MA722AssgntThree(3) MNG93002 Strategy and Case Analysis Assessment 2 – Background Information US airlines – Case Study The United States Airline Industry The U.S. airline industry has long struggled...

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MA722AssgntThree(3) MNG93002 Strategy and Case Analysis Assessment 2 – Background Information US airlines – Case Study The United States Airline Industry The U.S. airline industry has long struggled to make a profit. Analysts point to several factors that have made the industry a difficult place in which to do business. Over the years, larger carriers such as United, Delta, and American have been hurt by low-cost budget carriers entering the industry, including Southwest Airlines, Jet Blue, AirTran Airways, and Virgin America. These new entrants have used non-union labor, often fly just one type of aircraft (which reduces maintenance costs), have focused on the most lucrative routes, typically fly point-to-point (unlike the incumbents, which have historically routed passengers through hubs), and compete by offering very low fares. New entrants have helped to create a situation of excess capacity in the industry and have taken share from the incumbent air- lines, which often have a much higher cost structure (primarily due to higher labor costs). The incumbents have had little choice but to respond to fare cuts, and the result has been a protracted industry price war. To complicate matters, the rise of Internet travel sites such as Expedia, Travelocity, and Orbitz have made it much easier for consumers to comparison shop, and has helped to keep fares low. Beginning in 2001, higher oil prices also complicated matters. Fuel costs accounted for 32% of total revenues in 2011 (labor costs accounted for 26%; together they are the two biggest variable expense items). Many airlines went bankrupt in the 2000s, including Delta, Northwest, United, and US Airways. The larger airlines continued to fly, however, as they reorganized under Chapter 11 bankruptcy laws, and excess capacity persisted in the industry. The late 2000s and early 2010s were characterized by a wave of mergers in the industry. In 2008, Delta and Northwest merged. In 2010, United and Continental merged, and Southwest Airlines announced plans to acquire AirTran. In late 2012, American Airlines put itself under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. US Airways subsequently pushed for a merger agreement with American Airlines, which was under negotiation in early 2013. MA722AssgntThree(3) MNG93002 Strategy and Case Analysis Assessment 2 Due Date: 9:00 am (AEST), Monday, April 15, 2019 Value: 40% (marked out of 40) Instructions: This assessment focuses on the student’s understanding and application of strategic concepts associated with Strategic Position and Strategic Choice; outlined in Parts I and II the textbook. Read the short account of the US airlines industry provided in the Task 2 folder (Assessment 2 – Background Information) and prepare a 2500-word report that addresses the following: • Conduct a PESTEL and competitive forces analysis of the U.S. airline industry. What does this analysis tell you about key drivers for change, industry attractiveness, potential opportunities and possible threats? • Given your analysis if the Strategic Position of the US airlines industry, what Strategic Choices do you think an airline should adopt to improve its chances of being persistently profitable? Report Structure: Note: Executive Summary, Table of Contents and Reference List do not contribute to the word count. Section Content Assignment Cover Sheet Assignment/student information Title Page This is developed by the individual student. Identify the unit name & code, assignment title, student name & ID, and the word count. The title should provide insight into the focus of the report. The Title Page is not numbered. Executive Summary A brief overview of the importance of the topic and the aim and findings of the report. Must be on a page by itself that is numbered in roman numerals. Table of Contents Professional presentation using MSWord Insert Table of Contents function. On a page by itself and numbered in roman numerals. Introduction “Page 1” begins here at the bottom right hand corner. Use the ‘page number’ formatting function for this purpose. The remaining pages should then be numbered ‘Page 2’, ‘Page 3’, etc. Provide topic orientation (what is the topic and why is it important), state the aim of the report, define any key terms and outline what will be presented in the report. Body Do not use this word. Develop appropriate heading(s). Context: Historical overview of the economic performance of the US airline industry Theory: Explanation and relevance of Strategic Position/Choice, PESTEL analysis, five forces tool and its advantages and disadvantages and relevant strategic choice concepts. Analysis: PESTEL analysis identifying key drivers, five forces analysis of US airline industry with diagram summarising main findings. Discussion: Evaluation of key drivers of change, industry attractiveness, potential opportunities and possible threats. Application of strategic choice concepts to potential strategies for profitability. Conclusions Restate the aim of report and its significance (i.e. the aim). Summarise findings/evaluation. State limitations of report. Recommendations List in dot point short sentences the strategies for airline profitability List of References Correctly apply Harvard referencing style. Appendices Any additional information if required. Report Format: • Perspective – Use 3rd-person perspective when writing. • Font style – Times New Roman, 12pt, justified, 1½ line spacing. • Margins – top and bottom to be 2.54cm. Left and right to be 2.54cm. No page borders. • Spelling – specify Australian English language/grammar when running spell-check. • Writing – Grammar and expression must conform to the standards of a professional academic report.
Answered Same DayApr 11, 2021MNG93002Southern Cross University

Answer To: MA722AssgntThree(3) MNG93002 Strategy and Case Analysis Assessment 2 – Background Information US...

