Flying Fox
Established Member
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2006
- Posts
- 2,981
- Qantas
- Silver Club
My thoughts are -
1. I agree that J is now better than F used to be. If you think further back, F didn't even have flat beds so time has changed the service levels for everyone. Maybe with the exception of Y.
2. Concerns about less J redemption/upgrade seats as well.
3. More importantly, I think that QF has got its timing very wrong. With the GFC ending and premium travel demand growing again, isn't this the wrong time to be taking out premium classes that represent the fattest margins? Won't this hurt profitability in the future? If you consider a GFC as a once in a 30 yr event, reducing a profitable product line to combat a financial glitch that might not occur again in 30 yrs or so is bound to damage profitability in the 29yrs in between.
If this cycle of decision making continues, the next GFC will be just after QF have started reconfiguring their aircraft for more premium products
1. I agree that J is now better than F used to be. If you think further back, F didn't even have flat beds so time has changed the service levels for everyone. Maybe with the exception of Y.
2. Concerns about less J redemption/upgrade seats as well.
3. More importantly, I think that QF has got its timing very wrong. With the GFC ending and premium travel demand growing again, isn't this the wrong time to be taking out premium classes that represent the fattest margins? Won't this hurt profitability in the future? If you consider a GFC as a once in a 30 yr event, reducing a profitable product line to combat a financial glitch that might not occur again in 30 yrs or so is bound to damage profitability in the 29yrs in between.
If this cycle of decision making continues, the next GFC will be just after QF have started reconfiguring their aircraft for more premium products
