Title: UNITED APIL - Saipan
1UNITED APIL - Saipan
2FORTUNE magazine ranks United the No.1 WORLDS
MOST ADMIRED AIRLINES
- On March 1, 2012, FORTUNE magazine rated United
the most admired airline on its annual
airline-industry list of the Worlds Most Admired
Companies - The magazine also ranked United No.1 for global
competitiveness and long-term investment among 12
global carriers
3United The worlds leading airline
Unparalleled Global Network
Industry Leading Products Services
Strong Partnerships
Exceptional Coworkers
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4United service to all major regions ranks 1 or 2
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2
1
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2011 Unit Passenger Revenue1 (in cents)
- Serving the most destinations of any global
carrier - Hubs in the 4 largest U.S. cities
- 40 of Fortune 100 companies headquartered in UA
hubs
Rankings for US carriers by ASMs as of 2011. 1.
Consolidated PRASM numbers for carriers other
than UAL adjusted for length of haul versus UALs
length of haul Source Earnings releases and SEC
filings.
5Alliance Scope
Star Alliance consists of 25 current members
strategically located across the globe
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Notes indicates future partners.
6United will invest additional 550 million in
fleet-wide onboard improvements
- Adding flat-bed seating on long-haul aircraft,
more than any other U.S. carrier - Adding Economy Plus seating to Guam B737 fleet in
2013 - Installing Panasonic Ku-band satellite Wi-Fi
connectivity on more than 300 aircraft which
enables to introduce wireless streaming video
content on onboard its A319, 320, B747, 757, 767,
777 and 787 aircraft
7Working together drives business results A
culture where employees like their jobs and enjoy
coming to work
8PSS Largest Technology Conversion in Aviation
History
- Early on March 3, we converted to a single
passenger service system (SHARES), a single
website (united.com,) a single loyalty program
(MileagePlus) and a single employee booking tool
(employeeRES) - This was the single largest technology conversion
in aviation history - migrated 17 million PNRs, 17 million tickets and
32 million MileagePlus accounts - upgraded 12,000 workstations at approximately 200
locations - installed more than 2,500 application servers at
five data-center locations - coordinated partner connectivity with more than
160 airline and global distribution system
partners and more than 120 common use airport
locations around the world - integrated call routing services across our 12
contact centers and 1,400 home agents. - more than 14,000 co-workers completed more than
1.7 million training hours
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CONFIDENTIAL
9United Asia Pacific Network
SEA
CTS
SDJ
ORD
KIJ
DEN
EWR
IAD
PEK
SFO
NRT
ICN
KIX
LAX
NGO
HIJ
FUK
SNA
OKJ
PVG
OKA
IAH
HKG
TPE
LIH
HNL
SPN
OGG
KOA
MNL
BKK
ROP
GUM
KWA
TKK
SGN
YAP
ROR
MAJ
PNI
KSA
SIN
UA Routes
UA Routes
Future Routes
CNS
SYD
AKL
MEL
Source OAG Aug-2011
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10Guam Operation Performance
- Data period ending Jun 12, 2012
11Delays GBO A14 YOY Trend
12Delays GBO CF Trend
13- Houston You Blew It on United Hub
- By Ray Pierce
- Ref ray_at_raypierce.com
- HOUSTON (TheStreet) -- Houston, you blew it. You
killed the goose that laid the golden egg.
14- Aesop's fable, written in the sixth century B.C.,
tells of a couple that had a goose that laid
golden eggs. Thinking they could get more gold
more quickly, the couple killed the goose and cut
it open. But they found no more eggs. The fable
has stood for 2,400 years as a tale of being
rich, wanting to be richer, and losing everything
in that pursuit. - This ancient lesson, unfortunately, was lost on
Houston's city council, which voted 16-1 last
month to enable Southwest (LUV) to build an
international terminal at Houston Hobby Airport,
diminishing United's (UAL) hub at Houston Bush
Intercontinental. There United operates the third
biggest U.S. hub, with 650 daily departures to
177 destinations including 64 international
destinations. - United's Houston hub is also the third most
profitable major airline operation in the country
in terms of profit margin, according to Scott
Kirby, president of US Airways (LCC). The golden
egg is the vast benefit it brings to Houston's
economy. In a global world, cities have few
assets more important than international airports
with the reach to drive global commerce. - As John Kasarda, professor at the Kenan-Flagler
Business School at the University of North
Carolina, has said, in the 18th century the great
cities were ports. In the 19th century, the great
cities were railroad cities. In the 20th, they
were cities with good highway access. In the 21st
century, they are cities with non-stop
international flights. - Houston, of course, is important - it's the home
of the oil industry and the fourth biggest U.S.
city. Nevertheless, Houston cannot possibly, by
itself, support all the flights United operates
there. Rather, 71 of hub passengers connect,
coming from elsewhere to change planes. That is
the highest percentage for United's hubs. At
Denver, the next highest, 68 connect. At Dulles,
65 connect at Chicago, 62 at Cleveland 57,
and at Los Angeles and San Francisco, 52. At
Newark, the lowest, just 42 connect.
15- Statistics compiled by United show that among
U.S. hubs, Houston ranks fourth in providing
airline seats that exceed the number of local
passengers. In other words, Houston has far more
capacity than its residents fill. Charlotte, US
Airways' biggest hub, has 5.3 seats per local
passenger. Atlanta, Delta's(DAL) biggest, has
4.2. Dallas, AMR's(AAMRQ.PK) biggest, has 2.9.
Houston has 2.8, Detroit has 2.5 and Chicago also
has 2.5. At the other end of the spectrum, Miami
and Los Angeles have just 1.6 seats per local
passenger. (Capacity includes all airlines, not
just hub carriers.) Among the top 10 hub cities,
only Chicago has two international airports. - In the hub system, you bring in passengers to
connect. The more passengers you have, the more
flights and destinations you can offer. Sadly,
little margin for error exists in a historically
unprofitable business where, too often, the last
one or two passengers on an airplane provide the
margin between a profit and a loss. - "We have a series of flight that lose money,"
Znotins said. "We knew they were losing money,
but we thought we were going to grow in Houston.
Now we know we won't grow, so those flights look
like money-losing investments that won't get any
better. Rather than fly them for two more years,
we are pulling back. - The tragedy is that Aesop laid all this out two
and a half millennia ago. The golden goose, the
United hub, provides Houston with far more air
service than it can support. That only made
Houston want more, so it chopped up what it has
in return for a few cheap flights to Cancun.
16UnitedSupporting and servicing the
communities we live and work in