Dipayan answered on Apr 12 2021
142 Votes
Running Header: Strategy and Case Analysis
Strategy and Case Analysis
Strategy and Case Analysis
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Executive Summary
The report discusses about the strategic position of the US airline industry and its strategic choice. There is different strategic analysis that has been conducted in order to understand the external environment and the competitiveness in the market. The first part of the report consists of a historical overview of the economic performance of the US airline industry.
In the next part of the report, PESTEL analysis has been conducted to understand the different external factors affecting the US airline industry. The next part of the report concludes with discussion the key drivers of change, potential opportunities and the threat of the US airline industry referring to the mentioned two analyses. The last part of the report consists of a strategic choice that the US airline industry must adapt referring to the strategic position that the industry is now in the context of both the analysis that has been provided.
Table of Contents
Introduction    2
Economic Performance of the US airline industry    2
PESTEL Analysis    4
Porter’s Five Forces    8
Strategic Choice Concept    9
Conclusion    10
References    12
Introduction
The assignment gives an overall idea of US airlines and strategic management and its various concepts. The assignment would help in understanding various strategic management aspects to understand the market condition of the US airlines industry. The strategic concepts would help in gaining additional knowledge about strategic position and strategic choice that is required by the US airline industry.
In the first part of the report, PESTEL Analysis has been done to gain knowledge about different external factors that may affect the US airline industry. The next part of the report consists of Porter’s Five Forces Analysis to understand the competitiveness of the market US market in terms of the Airline industry. The next part of the report concludes with discussion the key drivers of change, potential opportunities and the threat of the US airline industry referring to the mentioned two analyses. The last part of the report consists of a strategic choice that the US airline industry must adapt referring to the strategic position that the industry is now in the context of both the analysis that has been provided.
Economic Performance of the US airline industry
US airline industry has been struggling to incur profit from a very long time. There are several factors that have been identified that have made the airline industry a difficult place to run their business and make a significant amount of profit. These factors have led to the downfall of the US airline industry in one way or the other. Giants in the US airline industry like the Delta, United and American have been deeply affected by low-cost budget careers which have not only affected their profit but also have taken away customers. The entrance of low-cost budget careers like Jet Blue, Southwest Airlines, AirTran and Virgin America has highly affected the US airline industry. For the big giants like Delta, American and others it was difficult to compete in the market with the low-cost budget career. People were generally getting attracted to the low-cost budget career which highly affected the US airline industry. The new entrants in the US airline market mainly used non-union labor which helped them reduce labor cost, flew only one the type of aircraft which helped them immensely in reducing maintenance cost. The new entrants also focused on the most lucrative routes that helped them gain an advantage as people used to travel more on these routes which fetched them good revenue, they also flew point-to-point, unlike the US airline players where they traveled through hubs which again gave the new entrants huge benefit. The new entrants mainly beat the incumbent airlines in terms of labor cost. The incumbent airlines have to pay more wages as they are from labor union which affects their business.
With all these factors the incumbent had a very little to choose from hence reduced their price which then turned out to be a price war between the new entrants and the incumbent. As soon as the incumbent stabilized themselves by reducing its prices to an extent from where little profit could be gained the internet travel sites made it more complicated, In this case the internet travel sites like Orbitz, Expedia and Travelocity compared prices between different airlines which helped the customers by keeping the process low in order to compete with the competitors.
Later in the year 2001, the oil prices made matters more complicated. It has been seen that in the US airline industry the fuel cost accounted for 32% of the total revenue and the labor cost accounted for 26%. These were identified to be the two most variable expense items. There were many airlines that were already bankrupt in the 2000s due to these expenses as it was getting difficult to maintain the airlines with such low profit. Some of the bankrupted airlines at that time were United, Delta, US Airways and Northwest. The bigger airlines in the industry continued their operations persisting excess capacity in the industry.
In the gap between the years the 2000s and 2010s, various mergers took place. In the year 2008 Northwest and Delta merged together. In the year 2010 Continental and United merged together in the year 2010 and there was an announcement by Southwest Airlines to acquire AirTran. American airlines in the year 2012 considered and put...
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