Title: Renaissance at British Airways
1(No Transcript)
2Renaissance at British Airways
- Adapt to Survive
- Paul Beadsmoore
- Renaissance Architecture (role)
- Principal Business Analyst (job)
- Business Solutions (team)
3Before we begin, a word from BA recruitment
- Vacancy for a talented individual
- To turnaround the first loss since privatisation
- To deliver a tough strategy for tough times
- To build a sustainable future
- Must be focused on the customer
- Must be in touch with the workers
- Must be ruthless in cutting costs
- Replacing the boss is one of the biggest changes
a company can experience
4Summary
- There is now unrelenting pressure for the airline
industry to continually change - British Airways is transforming its Revenue
Management capability to enable a flexible future - Applying the technique of component based
development (CBD) will facilitate this
transformation - Smart-sourcing of components will deliver the
most efficient and effective solutions
5Some examples of change affecting British Airways
- Capacity reduction - focus on high yielding
business - New products - 4 cabins in longhaul
- Deregulation in Europe - low cost carriers
- Excessive global capacity - airline industry
currently making a loss - Pressure on profit - strength of sterling, fuel
- Selling - intermediaries embracing the concept of
revenue management
6Changes to the way BA Revenue Management reports
- Now part of the Strategy Department
- Part of a work stream called Capacity Management
- Fleet Planning
- Network Planning - includes Fleet Scheduling
- Revenue Management
- Managers will be appointed to a new structure on
3-Apr-00 to enable change - But what is most important is how the
organisation is structured at the bottom -
where the work gets done
7Major change to OR at BA
- Keith Rapley has left BA
- OR now part of the Strategy Department
- Structured into functional and
cross-functional teams - Work within a strong definition, i.e. strategic
consultancy, to maximise value - Formalise the movement of OR people into the line
- OR lost me!
8Change to take advantage of e-Opportunities
- e-Procurement (suppliers) and e-Working
(employees) - e-Commerce (customers) - 50 on-line revenue by
2003 - e-Ventures (new internet businesses)
- On-line neutral travel agency
- Air Miles on-line
- Lifestyle portal
9Renaissance progress
- Mission remains to be world leading
- Increased target - recognising that revenue
management is critical to the success of our
strategy - Completed the process and organisation design of
the ideal capability (To Be) - Completed system architecture gap analysis (SAGA)
- About to complete the implementation plan
10Renaissance plan
- Integrated implementation in 6-month phases
- OD Phase 3 will be embedded in the delivery
- e-Initiatives will be incorporated along the way
- Due to complete by end of 2001
- Establish an environment of continuous improvement
11Transition Planning - focus on business
capability and benefit delivery
- Business Capability Streams
- Improving existing capabilities
- Developing new capabilities
- Business cases with clear scope
- Small focused teams enabled to make decisions
- Whole department have opportunity to contribute
- Transition Framework
- Coordinates implementation
- Manages dependencies between streams
- Integrates new capabilities with existing ones
- Prioritises work and recruits resources
- Plans further work
12Renaissance method
- Objective - transform Revenue Management into a
dynamic enterprise - Stages -
- Solution Creation - turning ideas and theories
into solutions within a creative environment - Model Office - use a process lab to eliminate the
risk in the solution - Implement and measure performance
- Techniques - CBD and smart-sourcing
13Component based development (CBD)
- An enterprise is a collection of capability
components which cooperate by each using the
services supplied by others - A dynamic enterprise is an enterprise which can
evolve (new components added, old ones removed)
without having to stop - A dynamic enterprise will operate safely and
effectively if its components all obey three laws
143 laws for a dynamic enterprise
- A component, added to an enterprise, may not
disrupt the behaviour of that enterprise - A component using the services of another, does
so at its own risk and must protect itself from
damage - A component offering a service does so at its own
risk and must protect itself from misuse - Reference - Peter Henderson, University of
Southampton, UK
15Some examples of high level capability components
Performance Management
16Working Business Plans
Business Plans Financial Targets
Market Area View
Schedule
- Flow Plans
- Price
- Demand
- Yield
- Cost
- Channel
Network Plan Optimisation
Network View
Route View
Engine Numbers
17Smart-sourcing
- On-site - staff at LHR headquarters
- Off-site - Telephone Sales in Newcastle
- Off-shore - Revenue Management Support in India
- Automation
- In-house - OD, GHOST (groups)
- Third party - IDEAL (dealing), DSS (decision
support)
18Summary
- There is now unrelenting pressure for the airline
industry to continually change - British Airways is transforming its Revenue
Management capability to enable a flexible future - Applying the technique of component based
development (CBD) will facilitate this
transformation - Smart-sourcing of components will deliver the
most efficient and effective solutions
19Running an airline involves dealing with complex
technology and logistics. Yet, in the public
perception, this is a very straightforward
business, centred on the simple proposition of
bringing together a willing seller with a willing
buyer.
- Colin Marshall
- Acting Chief Executive
- British Airways
20(No Transcript)