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-   -   Damned by the Financial Times (https://www.pprune.org/fragrant-harbour/589943-damned-financial-times.html)

Trafalgar 23rd Jan 2017 00:10

Damned by the Financial Times
 
Well, more congrats to CX. Managed to make the headline article in the weekend Financial Times paper. Basically, their financial editor concludes that we are crap. Suggest that the recent announcement was long on jargon and short on any financial plan. Also, that it was time to take a broom and sweep away the Swire management, starting with the CEO. Of course, what does the FT know...?:ugh:

Icarus2001 23rd Jan 2017 01:55

It is a truism of business that the management team that gets a business into a mess cannot and will not be the one that unravels the mess. Wrong mindset.

Yonosoy Marinero 23rd Jan 2017 03:14

Well, color me shocked....
:hmm:

This is so evident that the FT probably let the intern write this one.

It's all in the hands of the shareholders now. As Icarus said, those idiots behind the wheel are the ones who drove us into the ditch in the first place. They won't be the ones to put us back on the road.

Freehills 23rd Jan 2017 04:55

Cathay Pacific: go pilot fish The Hong Kong airline has been slow to respond to competition on price and standards

Shareholders in Cathay Pacific may not agree. The Hong Kong airline’s shares are at a level usually associated with financial crises. Some woes are beyond Cathay’s control. China-based rivals are piling on capacity, adding direct routes to cities that would once have required a Hong Kong stopover. The territory’s government scrapped fuel surcharges and imposed extra airport costs to finance a runway. US airlines, whose domestic routes are now reliably profitable after heavy consolidation, are taking a renewed interest in Asia. But Cathay has been slow to respond. Flyers say its service has fallen behind standards set by Middle Eastern airlines. Losses on its badly timed fuel hedges have limited its ability to compete on price. So too have costs higher than rivals like Singapore Airlines, JAL or Qantas. A long-awaited review this week was longer on jargon than financial targets. The shares, which over five years have lagged behind even legacy European airlines, fell 3 per cent. New blood at the top would inject urgency into Cathay’s restructuring. The current chief executive was promoted internally. No non-executives are independent of big investors Swire Pacific and Air China. British Airways once changed its culture by hiring former Cathay boss Rod Eddington. He cut costs and axed Concorde, leaving the airline solidly profitable. A similar hire could help Cathay conform with Stevenson’s maxim that life is often about playing a poor hand well.

Captain Dart 23rd Jan 2017 05:51

Yeah, just what CX needs, Red Oddington to come back and make yet more cuts. In my opinion, his tenure at CX in the nineties marked the start of the decline of this airline that once led the world in quality, service and long-haul operations. He also ran Ansett, which not long after ceased to exist. Grounding Concorde, while possibly financially necessary, would not be something I would be proud of.

But he could bring back his 'Commitment Days'.

Starbear 23rd Jan 2017 08:00

Damned by the Financial Times
 
Trafalgar:
Not really , I would suggest confirmed by the Financial Times. They have said nothing different from all that you guys have said here and elsewhere.

Pilots by and large are a cynical, sceptical and questioning group and that is generally a good thing. The "Strategy on a Page " is nothing more than pure unmitigated "guff". Seriously try and decipher any section (or God forbid "pillar") into plain English or Chinese and I suspect most will struggle or even fail. Take the now infamous "digitally focussed" Really? WTF? Do they mean IT or online. If so, don't I recall much trumpeting of CX leading the away with cutting edge IT (whilst still failing to have fully intregated internet through Cathay City even now)? Although to be fair they are very very fond of trumpet blowing.

Back to the main point, AT in the Friday Flyer stated that the review of FOP will take approximately 6 months. 6 months just to discover what needs fixing before any actual action. What have they been doing for the past 12 months when the clues must have already been there for all to see.

I have seen this before in other companies where they employ consultants etc to come up with super guaranteed fixes for everything. But first you must have a list of buzz words and phrases and ensure all buy into them. Therein lies the problem because most people at the coal face recognise the busll**** that it is and refuse to comply and so are seen to spoil the party.

