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QANTAS, it gets better.

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Old 6th Sep 2022, 22:54
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QANTAS, it gets better.

https://michaelwest.com.au/wing-crac...ef-alan-joyce/


For long-suffering Qantas customers this raises the spectre of further chaos over the Christmas travel season. The airline is already struggling to deliver capacity on the most lucrative routes, desperately recruiting pilots, pulling training pilots out of retirement and engaged in an escalating industrial dispute with its dramatically constrained engineering division. It is even mulling leasing foreign aircraft and pilots to fill its capacity problems inflicted by management decisions.

Questions were put to Qantas public relations division for this story. As yet, no response has been forthcoming.

The unscheduled maintenance for the A380s – which is 50 days for each aircraft – and that will be conducted with a team from Airbus, threatens to exacerbate capacity constraints in Qantas international. Its post-Covid plans have already been stymied by the delayed delivery of new Boeing 787’s and the airline’s customers may find themselves flying on foreign owned and crewed 787s over Christmas, something insiders describe as “a new low” under Joyce’s management.

Last edited by Australia2; 6th Sep 2022 at 23:22.
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Old 6th Sep 2022, 23:19
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Your link did not work….

Try this one…https://michaelwest.com.au/wing-crac...ef-alan-joyce/
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Old 6th Sep 2022, 23:22
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Thanks Icarus
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Old 6th Sep 2022, 23:31
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Old news, this was done in the 1980s for similar reasons.
Qantas was government owned then.
The children who write the online fish wraps and start the threads and are alleged insiders leaking out, should do a bit of homework before they get tooo excited.
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Old 6th Sep 2022, 23:44
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Originally Posted by wombat watcher
Old news, this was done in the 1980s for similar reasons.
Qantas was government owned then.
The children who write the online fish wraps and start the threads and are alleged insiders leaking out, should do a bit of homework before they get tooo excited.
I think the point is that none of this would have happened if QF focused on running an airline rather than focusing on screwing the humans that make the airline work, both passengers and staff. Management saw this coming but let their egos stop them from changing their focus.
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Old 7th Sep 2022, 00:14
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Originally Posted by gordonfvckingramsay
I think the point is that none of this would have happened if QF focused on running an airline rather than focusing on screwing the humans that make the airline work, both passengers and staff. Management saw this coming but let their egos stop them from changing their focus.
Emirates, Singapore, Qatar, Etihad, BA, LH, Korean all have the same or more A380s as Qantas but somehow the article leads us to believe this is almost all AJ’s fault and a QF specific problem. The fact EK and SQ with their 120 and 24 A380s will be more substantially affected is barely mentioned. I’d argue proportionally this would affect EK the most, but MWM is on a bit of a vendetta against QF at the moment so anything like that will be blown out of proportion. Just like the upcoming Dnata strike action, from media headlines you’d think it’s solely QF ground staff performing strikes, only QF services being affected and more “Chaos for QF”. But they service most international carriers (owned by EK).

You can do a Google News search for articles relating to the 2019 AD, you’ll see back then the focus on the articles was on Airbus as a manufacturer and the aircraft itself, QF only rated a mention in these articles as an affected airline, unlike the MWM article where it’s now seemingly all their fault.

The AD extends the inspection area from 2019 and brings the time interval forward a bit. It’s not as if the entire fleet needs to be imminently grounded.

Half of QF A380s were inspected in 2019, it would been more disruptive to the schedule then to take them out of service for the inspections than now when most are in the process of slowly being re-activated, with crew re-training being the biggest obstacle to bringing them back sooner.
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Old 7th Sep 2022, 08:58
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Originally Posted by wombat watcher
Old news, this was done in the 1980s for similar reasons.
Qantas was government owned then.
The children who write the online fish wraps and start the threads and are alleged insiders leaking out, should do a bit of homework before they get tooo excited.
Or, shock horror, history repeats? Ie haven’t learned previous mistakes?

Either way, QF is now one of the bottom barrel products out there.
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Old 7th Sep 2022, 09:34
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accountants cannot run airlines. Consistently skimming off the top has lead all Qantas group airlines to the bottom - What an embarrassment.
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Old 7th Sep 2022, 11:47
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Originally Posted by LostontheLOC
accountants cannot run airlines.
The data tends to contradict that contention.
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Old 7th Sep 2022, 12:10
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Anyone can run an airline, whether the airline progresses successfully is another question. Running an airline in a low competitive environment where cost control vs a captive market interact is not hard. Add competitive elements and the task gradually gets harder and a pure numbers man is going to have problems as the elements that attract and keep regular clientele requires spending. The 'accountant' type axe wielding CEO has been the go to for the last 40 years mainly as we are talking about existing companies that require trimming to be competitive vs new lean competition. But too much focus on cost and not enough on product will inevitably make you vulnerable to loss of customers to try competition, especially if it undercuts you. Then the cost driven entities compete on cost alone until something breaks, and the whole industry spirals into oblivion. This was a major issue in GA, especially in flying training, no one stood out as 'better' so the consumer decision comes down almost purely to cost, undercutting and eventually a non viable industry that is just the next moron with cash thinking they can do it 'cheaper'.

If you look at simple cons business use to bamboozle the consumer, look at petrol prices, it constantly bounces up and down, so that each station is not actually competing at all, as the consumer has no idea what the actual price is, then loyalty programs, ie pay 10cpl more with us, but we give you 4cpl back, what a deal. All to pay for the same thing that you can get at any pump and probably 10-20cpl cheaper down the road if you did some simple investigations. Airlines have used the seat space tools, loyalty programs and other marketing tweaks, but really its now coming down to price in an accelerating cost market.

