs operating
cost differential NFC vs. Full Service Carrier
estimated to be minus 40-60 ! - No-Frills Carriers have generated air travel
growth in the short-haul sector - Yearly growth ca. 50 since 1995
- Appeal variety of market segments Existing
EY/BC Pax new passengers travellers using
other transport modes - No-Frills create new, additional routes
8The Changing Market 3 The Structural Change of
the European market structure is driven by the
NFC Segment
- Ryanair
- is an Irish company,
- is registered in the UK
- flies from Belgium to Italy
- and customers love it
- Segmentation of market into
- International network airlines with their
alliances - Regional niche carriers
- No-Frills on local short-haul markets
- Charter Airlines
- Erosion of traditional national markets
9The Changing Market 4 Flexible adaptation of
traditional pricing models
- Many Full-Service Carriers offer simple and low
prices!
- Different yield management philosophies
- In No-Frills model prices increase with demand
A seat on a flight is a scarce commodity - In Full Service model focus on business
travellerA seat on a flight is a perishable
commodity
In both cases, airlines can and do offer low fares
10AEA carriers are Full Service Network carriers
offering a Global Reach
From Linz to Kansas City
VIE
From Beijing to Odessa
From San Diego to Vienna
From Graz to Johannesburg
From Skopje to Sydney
- AEA
- 185 intercontinental destinations in 116
countries - 211 European destinations in
- 43 countries
- 800 destinations together with partner airlines!
- Networks and alliances enable
- travellers to fly from anywhere
- to anywhere
11Full Service Network Carriers are
Customer-oriented
- Through pricing, through ticketing
- Through check-in and baggage handling
- Onboard service
- Full-facility airports
- Frequent Flyer Programmes
- Schedule disruption backup
- Air travellers - especially on long-haul-routes -
expect convenience
12The response of the Network Full Service
Carriers
1. Create customer focus
2. Reduce costs
- Fleet review simplification increased
utilization - Routes review
- Staff reduced numbers, contracts
- Direct distribution reduction of commissions and
increased use of on-line booking and automated
ticketing - Purchasing rationalization of procurement
procedures
- New simplified fare structures
- Benefited from increased demand generated by
low-fares - New revenue report architecture
- Maximize existing investments in aircraft, IT,
staff - Reduce wastage inefficiencies
13Some AEA members have adopted a simplified
pricing structure
- One example Aer Lingus new approach
-
- Simplify the business less complexity
- Low fares
- Quality service
- More direct routes
- Lower costs
- Profits
14Austrians reaction to the LCC-challenge
- Dynamic approach in all important markets of
origin in order to generate additional incoming
traffic to destination Austria - Attractive offers on home-market in order to
promote outgoing traffic - Aggressive offers to stimulate transfer traffic
via Vienna - Comprehensive European-wide advertising and
promotion-campaign with innovative pricing
concepts, as - Special offers of free capacities at low prices
- "E-Weekend"
- "Click and Fly"
- red ticket (destinations in Germany from EUR
110.- , London and Dublin from EUR 150.- net.) - Consequently taking advantage of competitors'
weaknesses
15Offensive Marketing leads to gains in Market Share
Marktanteilsgewinn AAG vs. AEA (Passagier-Km)
Change in yoy (Passenger-Km, total int'l)
Source AEA Monthly Traffic Update, Austrian
Airlines Group
16Trends on containing costs continue
What did AEA-members do to cut costs?
17We now need even more pressure on external costs
18Survival of European Air Transport infrastructure
depends upon the active participation of all
industry providers
- Operating margins in airline industry must be
enhanced
19New European Parliament European Commission is
anopportunity to formulate new Air Transport
Policy
- AEA expects the EC to create a level playing
field - Between the airlines and their service providers
- Between the different airline business models
- With other modes of transportation
- Open Aviation Area needed on an international
level - Promote sustainable growth by liberalising
aviation and allowing the market to function - EP EC should therefore
- Avoid micro-management
- Focus on framework
- Make solid cost/benefit analysis
20Conclusion
- No-Frills Carriers have changed the market
behaviour irreversibly - Network carriers remain vital because they
- offer services which Pax need to all
destinations, globally - offer services, that No-Frills can not offer
- are beneficial to regional, national and
European economy - Network carriers are more nimble than ever before
by - reducing costs
- offfensive marketing
- expansion (into niches)
- Network Full Service Carriers will co-exist and
create a wider product range - Regulators must deal with underlying structural
issues and allow marketto absorb effects of NFC
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