GMEDX 23rd Jan 2017 08:33

Digitally focused?
 
Hopefully digitally focused means that they are finally going to pull their finger out but somehow I doubt it.

Flex88 23rd Jan 2017 15:35

Come on gang, what the hell are ya talking about re "Shareholders in Cathay Pacific" ?
There are 2..... And make no mistake - they Hand Pick the top managers❗️
The 360 "Top Managers" that just met - Google "The Peter Principle" it explains..
Nuff said...

joblow 24th Jan 2017 01:08

I have to agree with Capt Dart . Eddington's tenure was the beginning of the downward spiral at Cathay .
You cannot cut the quality of your product and expect no push back from the passengers who are paying good money for their tickets and have choices as to where they spend it .
This goes even further , if you treat your frontline staff with contempt, cut their pay and benefits. Then you have to be naive ( and I am being very polite with my choice of words here ) not to realise that the service standards will slip .
It's gotten so bad that the "couldn't care less attitude " from frontline staff has permeated every aspect of our business. The passengers and especially our premium ones are voting with their feet, moving to the Mid East carriers . If you have ever travelled on one of these airlines you would know that their product is so much better than ours that they aren't coming back any time soon .
Our food is for the most part inedible, it used to be amazing, our first class product ,when we have one , is questionably worth the price differential .
What this airline desperately needs is a CEO who understands that a happy workforce equates to a great service product . The only way to achieve that is to invest in your product and the workforce .

Freehills 24th Jan 2017 04:00

It isn't even clear what sort of airline they want to run. "A life well travelled" can apply to an LCC as well as a first class airline.

Plus - great service product and profits don't go together. Most profitable airlines in the world (Delta/ AA/ Ryanair/ SW) specialise in delivering product people are willing to pay for, rather than the product they aspire to

ron burgandy 24th Jan 2017 05:26

I really believe they're so far on the back of the curve now, there's no recovery.
The only way forward I see is to turn up to work, do a good job so you feel professionally happy, forget about everything outside of the flight deck related to CX, collect the pay each month, make sure you spend it on the things that are most important to you, and put your welfare far ahead of the company's.

Avius 24th Jan 2017 05:52

This sums up what needs changing before anything else.

Fast forward to about 6:00 of the video:

Jack Welch on Why You Want the Muscle of a Big Company but the Soul o?

Cafe City 24th Jan 2017 06:52

More likely https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r2wPmi6WEJ8

McNugget 24th Jan 2017 07:39


Originally Posted by Dan Buster (Post 9651469)
Spot on J-blow.
Have a look at the '4 pillars', there is no mention of 'happy' employees. Just lots of jargon relating to reviews, systems and programmes.

It's so simple isn't it? Develop a happy and proud workforce and everything else will fall into place. Of course the opposite is true as well. Get your workforce offside, nobody cares anymore and it all begins to crumble away- as we are currently seeing.
The workforce is the key-but the senior management just view us as a cost item that needs to be pared down constantly. So until management see us as the solution and not the problem, this downward spiral will continue.

Very well put.

It was a glaring omission, and it's been picked up on by all front line staff I've encountered. It really would be the single, most effective measure, and would pay for itself in spades.

Ron B,

Regarding the drag curve, I'm not so sure. A happy workforce would absolutely reverse the declining opinion of CX, and bring premium numbers back in droves.

American Airlines was a basket case, and granted, it went bankrupt - however, during the merger post-bankruptcy, Horton (CEO) gave every pilot and flight attendant HUGE pay rises. He stated it was because the reputation of both carriers is utterly horrific, the product and service is a woeful result of death by a thousand cuts (sound familiar?) and he needs all hands on deck to get through the merger. And it worked. Their product and service has improved 10-fold and they were the worlds most profitable airline in 2015.

