Marketing Strategy China Airlines on Guam CASE SYNOPSIS: This is a case study about how a foreign carrier‚ China Airlines‚ adapts it strategy competing in the Guam-based airline industry. The case traces the company’s history on Guam from setting up its regular flight schedule between Guam and Taipei‚ through a pricing competition with its main competitor Continental Micronesia‚ to today where it occupies the sole market share of flights between these locations. In addition‚ the
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Case Study: Distribution Strategy Distribution strategies exist in three forms: exclusive distribution‚ selective distribution‚ and intensive distribution. Kotler and Keller (2009) define each of the distribution strategies as: exclusive distribution limits the number of intermediaries used; selective distribution depends on a limited number of intermediaries; and intensive distribution works with as many outlets as feasible. The distribution strategy of the airlines industry was not a part of
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COURSEWORK 1: The US Airline Industry in 2004 Sommaire Introduction 3 I. The External Analysis 3 1 The macro-environment 3 2 The micro-environment 5 II. The Internal Analysis 7 1. SWOT analysis 7 III. The Strategic choices 9 1. The Bowman’s strategy clock 9 Introduction The US Airlines market experiences ups and downs‚ and different phases; for example the period of regulation up until 1978 and the period of deregulation. The US civil airline was created in 1920‚ but
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Background: Southwest Airlines is the largest airline measured by number of passengers carried each year within the United States. It is also known as a ‘discount airline’ compared with its large rivals in the industry. Rollin King and Herb Kelleher founded Southwest Airlines on June 18‚ 1971. Its first flights were from Love Field in Dallas to Houston and San Antonio‚ short hops with no-frills service and a simple fare structure. The airline began with one simple strategy: “If you get your passengers
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United and Continental merge to create world’s biggest airline United and Continental Said to Agree to Merge United is buying Continental‚ and the combined company will keep the United name and be based in Chicago. Jeffery A. Smisek‚ Continental’s chief executive‚ would run the company. If the deal wins antitrust approval‚ the merged airline would replace Delta Air Lines as the top carrier. WORLD’S BIGGEST AIRLINES * 1 - American Airlines * 2 - United Airlines * 3 - Delta Air Lines
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Strategy and Policy Case 2. Southwest Airlines. I- Strategic Profile and Case Analysis Purpose Southwest airlines were founded in 1971 by King and Herb Kellerher. They started with a low cost strategy in a risky market where profitability depends a lot on fuel prices and external factors‚ such as the willingness of consumers to pay ticket prices. They started growing a lot with various strategies that permitted them beat a lot of their competitors‚ but in order to stay in the market they
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Pricing Analysis Report AIRASIA BUDGET AIRLINE I. Executive summary Budget airline industry Singaporean airlines industry grew by 10.3% in 2007 to reach a value of S$6.5 billion‚ growing by more than 10% up to now. Noticeably‚ low-cost carriers have been the industry’s success story over the past decade. It has won huge number of passengers‚ stealing full-service market share and forcing full-service airline such as SIA to run its own low-cost options such as Scoot
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Distribution Strategy WS5A4 Southwest Airlines - Case Study Operating under an intensely competitive environment‚ Southwest Airlines carefully projects its image so customers can differentiate its product from its competitors. Southwest positions itself in all its marketing communications as the only low-fare‚ short-haul‚ high-frequency‚ point-to-point carrier in America that is fun to fly (Cheng‚ 2010). Its low-priced fares are a brand equity which it "owns" in the mathematical sense of being the
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important trends in the airline industry 3 The position of Singapore Airlines and reasons for prior success 4 Current strategy according to Rust‚ Norman and Dickson 6 The major issues Singapore Airlines is facing 7 Is Singapore Airlines current strategy sustainable for the future? 7 SWOT analysis 8 Future strategy for Singapore Airlines 9 References 10 Introduction The purpose of this paper is to advice the management of Singapore Airline (SIA) which strategy they should follow
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Jet Airways takes off with Citrix P50 1. What problems does Jet Airways hope that Citrix technologies will solve? The inefficiencies of the old system Jet Airways used were costing Jet Airways the time of its engineers and money that could have been used on maintaining its planes‚ instead of needlessly maintaining excess inventory. They weren’t able to interact with one another or with finance and inventory systems. Jet Airways turned to Citrix Systems for help in addressing these problems
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