Passengers on an Antarctic cruise have staged a hunger strike after the ship’s engine failed, forcing the expedition to be cut short.
13.11.2024 - 01:19 / skift.com / Gary Kelly / Bob Jordan / Elliott Management / Elliott Investment Management / Elizabeth Casolo
Elliott Investment Management tried leveraging its activist stake in Southwest Airlines to push CEO Bob Jordan out – but Jordan is still in charge. Now, he is unpacking how Southwest plans to keep up with competing airlines.
At Tuesday’s Skift Aviation Forum, Jordan said he thinks “that chapter is closed” with Elliott.
“You get feedback from your shareholders, not just Elliott,” Jordan said. “And the feedback was clear. We needed to continue our board refresh.”
Five of Elliott’s director picks joined Southwest’s board, and former chairman Gary Kelly left.
Jordan said changes have been underway at Southwest for a while, but Elliott sped up the process. “Southwest Airlines will return to industry-leading profitability,” Jordan said.
On top of considering customer preferences, the company ran simulations to evaluate how certain adjustments would impact boarding times.
“This is by far the deepest set of research that we have ever done,” Jordan said.
Assigned seats and extra legroom are a big selling point for passengers. Jordan said 86% of customers who don’t choose Southwest do so because of these concerns.
These seating adjustments, airline partnerships and red-eye flights may be standard on other airlines but are all part of Southwest’s agenda to keep pace.
“A lot of customers love red-eyes, but what it does for you on the efficiency side is it just makes the aircraft utilization even higher, makes our people more efficient,” Jordan said.
One other change: going paperless in the cockpit and cabin, a transition airlines have made in the past decade.
“If we had an offline diversion into an airport that Southwest Airlines does not serve… because we were paper based, you had to go find someone with a printer to reprint the new dispatch and dispatch release paperwork, the fueling paperwork,” Jordan said. “And today we go into an offline airport, you punch a button on the iPad and off you go.”
Another contentious choice: pulling back from Atlanta.
While the company still offers over 50 flights a day at the world’s busiest passenger airport, it’s shifting its focus to other cities. Jordan is trying to spot mounting demand, noting Austin and Nashville as areas for growth.
“Southwest Airlines is going to win, but you do have to pick your battles,” Jordan said.
As inflation and labor costs go up, Jordan believes Southwest is still in a good spot.
“Southwest Airlines has every one of their labor contracts locked up,” he said.
Other airlines have adopted a Southwest strategy: no change fees. But Jordan doesn’t see a threat when it comes to company policies.
“We have had the industry’s best set of customer-leaning, customer-friendly policies forever,” Jordan said. Some of the policies he mentioned: Southwest’s
Passengers on an Antarctic cruise have staged a hunger strike after the ship’s engine failed, forcing the expedition to be cut short.
For many residents of Valencia, Storm Dana feels like it only just happened yesterday. Just one month after one of the most devastating natural disasters in Spain's recent history, the community has started taking small steps towards a recovery.
Authorities at London's Gatwick Airport have said a security alert that forced the evacuation of one of the terminals and delayed dozens of flights has been "resolved and cleared by police".
Don’t expect a flurry of new casino licenses in the UAE. That was the message Wednesday from the country’s top gaming regulator at Skift Global Forum East 2024.
I moved to Italy in my 20s after a summer study abroad in Rome during my senior year of college.
Travel, regardless of what form it may take, is a privilege. To move around the world for work, vacation, or in some instances, out of sheer necessity, requires money and time, but also the ability to physically cross borders and to do so on one's own terms. Some are born without that opportunity, while others have it forcibly taken away later in life. After a period confined behind fences or walls—tangible or abstract—what meaning can the act of traveling take on once it's been regained?
Billionaire Jeff Bezos appears to be selling one of his multimillion-dollar private jets.
My first cruise ever was in the early 1980s on one of Carnival Cruise Line's first ships, Carnivale. I swear our cabin was actually a crew cabin. It was on Deck 1 and had four metal bunks permanently attached to the walls with a tiny desk and chair between them.
Spirit Airlines told travelers they can keep booking and flying with the carrier after filing for bankruptcy protection on Monday.
Nicole Sunderland first caught the travel bug over two decades ago when she sold magazines door to door around the country.
The future of long-haul flying is just around the corner. Think single-aisle interiors in narrow-bodied planes, longer flights, and better fuel efficiency.
Big Sky, Montana, has always been one of the greatest places to ski in the US. Lone Mountain’s vast expanse of untamed terrain, coupled with its pristine powder, has drawn skiers and snowboarders from around the globe. But in recent years, this area has seen a surge in developments with new luxury accommodations, upscale dining and chic as-hell après-ski options, and state-of-the-art lifts with heated seats, elevating its status to a world-class winter destination. And although, yes, the resorts and high-end hotels here are opulent, catering specifically to powderhounds, but you’ll be looking at least $500 per person/night. For a significantly lower price (per head), you can rent a luxury home on Airbnb and have the benefit of space, a kitchen, and a home to return to after a day on the slopes. Great for families and groups of friends, these ski-in/ski-out Airbnbs in Big Sky have exceptional locations near lifts and extras like hot tubs and fireplaces for a little added zhuzh.