JetBlue Airways: Growing Pains?
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Case Details:
Case Code : BSTR277 Case Length : 18 Pages Period : 2000-2007 Pub Date : 2008 Teaching Note : Available Themes: Business Strategy
Organization : JetBlue Industry: Aviation
Countries : USA
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This case study was compiled from published sources, and is intended to be used as a basis for class discussion. It is not intended to illustrate either effective or ineffective handling of a management situation. Nor is it a primary information source.
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A Change of Guard at Jetblue Contd...
The airline's slow reaction to the adverse weather had left thousands of passengers stranded at the airports.
In addition to having serious financial repercussions, this fiasco harmed JetBlue's image as a customer-friendly airline and tarnished its reliability record. Analysts greeted the leadership change positively.
For several years after it was set up, JetBlue had been one of the most successful airlines in the US, rivaling Southwest Airlines (Southwest)4 in profitability and growth. However, it began facing various problems, both internal and external, in 2005-2006.
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Several analysts were of the opinion that JetBlue's growth in its early years had been too fast and unsustainable in the longer term, and that it was because of this that things started to come undone at the airline when the business environment changed.
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Background
Business plans for setting up JetBlue were developed by Neeleman, along with his lawyer Tom Kelly, in 1998. Neeleman raised $160 million5 in capital from top investors like Weston Presidio Capital, J.P. Morgan Partners, and Soros Private Equity Partners, and founded the airline in February 1999.
In September 1999, JetBlue was awarded 75 landing and takeoff slots at the John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK)
in New York, which was to serve as its base... |
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