Storm over Sobelair
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Storm over Sobelair
Interesting article in La Libre Belgique yesterday (http://www.lalibre.be/article.phtml?id= ... _id=127794)
Aldo Vastapane was angry at 4 pilots who sent him a fax against negotiating with SN BA (they would probably have to relinquish part of their salary if that occurred). He replied that he has no orders to receive from pilots.
There are also increasingly different views between Aldo Vastapane (who is actively looking for co-operation with SN BA) and his Managing Director Luc Mellaerts (who shares the pilots' views and wants Sobelair to stand alone).
And then this explosive statement from a study made by consultant Arthur D Little: the finances of SN BA are bad. Therefore, they should buy Sobelair at a low price, and sell three planes to refinance themselves! A second option would be to change Sobelair in a low-cost operator!
Hot summer over Brussels airport!!!
Aldo Vastapane was angry at 4 pilots who sent him a fax against negotiating with SN BA (they would probably have to relinquish part of their salary if that occurred). He replied that he has no orders to receive from pilots.
There are also increasingly different views between Aldo Vastapane (who is actively looking for co-operation with SN BA) and his Managing Director Luc Mellaerts (who shares the pilots' views and wants Sobelair to stand alone).
And then this explosive statement from a study made by consultant Arthur D Little: the finances of SN BA are bad. Therefore, they should buy Sobelair at a low price, and sell three planes to refinance themselves! A second option would be to change Sobelair in a low-cost operator!
Hot summer over Brussels airport!!!
Last edited by sn26567 on 07 Aug 2003, 10:29, edited 1 time in total.
André
ex Sabena #26567
ex Sabena #26567
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vliegtuigfreak
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What is a good low cost carrier?
A good low cost carrier is not a cheap one...
Virgin Blue is number one, Southwest Airlines and Ryanair took second and third place respectively in 2003 Travel Quality.com Aviation Awards.
Virgin Blue chief executive Brett Godfrey said the carrier started less than three years ago determined to offer an affordable high-quality product.
"It's made a big impact in a challenging industry and what really shone through was its commitment to good old-fashioned friendly customer service,"
Last year Virgin Blue was named the Skytrax best low-fare carrier.
So low cost results in low fare?
Q is: would SLR and SNBA be able to offer an affordable high-quality product @ a low fare.
We are many to know the answers, aren't we?
Virgin Blue is number one, Southwest Airlines and Ryanair took second and third place respectively in 2003 Travel Quality.com Aviation Awards.
Virgin Blue chief executive Brett Godfrey said the carrier started less than three years ago determined to offer an affordable high-quality product.
"It's made a big impact in a challenging industry and what really shone through was its commitment to good old-fashioned friendly customer service,"
Last year Virgin Blue was named the Skytrax best low-fare carrier.
So low cost results in low fare?
Q is: would SLR and SNBA be able to offer an affordable high-quality product @ a low fare.
We are many to know the answers, aren't we?
And the difference is? a Q&A.
Q: What is the difference between an airline and a charter airline?
A: The client.
Airline clients are the passengers. In most of the cases the passengers decides what airline he will fly (Unless he wants to fly to Kabul, he might always end up with Mahan Airlines...)
Of course travel agents can have an influence, but in the end the passenger will decide.
Charter airline clients are the product managers of the tour operators. There are only a few PM in Belgium. Their criteria are slightly different from the passenger's. Remember some elegant kick backs in Luxemburg with some famous TO. Charter airlines can eventually buy these PM's.
Interest and benefits are NOT the same.
The passengers wants comfort, services etc... everything you know.
The PM wants the widest benefit margin, and as little as possible trouble. If he can obtain that, and made a saleable product, he has done good work.
When the passengers wants the max, the PM will tend to give the minimum. Its an balance-act.
The charter airline will consequently work in the same balancing way. Its only problem is competition. UK, Germany, Netherlands have good charter airlines due to that competion. But a charter airline in a monoply has arrogance tendencies, as have prime ministers in a comfortable majority. That is why the british charter airlines are better than the premier overthere.
Fons
A: The client.
Airline clients are the passengers. In most of the cases the passengers decides what airline he will fly (Unless he wants to fly to Kabul, he might always end up with Mahan Airlines...)
Of course travel agents can have an influence, but in the end the passenger will decide.
Charter airline clients are the product managers of the tour operators. There are only a few PM in Belgium. Their criteria are slightly different from the passenger's. Remember some elegant kick backs in Luxemburg with some famous TO. Charter airlines can eventually buy these PM's.
