CrankyFlier: Blaming United's problems on Continental (and v.v.) is the problem
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CrankyFlier: Blaming United's problems on Continental (and v.v.) is the problem
A well-informed article on the state of United today
http://crankyflier.com/2014/07/10/bl...y-the-problem/
http://crankyflier.com/2014/07/10/bl...y-the-problem/
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A few others posting in this Forum, myself included, have discussed in the past about the difficulties posed in merging two different corporate cultures.
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I would revise that to say that the cultural issues are, in part, because of the cutbacks and bewildering business decisions. Employees are pretty much always to play ball when they know they're part of a winning team. Winning teams don't constantly play the blame game and scatter-shot course changes across the backs of their employees and customers... Cultural issues like this may not have their ultimate roots in operational problems, but the endemic existence of such problems definitely makes the cultural problems almost impossible to resolve.
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All the problems they discuss about pre-merger United were basically internal, and did reflect badly on United, but had nowhere near the impact on passengers that the issues do today. The complete abandonment of the most loyal United customers came after Continental took over. Keeping the United name while basically making it Continental Airlines in practice only made matters worse, as it demonstrated that any desire to keep the United customers or employees happy would be a mockery.
No, only a clean sweep of ALL management, and a decision to make it either Continental or United Airlines in reality would have been far more effective. Pretending to be the Brady Bunch of airlines, and make one big happy family wasn't going to work, and was an insult to long time customers of both airlines.
Both sides are right. It was the fault of a crappy merger.
No, only a clean sweep of ALL management, and a decision to make it either Continental or United Airlines in reality would have been far more effective. Pretending to be the Brady Bunch of airlines, and make one big happy family wasn't going to work, and was an insult to long time customers of both airlines.
Both sides are right. It was the fault of a crappy merger.
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United was still an airline that had dramatically under-invested in itself. Planes weren’t well-maintained (not unsafe, but they weren’t reliable) and sub-par onboard products ruled the day. Anyone who thinks United was a truly great airline is smoking something.
Too many people (a lot on here) seem to forget how bad United was most of the past 10 years.
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I'll say it again: Continental was abandoning its own elites pre-merger after Mr. Smisek took over. My upgrade rate plummeted as TODs/FC buyups of some sort became more and more prevalent. The article points out that UA was improving as the merger neared; CO was getting worse. It pains me to hear blanket condemnations of CO, because throughout most of the 2000s it was a damn good airline.
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It's very simple.
What's UAL's name?
United Continental Holdings
AAL?
American Airlines Group
DAL?
Delta Air Lines.
Notice anything? Yes - Jeff is still living in CO land while Parker and Anderson are at least smart enough to abandon the NW and US names.
This is emblematic of the problem.
What's UAL's name?
United Continental Holdings
AAL?
American Airlines Group
DAL?
Delta Air Lines.
Notice anything? Yes - Jeff is still living in CO land while Parker and Anderson are at least smart enough to abandon the NW and US names.
This is emblematic of the problem.
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This:
"If you listened to many pre-merger United employees, you’d think that United was the greatest airline of all time until Continental came in and ruined it. Talk about seeing the world with rose (er, uh, tulip?)-colored glasses. Let’s be realistic here.
United was a mess for a full decade or, arguably, more leading up to the merger. Awful management, bad labor relations, and a lack of interest in preparing the airline for long term success led United to the bottom of the industry several times. Had things gotten better in the last couple of years before the merger? Sure. But that’s because they couldn’t get any worse."
There is so much retroactive romanticizing of the old United, by employees and passengers alike. It's nonsense; CrankyFlyer is right.
But the pmUA / pmCO distinctions and cross-culture blame-placing are killing the airline, and Smisek is spraying kerosene on the bonfire when he stands up and blames "undertrained" pmUA employees for today's crisis.
The writer is absolutely correct about the culture problem. I don't think management knows any other game but blame-placing and moat-digging, however.
"If you listened to many pre-merger United employees, you’d think that United was the greatest airline of all time until Continental came in and ruined it. Talk about seeing the world with rose (er, uh, tulip?)-colored glasses. Let’s be realistic here.
United was a mess for a full decade or, arguably, more leading up to the merger. Awful management, bad labor relations, and a lack of interest in preparing the airline for long term success led United to the bottom of the industry several times. Had things gotten better in the last couple of years before the merger? Sure. But that’s because they couldn’t get any worse."
There is so much retroactive romanticizing of the old United, by employees and passengers alike. It's nonsense; CrankyFlyer is right.
But the pmUA / pmCO distinctions and cross-culture blame-placing are killing the airline, and Smisek is spraying kerosene on the bonfire when he stands up and blames "undertrained" pmUA employees for today's crisis.
The writer is absolutely correct about the culture problem. I don't think management knows any other game but blame-placing and moat-digging, however.
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I agree that the article is a worthwhile read and a thoughtful (though by no means new) take on what ails United. I recall, for instance, the "Glenn Must Go" buttons from the pre-merger years, reflecting the poor employee and (to some extent) customer morale.
Still, I think Cranky buries the lead and underplays some other problems:
1. Most of all, the fundamental problem is not the clashing corporate cultures but the lousy management team now ruling the roost. The failure to integrate and reconcile those corporate cultures is but a symptom of the much bigger issue of lousy management.
2. I'd also rank retaining SHARES as an even bigger problem than failing to integrate the two cultures.
3. Similarly, lousy employee morale is not just a matter of different cultures - it starts with lousy management that gives staff lousy systems to work with, little leeway to handle problems, short-staffed situations and apparent disincentives that prioritize penny-pinching over customer satisfaction (certainly but not only during IRROPS).
4. The cascading deterioration of UA's formerly decent FF program has little to do with different corporate cultures.
Still, I think Cranky buries the lead and underplays some other problems:
1. Most of all, the fundamental problem is not the clashing corporate cultures but the lousy management team now ruling the roost. The failure to integrate and reconcile those corporate cultures is but a symptom of the much bigger issue of lousy management.
2. I'd also rank retaining SHARES as an even bigger problem than failing to integrate the two cultures.
3. Similarly, lousy employee morale is not just a matter of different cultures - it starts with lousy management that gives staff lousy systems to work with, little leeway to handle problems, short-staffed situations and apparent disincentives that prioritize penny-pinching over customer satisfaction (certainly but not only during IRROPS).
4. The cascading deterioration of UA's formerly decent FF program has little to do with different corporate cultures.