Air National
Air National
Air National
Air National’s (AN) 1998 Annual Report glowed with optimism. Bradley Smith, CEO, stated in his
letter to shareholders, ‘As a newly privatized company, we face the future with enthusiasm,
confident that we can compete in a deregulated industry.’ By April 2000, however, the tone had
changed, with a reported pre-tax loss of $93 million. The newly appointed CEO, Clive Warren,
announced a major change in the company’s business strategy that would lead to a transformation
of business operations and HR practices in Europe’s largest airline company. Background During the
early 1980s, civil aviation was a highly regulated market, and competition was managed via close, if
not always harmonious, relationships between airlines, their competitors and governments. National
flag-carriers dominated the markets, and market shares were determined not by competition but by
the skill of their governments in negotiating bilateral ‘air service agreements’. These agreements
established the volume and distribution of air traffic and thereby revenue. Within these markets, AN
dominated other carriers; despite the emergence of new entrants, AN’s share of the domestic
market in the early 1980s, for example, increased by 60 per cent. The competition In the middle of
the 1980s, AN’s external environment was subjected to two sets of significant change. First, in 1986,
AN was privatized by Britain’s Conservative government. This potentially reduced the political
influence of the old corporation and exposed the new company to competitive forces. Preparation
for privatization required a painful restructuring and ‘downsizing’ of assets and the workforce,
driven largely by the need to make the company attractive to initially sceptical investors.
Privatization also offered significant political leverage, which AN was able to deploy to secure further
stability in its key product markets. It was this context, rather than the stimulus of market
competition, that gave senior management the degree of stability and security needed to plan and
implement new business and HRM strategies. The second set of pressures, potentially more decisive,
was generated by prolonged economic recession and the ongoing deregulation of civil aviation in
Europe and North America. With these environmental forces, AN attempted to grow out of the
recession by adopting a low-cost competitive strategy and joining the industry-wide price war.
Bradley Smith, when he addressed his senior management team, stated, ‘this strategy requires us to
be aggressive in the marketplace and to be diligent in our pursuit of cost reductions and cost
minimization in areas like service, marketing and advertising’. The low-cost competitive strategy
failed. Passenger numbers slumped by 7 per cent during the late 1980s, contributing to a pre-tax
loss. Following the appointment of the new CEO, AN changed its competitive strategy and began to
develop a differentiation business strategy (Porter, 1979) or what is also referred to as an ‘added-
value’ strategy. In 2002, following the September 11 attacks in New York and Washington in which
four commercial planes were hijacked and crashed, killing almost 3000 people, international air
travel bookings fell sharply. The catastrophes caused the loss of more than 100,000 airline jobs
around the world. In addition, early in 2002, new discount airlines started operating in Europe, and
there was a costly battle for market share between AN, HopJet Airlines and Tango Airlines. Air
National’s new competitive strategy Under the guidance of the newly appointed CEO, Clive Warren,
AN prioritized high-quality customer service, ‘re-engineered’ the company and launched a discount
airline that operated as a separate company. The management structure was reorganized to provide
a tighter focus on operational issues beneath corporate level. AN’s operations were divided into
route groups based on five major markets (Exhibit 2.1). Each group was to be headed by a general
manager who was given authority over the development of the business, with a particular emphasis
on marketing. The company’s advertising began also to emphasize the added-value elements of AN’s
services. New brand names were developed, and new uniforms were introduced for the cabin crews
and point-of-service staff. AN’s restructuring also aimed to cut the company’s cost base. Aircraft and
buildings were sold and persistently unprofitable routes either suspended or abandoned altogether.
AN’s overall route portfolio was cut by 4 per cent during 2001 alone. Labour costs offered the most
significant potential savings, and with 35,000 employees AN’s re-engineering included ‘one of the
biggest redundancy programmes in British history’. Once the redundancy programme was
underway, the company was able to focus on product development, marketing, customer service
and HR development. The company’s sharpened focus on the new ‘customer-first’ programme
prompted a major review of the management of employees and their interface with customers. Air
National’s human resources strategy The competitive and HR strategies pursued by
AN mainline business in the wake of this restructuring process, are congruent with an HR strategy
that emphasizes employee empowerment and commitment. As Clive Warren stated in a television
interview, ‘In an industry like ours, where there are no assembly lines or robots, people are our most
important asset and our long term survival depends upon how they work as part of a team’. In the
closing part of her presentation, Elizabeth Hoffman, AN’s Director of Human Resources, outlined the
need for a new approach to managing AN’s mainline employees: ‘We must emphasize to our
managers that they must give up control if our employees are to improve their performance’ (Exhibit
2.2). As part of the ‘new way of doing things’, demarcation between craft groups, such as avionics
and mechanical engineers, were removed, and staff were organized into teams of multiskilled
operatives led by team leaders. Even those middle managers who supported the new work teams
found this approach to managing their subordinates uncomfortable, as one maintenance manager
acknowledged: ‘The hard part is having to share power. I confess, I like to be able to say yes or no
without having to confer all the time and seek consensus from the team.’ AN instituted a series of
customer service training seminars and invested in training and development.
The senior management also strategy and GoJet’s HR strategy? (Re-reading HRM in practice 2.3
might help here.) developed a ‘strategic partnership’ with the unions. At the onset of the
restructuring process, Clive Warren and Elizabeth Hoffman undertook to ‘open the books’ to the
unions and established team briefings and regular, formal consultation meetings with union
representatives. A profit-related pay system was also launched, with the full support of the unions.
In addition, senior management held major training programmes, designed and delivered by leading
business school academics, on the importance of trust, motivation and ‘visionary’ leadership.
Running parallel to these developments was the company’s concurrent objective of cost reduction.
Between 1996 and 2000, AN shed 37 per cent of its workforce, nearly 25 per cent leaving in 1998.
Job cuts were managed entirely through voluntary severance and redeployment. The requirement to
sustain and improve performance in the face of such job losses produced, however, a preoccupation
with productivity levels, and attempts to alter shift patterns sometimes provoked conflict. Disputes
were resolved quickly, usually by the company reminding employees of AN’s commitment to job
security, training and development, and through senior management ‘throwing money at the
problem’. GoJet competitive and human resources strategy AN also launched its GoJet product in
November 2002 to take advantage of the dramatic shift by European and North American
passengers towards discount airlines. GoJet planes have more seats because there is less room
between the seats and the business-class section has been removed, which allows the planes to
carry an additional 20 passengers. GoJet costs will be 20 per cent lower than those of AN’s
comparable mainline flights partly because GoJet’s employees will be paid a lower wage than their
counterparts at AN. Clive Warren has, however, said that wages will be competitive with GoJet’s
competitors in the discount market. Reviewing the developments, Clive Warren considered that AN
had been ‘transformed by re-engineering’. Deep in debt in the late 1980s, AN went into profit in the
first quarter of 1998 and then suffered a loss in the last quarter of 2001 and the first quarter of 2002.
The company’s aircraft were flying to 164 destinations in 75 countries from 16 UK airports. ‘If we are
to maintain our market share in domestic and international passenger traffic we have to have a
business plan that recognizes the realities of airline travel in the 21st century’, said Warren.
You are an HR consultant employed by a rival national airline to investigate AN’s competitive and HR
strategy.
1. What factors enabled AN’s senior management to take a strategic approach to its business and to
adopt an empowering-developmental approach to HRM?
2. How useful is the concept of ‘strategic choice’ in understanding the linkage between AN’s
competitive and HR strategies?
3. What problems, if any, do you envisage with AN’s HR strategy and GoJet’s HR strategy? (Re-
reading HRM in practice 2.3 might help here.)