US Airways Dividend Miles (Pre-FlightFund Merger) - Syracuse a test market for US Airways strategy




IndyDavid
May 11, 04, 8:01 pm
Syracuse a test market for US Airways strategy
Airline cutting prices and changing the size of its flights to be competitive.
Tuesday, May 11, 2004

By Rick Moriarty
Staff writer

US Airways, which announced sharp drops Monday in some of its highest fares at Hancock Airport, is using Syracuse as a test market for a new approach to pricing and scheduling.

B. Ben Baldanza, US Airways senior vice president for marketing and planning, said the airline views Syracuse as a typical medium-sized Northeast city. That's one of the reasons the airline decided to try its lower-fare approach in Syracuse as it battles growing competition from discount carriers, he said.

"For us to grow and for us to thrive as a company, Syracuse needs to work for us," he said at Hancock Airport. "It's an important city in our network."

US Airways, the most dominant carrier at Hancock, lowered its top fares between 31 percent and 56 percent for flights between Syracuse and Baltimore; Charlotte, N.C.; Hartford, Conn.; New York City's LaGuardia Airport; and Philadelphia. The new fares took effect Monday.

The airline said it will increase from three to five its number of daily flights from Syracuse to Reagan Washington National Airport in Washington, D.C. And it will begin replacing turboprop planes with new, 72-seat regional jets on flights to Boston, LaGuardia, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Washington, D.C.

Baldanza, a Syracuse University graduate who grew up in Rome, said the airline expects the lower fares to boost its business in Syracuse by giving business travelers less reason to drive to their destinations. The lower fares should also stem the leakage of customers from Syracuse to airports in Albany, Buffalo and Rochester, he said.

He said the airline plans to cut fares in other markets, too, but that federal rules prevent him from disclosing details until the new fares take effect.

To cut fares, the airline is cutting costs. It eliminated some costs while in Chapter 11 bankruptcy last year, and it is discussing with its labor unions ways to cut more. It also is looking to save money by using more efficient regional jets in smaller markets and through scheduling changes.

Officials with the city and the Metropolitan Development Association said competition in Syracuse from JetBlue Airways and, later this year, from start-up Independence Air was a factor in US Airways' decision to cut fares in Syracuse.

The MDA and Mayor Matt Driscoll had been lobbying US Airways for lower business fares for about a year.

"This is good news because accessible, competitive air service is so important to our economic viability here in Central New York," said Kenneth Shaw, MDA chairman and chancellor of Syracuse University.

© 2004 The Post-Standard.

http://www.syracuse.com/search/index.ssf?/base/business-5/1084264678121200.xml?syrbubiz


choster
May 11, 04, 10:13 pm
Is jetBlue serious competition? Currently B6 doesn't compete directly on any routes except to New York (SYR-JFK vs. SYR-LGA); it's the only LCC currently serving airports between ALB and BUF and US still seems to command a premium of 50% or more out of SYR. That might make it seem obvious for LCCs to target, but the population is stagnant compared to other parts of the country and the air traffic at airports I frequent seems to have followed-- BGM and ELM have less service vs. 10 years ago, and whereas there were four carriers serving ITH when I started college, US is the only one left when I go up for reunions.

HPTunco
May 11, 04, 10:15 pm
BBB: "For us to grow and for us to thrive as a company, Syracuse needs to work for us," he said at Hancock Airport. "It's an important city in our network."

I'm glad that BBB has finally identified the source of USAirway's problem. It's not high labor costs, it's not PIT, it's HIGH FARES AT SYR!