Interest and benefits are NOT the same.
The passengers wants comfort, services etc... everything you know.
The PM wants the widest benefit margin, and as little as possible trouble. If he can obtain that, and made a saleable product, he has done good work.
When the passengers wants the max, the PM will tend to give the minimum. Its an balance-act.
The charter airline will consequently work in the same balancing way. Its only problem is competition. UK, Germany, Netherlands have good charter airlines due to that competion. But a charter airline in a monoply has arrogance tendencies, as have prime ministers in a comfortable majority. That is why the british charter airlines are better than the premier overthere.
Fons
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- Contact:
In Britain there are many complaints about charter airlines, as there are about Ryanair. Many charter airlines in Britain start up and either end up going bankrupt or taken over by bigger companies, but no one would ever regard them as quality airlines (and that is the point of view of someone British!)
Sabena and Sobelair - gone but never forgotten.
Louise
Louise
That is what I mean...
There used to be one regular quality charter in Belgium.Comet wrote: no one would ever regard them as quality airlines)
Flying BRU TCI (Not TFS, didn't exsist at that time) That was a Caravelle equiped only with 2/3 of its seats, to say 66 seats approx. Serving champagne to their passengers. But this charter was 'limited' to clients of a building promotor.
We are not talking of these exceptions.
Charters as done by Demeutter of Airtour Brussels Belgian TO in the 6&7ties, was not what a charter is nowadays.
I have seen british charters disembarking their load at MBA, oh my god...
Colleagues at stations in Spain must even have seen worse, although the flying time is shorter... raving.
The wrapper and the content are not always of best freshness...
Some countries have them...
Re: What is a good low cost carrier?
Definitely NO.SN30952 wrote:Q is: would SLR and SNBA be able to offer an affordable high-quality product @ a low fare.
We are many to know the answers, aren't we?
Many reasons:
1) the high traffic rights at BRU
2) a mentality of doing the least possible for the highest salary (although this is improving at SN BA)
3) a lack of entrepreneurship
4) an undercapitalised company that lacks money for the investments necessary to launch such a venture.
Only a guy like Branson (or that Greek from easyJet, Stelios something, can't remember his name) has the guts (and the money) to succeed.
André
ex Sabena #26567
ex Sabena #26567
High costs for low cost carriers?
Andre,sn26567 wrote:Andre wrote: Many reasons:
1) the high traffic rights at BRU
Traffic rights are usually granted...
Do you mean the cost to operate into and out BRU BN?
If that is the case I guess it is for everybody the same? Or do have some guys avantages? I know airlines can bargain @BN.
What is known about that?
[quote="liebensd]"They own only two aircrafts (I think) [/quote]
Selling its own gear, looks like sawing the bough your sitting on. As thin as it may be...
The value of SLR is this:
- Its know how
- Its aircraft
- Its portfolio
Honestly, I would be a foreign investor, I would only be interested in the last item.
Selling its own gear, looks like sawing the bough your sitting on. As thin as it may be...
The value of SLR is this:
- Its know how
- Its aircraft
- Its portfolio
Honestly, I would be a foreign investor, I would only be interested in the last item.
Sobelair: "Voldoende geld tot winter"
(belga) - "We zitten niet in geldnood. Voorlopig winnen we geld. We zitten goed tot de winter", aldus Aldo Vastapane, voorzitter van de raad van beheer van chartermaatschappij Sobelair. Hij zei dit in een reactie op geruchten over het verzoek van een lening aan SN Brussels Airlines (SNBA).
In juli luidde het nog dat het Sabena-curatele een herschikking van de schuld van Sobelair linkte aan een samenwerking met SNBA. Volgens Vastapane lopen hierover nog steeds gesprekken.
15:51 - 11/08/2003
Copyright © Tijdnet
English summary
Sobelair has enough money until the winter and is now making profit.
Greetz,
Dave
(belga) - "We zitten niet in geldnood. Voorlopig winnen we geld. We zitten goed tot de winter", aldus Aldo Vastapane, voorzitter van de raad van beheer van chartermaatschappij Sobelair. Hij zei dit in een reactie op geruchten over het verzoek van een lening aan SN Brussels Airlines (SNBA).
In juli luidde het nog dat het Sabena-curatele een herschikking van de schuld van Sobelair linkte aan een samenwerking met SNBA. Volgens Vastapane lopen hierover nog steeds gesprekken.
15:51 - 11/08/2003
Copyright © Tijdnet
English summary
Sobelair has enough money until the winter and is now making profit.
Greetz,
Dave