Point is QF has cut the fat out and is into the bone that gels the premium customers to the business, as long as the market remains saturated they will kick along, but if this downturn gets nasty they may find themselves in a spot of bother as the product is no longer a step above the competition.
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Old 7th Sep 2022, 21:24
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Originally Posted by 43Inches
Point is QF has cut the fat out and is into the bone that gels the premium customers to the business, as long as the market remains saturated they will kick along, but if this downturn gets nasty they may find themselves in a spot of bother as the product is no longer a step above the competition.
This started 15 years ago. My brother, who travelled from Melbourne to Beijing 12 or 15 times per year in Business Class on Qantas, moved to Singapore Airlines. In his words, "I stopped flying Qantas when I could see Geoff Dixon's cost cutting before my eyes."

I suspect there are many once bolted-on Qantas high value Frequent Flyers who are now doing the same. It will be very difficult for Qantas to get them back.
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Old 7th Sep 2022, 22:08
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Originally Posted by 43Inches

Point is QF has cut the fat out and is into the bone that gels the premium customers to the business, as long as the market remains saturated they will kick along, but if this downturn gets nasty they may find themselves in a spot of bother as the product is no longer a step above the competition.
While all the “fat cutting” happened CEOs and senior management met their KPIs and were handsomely rewarded with 7 figure bonuses.
The airline lurched and bumbled along mainly through its own momentum. Then along came Covid, a once in a lifetime crisis / opportunity for management to exploit. And exploit it to the full, they did.

And then when the cracks first began to occur, the CEO living in some Bollinger soaked alternate universe blamed passengers for not being match fit. Truly away with the fairies.
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Old 8th Sep 2022, 00:26
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I believe AJ may have miss timed his exit. Late 2021 would have worked so much better for him.
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Old 8th Sep 2022, 01:26
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And then when the cracks first began to occur, the CEO living in some Bollinger soaked alternate universe blamed passengers for not being match fit. Truly away with the fairies.
Post of the year
CC
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Old 8th Sep 2022, 01:52
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Originally Posted by lucille
And then when the cracks first began to occur, the CEO living in some Bollinger soaked alternate universe blamed passengers for not being match fit. Truly away with the fairies.
Joyce is living in cloud cuckoo land. Blaming the pax?? What exactly did he mean by passengers not being ‘match fit’ anyway? Should a passenger carry an additional suitcase and an extra months worth of medication just in case his airline loses their baggage? Should passengers travel with tents and sleeping bags in case an aircraft is grounded in an outback location with engineering issues? Should a disabled passenger have their wheelchair made from titanium just in case the ground handlers drop it on the tarmac? I mean seriously, the bloke is full of piss and wind blaming the pax for all of the Qantas woes. Not an ounce of humility and not a single mention of executive management accountability.

It’s now so very obvious that all of the cuts, downsizing, and scaling back done under Joyce’s tenure has boiled over. COVID is only one part of the causal chain, the rest of their issues can be attributed to the incompetents at the top cutting way too deep. Joyce has slammed Qantas with lean six sigma on steroids and the result is a hollowed out shell of an airline. And with a neutered Board too scared to cut this little worm free, they too should be held to account. Qantas may have a respectable share price, but at what cost?

Last edited by Paragraph377; 8th Sep 2022 at 08:55.
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Old 8th Sep 2022, 05:17
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Events such as QF is facing (and a lot of others) reminds me of a story given at some lecture many, many years ago. Steelworks in Pittsburg family owned was facing tough times, agreement made was all would cut back their hours, no one let go, as production dropped so did the commensurate hours put in by each of the work force, pay cheque declined naturally, but each was getting by, things eventually returned to normal and the owner had earned the undying loyalty of his work force.

Herb Kelleher, co founder of Southwest, from reading seemed to have had a similar loyalty from his work force.

Any business is a triumvirate, investors, management and those at the coal face. In fact all three are investors, those with cash, those with management talent, and those at the coal face with the necessary skills (check in, IT, engineer, pilot, CC, baggage handler, tug driver etc etc). Only two on that triangle seem to be acknowledged as having any investment in a businesses success if the financial pages are a guide.
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Old 8th Sep 2022, 08:07
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Maybe QF should have taken a leaf from Ken Grenda, of Grenda Bus Corporation in Melbourne. When he sold the family business to Venture he gifted the staff a pool of $16 million to say thanks. The money was distributed based on time in service with some employees getting $100,000. Some staff members having 40-50 years at the company. The company was bought as a going concern, so these were not redundancy payments, just thanks.
"A business is only as good as its people and our people are fantastic," said the senior Mr Grenda, who has been dubbed the ''best'' and ''most generous'' boss in Australia.

"We have had people here who are second generation, and one fellow in the same job for 52 years.''
Unfortunately in aviation the quote would probably be more along "A business is only as good as it's CEO and employees are a cost to be smashed down to minimums"
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Old 9th Sep 2022, 01:56
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A business is only as good as it's CEO and employees are a cost to be smashed down to minimums"
If the Wright brothers were alive today Wilbur would have to fire Orville to reduce costs
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Old 9th Sep 2022, 02:58
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Originally Posted by megan
If the Wright brothers were alive today Wilbur would have to fire Orville to reduce costs
Well, to be fair to Wilbur, Orville did crash eight times, didn't he? A morning tea with the Chief Pilot might have been in order.
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Old 9th Sep 2022, 04:57
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Originally Posted by MickG0105
Well, to be fair to Wilbur, Orville did crash eight times, didn't he? A morning tea with the Chief Pilot might have been in order.
Today, Orville would likely get a guided tour through mahogany row and promotion to management pilot.
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