1 / 29

Management of Transportation

Management of Transportation. Chapter 5 The Airline Industry. Introduction. Wright Brothers first flight: 1903 Government development and promotion of air transport begins in 1920s: U.S. Post Office air mail subsidy program helps launch commercial passenger airline industry

Télécharger la présentation

Management of Transportation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Management of Transportation Chapter 5 The AirlineIndustry

  2. Introduction • Wright Brothers first flight: 1903 • Government development and promotion of air transport begins in 1920s: • U.S. Post Office air mail subsidy program helps launch commercial passenger airline industry • Competitive advantage: Speed (travel time savings) • Econ. Deregulation enables more competitive pricing

  3. Types of CarriersPrivate Carriers • Definition: • A firm that transports company personnel or freight in planes to support its primary business • Preponderance of use is for transport of personnel • Subject to federal safety regulations administered by the Federal Aviation Adm. (FAA)

  4. Types of CarriersFor-Hire Carriers • Several different classification schemes • Classified by annual operating revenues • Majors (revenues of >$1 billion) • Nationals ($100 million - $1 billion) • Regionals (revenues of <$100 million) • Classified by type of service • All-cargo • Commuter • Charter • International

  5. Market StructureNumber of Carriers • Relatively small number of for-hire carriers • Most revenues earned by small number of majors • Several cycles of increasing, then decreasing number of airlines after 1978 deregulation • Private air transport • Over 500 corporations own/operate aircraft • About 60,000 corporate-owned planes exist • Thousands of private aircraft used for personal, recreational, and instructional purposes

  6. Market StructureNumber of Carriers

  7. Market StructureNumber of Carriers

  8. CompetitionIntermodal and Intramodal • Very limited intermodal competition for long distance (500+ miles) trips • Air has decided advantage in transport speed • Freight: rising competition from time-definite motor carrier service • Passengers: some limited competition from personal automobile travel, rail, and bus service • Intense intramodal competition • Creates cycles of new entrants, excess capacity, reduced fares, carriers exiting markets

  9. CompetitionService Competition • Nature of passenger service competition • Flight frequency on given route • Timing of flights • Meals, in-flight communications, other services • No-frills alternatives intensify competition • Advertising used to differentiate carriers • Nature of competition for cargo, express traffic • Published schedules and rates • Door-to-door, time-definite service

  10. Operating and ServiceCharacteristicsGeneral • Due to value of time, air dominates for-hire, long-distance passenger market • When importance of speed outweighs cost, then air is attractive for freight • Emergency shipments • Typical commodities • Mail, fashion clothing, communications products, fresh flowers, racehorses, jewelry • Air freight cost vs. inventory cost tradeoff

  11. Operating and Service CharacteristicsSpeed of Service • Speed, travel time advantage can be off-set by • Low flight frequency, schedule timing • Smaller communities have experienced reduced frequencies • In-direct routing due to hub and spoke networks • Legacy majors moved to hub and spoke networks following deregulation to improve load-factors • Air traffic and ground congestion, security measures • Most relevant at major airports • Adds uncertainty to total travel time

  12. Operating and Service CharacteristicsLength of Haul and Capacity • Length of haul • 2007 average air trip length for passengers: 1078 miles • Aircraft capacity dependent on aircraft type • Wide-body, 4 engine jet • 370 passengers and all-cargo capacity of 16.6 tons • Boeing 777 carries 263 passengers • Most planes carry 120-260 passengers

  13. Operating and Service CharacteristicsAccessibility and Dependability • Air travel is generally highly reliable • Weather and congestion are the principal causes of schedule disruptions • Sophisticated navigation systems facilitate operation in poor weather conditions • Limited airport accessibility adds travel time and cost to air travel • Limited accessibility is the principal service disadvantage of air travel

  14. Equipment and Facilities • Types of vehicles (aircraft) • Many aircraft types • Wide range of seating capacity, cargo payload, speed, fuel consumption, operating costs/hour • Key is to match operating characteristics to demand needs of route • Terminals (airports) • Airports financed by government • Federal construction assistance programs • State and local governments operate and maintain • Air carriers and users pay for use

  15. Equipment and Facilities

  16. Taxes and Fees

  17. Taxes and Fees (continued)

  18. Cost StructureFixed vs. Variable Cost Components • High variable costs (80% of total operation costs) • About 38% attributable to flight operations • About 10% for maintenance • About 14% for aircraft and traffic servicing • Low fixed costs • Due to government investment in terminals and operating infrastructure • Increasing price competition creates pressure to reduce labor costs, increase productivity

  19. Cost Structure Fixed vs. Variable Cost Components

  20. Cost Structure, cont’dFuel and Labor Costs • Fuel costs: rising fuel costs have major impact on total operating costs • A Boeing 474-400 consumes 3,411 gal./hour • Airlines turn to more fuel efficient aircraft and smaller planes on low-density routes • Labor costs • Variety of job skills required by an airline • Pilots, flight engineers, attendants, communications personnel, mechanics, ground crew, administrative • Pilot wages vary depending upon the plane they are rated to fly and union affiliation

  21. Cost StructureEquipment, Economies of Scale and Density • Equipment economies of scale and density • Cost per flight-hour higher for larger planes • But, cost per seat-mile lower for large planes • Example of EOS with respect to plane size (capacity) • Also, for any given plane size, low marginal cost to fill empty seats (example of econ. of density)

  22. Cost StructureEquipment, Economies of Scale and Density • Operating economies of scale at the firm level • Minor degree of economies of scale • Capital investment needed for integrated communication networks create some EOS • For the most part, EOS at the firm level are not significant • Significant economies of density at route level • Important consideration when choosing city-pairs to serve, and setting flight freq. and planes for each route

  23. RatesPricing • Many passenger fare variations • Price of same seat on flight may vary depending on restrictions at time of purchase • Advance purchase, time of day, competition • Yield management used to increase revenues and improve capacity utilization • Load factors average about 79.9% in 2007 • Cargo pricing • Based mainly on weight or cubic dimensions • Over-dimensional charge for < 8 cu ft. density

  24. RatesOperating Efficiency • Operating ratio = [Op. Exp./Op. Inc.] * 100 • Industry average: 1994-2000: 94.7-96.9 2007: 94.7 • Load Factor = [#Passengers/#Seats] * 100 • Industry average climbs above 70% • Relationship between load factor, plane size, and operating cost

  25. RatesOperating Efficiency

  26. Current IssuesSafety and Security • Air transport has lowest accident rates • Factors affecting airline safety • Airport security and threat of airline terrorism • Administrative agencies • Department of Homeland Security • Transportation Security Administration • Security-related initiatives • Passenger and luggage screening. carry-on limitations • Screening of freight carried on passenger airlines • Substance abuse • Drug testing policies, alcohol consumption guidelines

  27. Current IssuesSafety and Security

  28. Current IssuesSafety and Security

  29. Current IssuesTechnology • Sophisticated equipment and programs facilitate the achievement of high speed transport • Automated information processing programs • Air Cargo Fast Flow Program • Paperless, speeds processing through customs • Improves shipment tracking • Improves communication between connecting carriers • Air traffic control system • Potential application of GPS navigation aids • Potential to reduce operating costs, improve service, and safety • Requires high cost investment for new technology on aircraft

More Related