I flew to SYR last month.......$800 RT from PIT! So is BBB talking about lowering to $600 or $60? I wonder how SYR was identified as such an important market. The business climate there is lousy (Carrier shuttering manufacturing operations, etc.). :mad:


HeHateY
May 12, 04, 1:25 am
Will they be bringing back the orange F28's and free in-flight cocktails?

http://www.airtimes.com/cgat/usb/empire/ur830101.jpg ;)

geo1005
May 12, 04, 6:44 am
I wonder how SYR was identified as such an important market. The business climate there is lousy... :mad:


The article did not identify SYR by itself as a key market but representative of "a typical medium-sized Northeast city". I am glad US is recognizing their fare structure is wack-o and that they are doing something (anything?) about it. Hopefully, this test market fare structure will work and they will be able to spread it systemwide.

HPTunco
May 12, 04, 9:31 am
The article did not identify SYR by itself as a key market but representative of "a typical medium-sized Northeast city". I am glad US is recognizing their fare structure is wack-o and that they are doing something (anything?) about it. Hopefully, this test market fare structure will work and they will be able to spread it systemwide.

"For us to grow and for us to thrive as a company, Syracuse needs to work for us," he said at Hancock Airport. "It's an important city in our network."

This is the exact quote.....not a "typical Northeast city", but SYRACUSE.....not any city, but "an IMPORTANT CITY".

BBB is from the SYR area. Bonner is dragging more flights, golf vacation specials and maintenance to Alabamy......I guess when the ship is sinking you take care of those who have taken care of you......before the water is over your head.

If revamping fares is the way to go (of course it is!).......then the whole system should be revamped, not just a few routes or favorite cities. If I'm now going to pay less than half of what I have paid to fly to SYR, then that revenue must be made up elsewhere......and not totally from the employees.

geo1005
May 12, 04, 10:08 am
"For us to grow and for us to thrive as a company, Syracuse needs to work for us," he said at Hancock Airport. "It's an important city in our network."

This is the exact quote.....not a "typical Northeast city", but SYRACUSE.....not any city, but "an IMPORTANT CITY".


Actually BBB said both - "...the airline views Syracuse as a typical medium-sized Northeast city", and "...an important city in our network."


Given that he was speaking to a reporter from a Syracuse newspaper, I doubt he'd offer up something like "Syracuse is honestly a pretty average destination as far as we're concerned so we figured messing around with the fares here is no big deal if it doesn't work." ;)

:D

IndyDavid
May 12, 04, 10:31 am
"Syracuse is honestly a pretty average destination as far as we're concerned so we figured messing around with the fares here is no big deal if it doesn't work." ;) :D

Ahh, yes. This is why John McCain's "Straight Talk Express" was so popular -- because telling the truth is so rare these days.

David

IndyDavid
Jun 5, 04, 9:10 am
A quick update on this... I just checked SYR-PHL and found only 6 coach fares!

CARRIER ONE-WAY ROUND-TRIP FARE CODE
------- ------- ---------- ---------
US Airways USD 198.00 SRA14QN
US Airways USD 258.00 LRA14QN
US Airways USD 318.00 VRA14QN
US Airways USD 398.00 QE71QN
US Airways USD 299.00 USD 598.00 HQ
US Airways USD 339.00 USD 678.00 NQ
US Airways USD 499.00 USD 998.00 F8

And for the record, SYR is not a Southwest city.

David

AtlanticBeach
Jun 5, 04, 10:04 am
A quick update on this... I just checked SYR-PHL and found only 6 coach fares!

CARRIER ONE-WAY ROUND-TRIP FARE CODE
------- ------- ---------- ---------
US Airways USD 198.00 SRA14QN
US Airways USD 258.00 LRA14QN
US Airways USD 318.00 VRA14QN
US Airways USD 398.00 QE71QN
US Airways USD 299.00 USD 598.00 HQ
US Airways USD 339.00 USD 678.00 NQ
US Airways USD 499.00 USD 998.00 F8

And for the record, SYR is not a Southwest city.

David


The fare changes look more like a PR move than actual reduction. However, let's give credit for getting rid of more than 20 fares in this market. Fare simplification is one big step. Fare rationalization is still questionable since this trip is 228 NM each way.



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