Well with the greatest of respect ,platy,I never said anything about idolising Alan Joyce,all I did is make a comment that he has a double maths degree from Trinity,and I postulated that his experience in maths may stand Qantas in good stead if they need someone who can "run the numbers",I also,by the way,commented that the next few years are likely to be tough going for Qantas (and Joyce) and that at the end of it he will either be acknowledged as a good choice for CEO or a bad one,only time will tell,but having read a few of your recent posts on the subject of Qantas and their management team I suspect that you hold pretty firm views about Joyce (and Dixon) and that you are unlikely to change them.
Would that be a fair statement? I don't wish to put words in your mouth.
Actually you claimed that you "
couldn't imagine that there would be a better man for the job" given his education
My counter points were that there are master degrees and masters degrees, that his educational skill set isn't actually that remarkable and I question why that should make him the
best!
My concerns about Joyce are his lack of people skills (based on personal reports from folk I know who have dealt with him in QF) despite the rhetoric to fix the morale and customer service problems at QF.
And his belief in the JQ model without acknowledging the great debt the start up owed (and continues to owe) the infrastructure of the parent airline.
QF/JQ continue to issue PR, which any self respecting jouralist could pick apart as fantastical (eg my example above of claims of increased pax on routes where they simply ain't enough aircraft to acommodate the volume of traffic increase claimed) and one questions whether he believes the hype as much as the unquestionning journos (my insiders tell me they think he does).
I personally see great problems in Group QF including poor brand demaraction and I suspect that Joyce will further that confusion rather than fix it.
Is Joyce broadly competent? Probably, yes. The best? That's a matter for subjective debate.
From a customer perspective my
concern is that we will continue to see an erosion of service, product, loyalty benefits, etc, etc and Joyce's background both academic and in the LCC arena accentuates that perception.
Qf survive the GFC? Sure, make the whole thing LCC and crunch those numbers and be very thankful Dixon's love affair with private equity fell flat on its face.