Table of Contents S.No. | Topic | 1. | General Environmental Analysis | 2. | Industry’s Dominant Traits | 3. | Based on Porter’s Five Forces Model Attractiveness Industry | 4. | Strategic Group in Industry | 5. | Industry Dynamics within the Dominant Strategic Group (Porter Five Forces Model) | 6. | Drivers of Change and their implication on the industry | 7. | Key Success Factors | 8. | Competitive Profile Matrix (CPM) | 10. | External Factor Evaluation
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2.1 Introduction ! Despite adverse economic conditions in the recent past‚ the airline industry globally has proven to be resilient. After a short downturn‚ the industry recovered quickly and‚ in fact‚ grew moderately. From 2011 to 2031‚ annual air traffic is expected to increase at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 5%‚ and reach about 13.8 billion revenue passenger kilometers (RPK). ! While the mainstay markets (Europe and North America) have not shown significant growth‚ and
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Threat of Entry There is a high barrier entering airlines industry since it requires high capital to set up everything such as purchase or lease air craft‚ set up office‚ hire staffs‚ and etc. Thus‚ this has reduced the treat to Malindo Airline. Moreover‚ brand awareness is quite important in this industry. Hence‚ to enter this industry not only required high capital but also have to take some time to create brand awareness. Consumers always choose the product or service they really trust. Thus
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1. Competitive rivalry – This is the rivalry with other airlines in your existing markets or future markets. Take for example of Malaysia Airlines‚ it will have to identify and segment its markets first. Probably it will come out with a cross matrix segments of: a. geographical markets b. demography c. Travel purposes. Let view one of the segment‚ geographical .. for Malaysia. Then we can see straight away the prominent competitor which is Air Asia. The competitor will be one of the considerations
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Southwest Airlines: Leading the Airline Industry one Statistic at a Time Victoria Mack May 6th‚ 2013 Quantitative Research Methods Term Paper I. Introduction “The mission of Southwest Airlines is dedication to the highest quality of customer service delivered with a sense of warmth‚ friendliness‚ individual pride‚ and company spirit.” (Kelly‚ Gary) By providing the highest quality of customer service‚ Southwest Airlines business model is set up to provide
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Australia Threat of new entrants – The airline industry has been around for over 100 years and due to large capital requirements and overhead (high cost of planes)‚ the industry would not be greatly affected by new entrants and therefore the threat of new entrants is high. With low operating margins and high initial investment‚ a high market share is needed to ensure full flights (maximizing profits on each flight). This would be difficult for a new entrant. Industry is mature so is probably not attractive
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Executive Summary Southwest Airlines has been a strong growth company over the last 35 years. Using its low-cost‚ passenger friendly‚ point-to-point operational strategy‚ Southwest has been able to sustain considerable growth year after year and remain profitable for 33 straight years. While Southwest has gained market share in recent years‚ legacy carriers have struggled due to depressed market conditions. The entire airline industry has endured expensive labor contracts‚ soaring energy costs and
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framework to show how the structure of the airline industry has caused low profitability during the past twenty years. Below are Porter’s five forces of competition. In them you will understand what has caused low profitability. The bargaining power of suppliers: Labor is the airline industry’s largest single expense. Most airline workers belong to one of a dozen unions‚ which give the airline workers strong power in negotiations with the airlines. Airline operations are also energy-intensive‚ and
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product and airline travel‚ an elastic product. Thanks to the addictive nature of coffee‚ consumers prioritize this good and the retail coffee industry has been able to push the envelope on price. On the other hand‚ the history of the airline industry has shown that air travel is thought of as a lavish good and only when feasible will consumers purchase airline travel. Consumer preferences reflect coffee as a necessity and airline travel as a luxury; therefore‚ the two industries have opposing
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Introduction of United Airlines/Industry History Helen M. Petrucci Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Abstract An abstract is a single paragraph‚ without indentation‚ that summarizes the key points of the manuscript in 150 to 250 words. For simpler papers in Paul Rose’s classes‚ a somewhat shorter abstract is fine. The purpose of the abstract is to provide the reader with a brief overview of the paper. When in doubt about a rule‚ check the sixth edition APA manual rather than
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