CX top brass could get us all in side, and the results would be spectacular. By and large, you have a well-trained, professional, motivated team up front. But, apathy reigns. It's a deeply unhappy group. How any people manager thinks that's how to extract the most value from that manpower is beyond me.

Aft of the flight deck door, you have leaders that have seen the good days.
They would love to have them back, but they aren't given the tools to, and they no longer have a reason to care. These are the customer facing employees. I believe the fancy term for that is a "touch point".
Well, that touch point is now a handshake with an electric shock prank toy.

We hear plenty of stick for cabin crew here, but I personally think that they've done a remarkable job to hold on to any semblance of service quality for this long.

Inspire them, and watch what happens. By inspire, I mean treat them properly and give them a few basic tools to enhance their offerings. They WANT to offer premium service. That's why they joined.

Invest in the people, and you'll hardly even need to invest in hard product to reverse the trend.

Apologies to the other employee groups who I make no mention of. I'm sure they have similar points of view. I just don't get to see their perspectives while on the job.

This is so easy. It would take time, but it's easy. Unlike deciphering that nonsense email.

Time to wake up, rather than time to win.

Yonosoy Marinero 24th Jan 2017 07:50


collect the pay each month, make sure you spend it on the things that are most important to you,
It would be wiser to put it on a solid saving plan rather than spending it...

This airline is either headed for oblivion and the corporate chop shop, or someone will wake up and hire a restructuring specialist to put it back on track, and these guys usually come equipped with a rather blunt payroll-cutting axe.

Either way, the idiots who are sinking this airline are taking our job stability with it.

AtoBsafely 24th Jan 2017 07:58

"Invest in the people"

Yes! Unfortunately we have 350 accountants in charge, and no leader in sight.

Strewth 24th Jan 2017 11:11

nothing new under the sun
 

Strewth 24th Jan 2017 12:46


flyingkiwi 24th Jan 2017 22:13

Rob Fyfe the leader that appeared in an air nz safety video in only body paint. now thats leadership.

Shep69 24th Jan 2017 22:42


Originally Posted by McNugget (Post 9651672)
Very well put.

It was a glaring omission, and it's been picked up on by all front line staff I've encountered. It really would be the single, most effective measure, and would pay for itself in spades.

Ron B,

Regarding the drag curve, I'm not so sure. A happy workforce would absolutely reverse the declining opinion of CX, and bring premium numbers back in droves.

American Airlines was a basket case, and granted, it went bankrupt - however, during the merger post-bankruptcy, Horton (CEO) gave every pilot and flight attendant HUGE pay rises. He stated it was because the reputation of both carriers is utterly horrific, the product and service is a woeful result of death by a thousand cuts (sound familiar?) and he needs all hands on deck to get through the merger. And it worked. Their product and service has improved 10-fold and they were the worlds most profitable airline in 2015.

CX top brass could get us all in side, and the results would be spectacular. By and large, you have a well-trained, professional, motivated team up front. But, apathy reigns. It's a deeply unhappy group. How any people manager thinks that's how to extract the most value from that manpower is beyond me.

Aft of the flight deck door, you have leaders that have seen the good days.
They would love to have them back, but they aren't given the tools to, and they no longer have a reason to care. These are the customer facing employees. I believe the fancy term for that is a "touch point".
Well, that touch point is now a handshake with an electric shock prank toy.

We hear plenty of stick for cabin crew here, but I personally think that they've done a remarkable job to hold on to any semblance of service quality for this long.

Inspire them, and watch what happens. By inspire, I mean treat them properly and give them a few basic tools to enhance their offerings. They WANT to offer premium service. That's why they joined.

Invest in the people, and you'll hardly even need to invest in hard product to reverse the trend.

Apologies to the other employee groups who I make no mention of. I'm sure they have similar points of view. I just don't get to see their perspectives while on the job.

This is so easy. It would take time, but it's easy. Unlike deciphering that nonsense email.

Time to wake up, rather than time to win.

This is spot on, but also what I was preaching over a year and a half ago. Not much has changed. Nor has there been much willingness to change or really even listen much.


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