Jet Airways' Strategy, Operations and Competitive Position


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Case Details:

Case Code : BSTR172
Case Length : 18 Pages
Period : 1993-05
Organization : Jet Airways
Pub Date : 2005
Teaching Note : Available
Countries : India
Themes: Business Strategy
Industry : Aviation

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Please note:

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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Jet Airways' Successful IPO Contd...

As of late 2004, Jet Airways was the leader in the Indian airline industry with a market share of nearly 46 percent (in terms of passengers carried). Indian Airlines, India's national airline, followed at around 38.5 percent, and Air Sahara, another private operator, was fast catching up with a market share of 14.5 percent in 2004.

The positions of all three, however, were under threat from Air Deccan and a slew of other LCAs that promised to change the dynamics of the industry completely. (By the end of 2004, Air Deccan, which started operations in late 2003, had managed to capture a market share of one percent in terms of passengers carried.)

Background

Civil aviation in India came under the purview of the Department of Civil Aviation, a part of the Ministry of Civil Aviation and Tourism, Government of India (GoI).

Until economic liberalization took place in the early 1990s, the sector was dominated by government-owned carriers Air India, Indian Airlines, and Alliance Air, along with a few helicopter companies.

In 1991, as a part of the economic liberalization program, the GoI opened the civil aviation sector to private investment. This was considered to be a boon for the sector and was welcomed by investors and passengers alike. The general opinion was that civil aviation would benefit considerably with the entry of private airlines, which would compete with the increasingly apathetic national airlines and improve the overall standards of service. Following liberalization, several new private airlines began operations in India. Some of the prominent ones were: ModiLuft, Damania Airways, East West Airlines, NEPC, Air Sahara, and Jet Airways. Of these airlines, only Jet Airways and Air Sahara managed to survive the 1990s.

Goyal, the founder of Jet Airways was a Commerce graduate who joined Lebanese International Airlines as a General Sales Agent (GSA) based in New Delhi in 1967.

Following this, he had a stint with Iraqi Airways for a few years, before joining the Royal Jordanian Airlines as a regional manager. Working with foreign airlines gave Goyal extensive exposure to all facets of the airline business and propelled him toward entering the business himself...

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