Proceedings of the 13th Asia Pacific Management Conference‚ Melbourne‚ Australia‚ 2007‚ 431-436 Competitive Strategy for Low Cost Airlines Hongwei Jiang RMIT University‚ Australia Abstract The aim of this paper is to identify challenge faced to Low-Cost Carriers (LCCs) or Low-Cost Airlines and provide new insights into the development and competitive strategy for LCCs. LCCs are still a relatively new phenomenon in Australia since Virgin Blue and Jetstar came to the market. There are over 30 LCCs
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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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underlying strategy: creating a "unique and valuable [market] position"‚ making trade-offs by choosing "what not to do"‚ and creating "fit" by aligning company activities to with one another to support the chosen strategy.[5] Dr. Vladimir Kvint defines strategy as "a system of finding‚ formulating‚ and developing a doctrine that will ensure long-term success if followed faithfully."[6] Corporate strategy involves answering a key question from a portfolio perspective: "What business should we be
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"Almost no consensus exists about what corporate strategy is‚ much less about how a company should formulate it"[1]. This is due to a combination of factors that relate to strategy terms‚ concepts and principles and their practical application. This article is designed to provide executives with a better understanding of the nature and purpose of strategy and draws on Jack Welch ’s record at GE‚ as well as examples from other companies‚ to show how these strategy-related terms‚ concepts‚ and principles
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today the largest airline in the UK and the leader in terms of transatlantic flights globally. They are a group mainly based in Heathrow Airport‚ London Gatwick and Manchester‚ where they operate international & domestic scheduled air services for carriage of passengers‚ freight & mail. In addition‚ British Airways is part of the oneworld alliance that together comprises 700 destinations. Founded in 1999‚ American Airlines‚ Cathay Pacific‚ Finnair‚ Iberia‚ Japan Airlines‚ Lan Airlines‚ Malév‚ Qantas
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Unit title: Business Strategy TABLE OF CONTENTS OVERVIEW 3 STRATEGIC CONTEXT 3 STAKEHOLDER ANALYSIS 5 ENVIORNMENTAL AUDIT 8 ORGANIZATIONAL AUDIT 13 ANSOFF MATRIX 16 BOSTON CONSULTING GROUP BCG MATRIX 18 PLANNING SYSTEMS 20 STRATEGIC PLAN FOR GLOBAL TECH CORPORATION 21 RESOLVING ISSUES DURING PLANNING PROCES 22 REFERENCES 23 Overview Global Tech Corporation is a leading telecom provider
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Business Models in the Airline Industry January 30‚ 2013 Winter term 2013 Outline Evolution Hub-and-spoke route networks Legacy carriers Low cost carriers (LCCs) Ultra low cost carriers (ULCCs) Regional and charter carriers Evolution Before deregulation Full service network carriers No low cost models No price competition (same price on a given route) Full-quality service Point-to-point route networks After deregulation Proliferation
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Critical Analysis and Evaluation of Porters Five Forces in today’s Dynamic Business Environment INRODUCTION The environment in which organisations operate‚ changes day after day‚ with growing competition among its competitors for greater market share. As a result of intense competition among these organisations‚ it becomes very necessary for both new entrant and the incumbent organisations to periodically carry out analysis to ascertain strengths and the weaknesses are. This assay will focus
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Nokia’s Technology Strategy As you all know‚ Nokia was the world’s largest vendor of mobile phones from 1998 to now. One of the reasons this company success is because of the technology strategy. Nokia’s use of technology is a key contributor to the company’s overall business goals. The right technology strategy provides revenue through differentiation‚ brings cost advantage and a favourable supply environment. It gives access to the right technologies at the right time and also helps shape the
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Business Strategy -Strategic Intent Introduction Hamel and Prahalad argue that western companies used to "fitting" vision to adapt its resources‚ as a result‚ they will only seek to maintain their advantages. In contrast‚ Japanese companies dedicated to accelerating the pace of organizational learning in order to maximize resources‚ and trying to achieve seemingly impossible goals (Hamel and Prahalad‚ 1989:65). They believe these Japanese companies develop “an obsession with winning” among the
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