Changes At AA

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Although I don't need it (standing at only 5'7"), I'm very glad to see
that AA's keeping the more leg-room thing! :-D

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Clay in SEA

fAAn of the silver bird

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http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/bus/stories/051804dnbusameri
can.ce759.html

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Months into an aggressive reassessment of American Airlines Inc.'s
in-flight services and its fare structure, results from the research are
starting to trickle out.=20

The Fort Worth-based carrier will keep expanded legroom on the vast
majority of its jets, deciding that customers value two to four inches
of extra space. American officials had thought about moving seats closer
together again to increase its capacity at very little cost.=20

After considering offerings such as satellite television at every seat,
American will, at least for now, focus its efforts on giving more
passengers power ports. The thinking: Many passengers already tote their
own entertainment, but they could use electricity from the plane.=20

And American is expected to experiment again with some kind of
simplified fare system. American chief executive Gerard Arpey has
already been presented with a plan but has told airline executives it
needed more work.=20

Major changes to American's business plan aren't imminent, airline
officials cautioned. But serious revisions remain likely over the coming
months as the airline works through the research it's gathered from a
core team of 100 front-line employees who were brought together in
January to help change the airline. Reports from teams of the employees
are due in a few weeks, covering everything from how passengers get
their bags to how they respond to various fares.=20

"It's an ongoing continuous improvement process, just as we've done with
our cost cutting program," said Roger Frizzell, a spokesman for
American. They're "looking at our customer service and looking for
options on how we can improve our interaction."=20

Strategy=20

A smattering of details could emerge Wednesday at parent AMR Corp.'s
annual shareholder meeting, including an announcement that American will
upgrade about 100 planes previously operated by Trans World Airlines.
The carrier posted on its Internet site the news that the planes would
all receive in-seat power ports.=20

The focus on strategic planning contrasts sharply to last May's AMR
annual meeting, when Mr. Arpey unveiled his turnaround plan and the
carrier's fate remained uncertain. Now Mr. Arpey wants to sharpen his
company's swords to battle discounter airlines such as JetBlue Airways
Corp., especially in the Northeast.=20

"Any time you can do even something minor for passenger comfort, it's a
lot better than a kick in the butt," said industry consultant Darryl
Jenkins, a visiting professor at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.
"Everything is going to help."=20

Here's what could change, analysts say:=20

Customers' experience=20

All areas where American customers have contact with the airline are
being "process mapped" and evaluated for improvement.=20

For example, American's business class airplane seats aren't competitive
with new offerings from trans-Atlantic competitors, and the airline may
invest millions for improved seats that can lie completely flat like a
bed.=20

Also under consideration: Raising the quality of items such as
toiletries in amenity kits handed to international travelers. Meals and
other services offered on pricey overseas flights also could improve.=20

Much of American's growth is focused on international flying, where it
faces far less discount competition and has found better results lately.
American has added Asian routes and wants to find new ways to grow its
limited Pacific schedule.=20

As for in-flight entertainment, American realizes it offers an inferior
product to discounters such as JetBlue, which has free satellite
television at each seat. But Mr. Arpey is wary of investing millions for
new systems in each of its planes, which can add up quickly in a fleet
of 726 aircraft. But many concepts remain on the table for discussion.=20

Mr. Arpey seems to favor providing the infrastructure, such as electric
power and possibly Internet connections, relying on customers to bring
their own notebook computers and portable DVD players.=20

Airfare=20

Mr. Arpey has sent his executives back to the drawing board on pricing,
according to a source close to the airline.=20

Analysts and consultants expect American to experiment, though it
probably won't shake things up to the extent of its ill-fated Value
Pricing simplification, which wreaked havoc throughout the industry in
1992.=20

"They're going to have to do something," said Mr. Jenkins. "They still
do have some pricing power out there, but it's a lot less than they have
before."=20

Corporate fliers are chaffing at paying high walk-up fares at American
and other traditional carriers.=20

The premium of flying at short notice on a traditional carrier can
easily reach $1,000.=20

Discount carriers are forcing American and others to lower those top-end
prices by expanding their service onto traditional airlines' top routes.


Transcontinental routes previously served as American's bread and
butter.=20

Now yields, or what passengers pay per mile to fly, are down nearly 20
percent on key cross-country routes, thanks to discounters.=20

New price structure?=20

American and other airlines aren't financially strong enough to support
an overhaul in ticket pricing because such a change would cost tens of
millions of dollars in lost revenue, at least initially, Mr. Jenkins
said. But the alternative is losing even more of their best customers.=20

The new structure would probably be a combination of cheaper last-minute
fares and more expensive leisure fares to help make up some of the lost
revenue.=20

And the new system wouldn't work well on routes with discount
competition, where Southwest Airlines Co. and others are the ones
setting the prices, he said.=20

The world's largest carrier has lost a lot of swagger on Wall Street as
attention has focused on low-cost, low-fare darlings such as JetBlue and
AirTran Airways Inc. American fights a difficult perception that it's a
high-fare airline.=20

Image adjustment=20

Dan Garton, American's executive vice president for marketing, said in a
recent interview that the carrier launched a campaign in New York that
doubled the perception among residents that the carrier offered low
fares. The bad news: the new number believing the carrier has low fares
rose to just 14 percent.=20

"It's a start," he said.=20

The carrier is giving plenty of thought to refreshing its image with
consumers and hopes to lean on its strengths - experience and global
reach - to reintroduce itself.=20

As it works through the decision-making, American has purposefully
slowed down some thinking in order to let the employee-led committees
study issues and make presentations, said Mr. Frizzell, American's
spokesman.=20

Summer bookings are strong, and the airline is reluctant to make huge
changes now - with the busiest travel months around the corner.=20

Many of the changes may be announced in coming months but probably won't
take effect until the fall or even next year because the airline
planning cycle can be pretty long.=20

"No stone is going to go unturned," Mr. Frizzell said.=20

=20

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Clay Wardlow

Technical Writer

Advanced Digital Information Corp.

11431 Willows Rd. NE

Redmond, WA. 98052

(425) 897-7448

www.adic.com <http://www.adic.com/>=20

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