Preview

Ryanair Dogfight over Europe

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
968 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Ryanair Dogfight over Europe
Dogfight over Europe: Ryanair (A)

1) What is your assesment of Ryanair´s launch strategy?
The Ryanair's launch strategy was not the best for that moment. They began flying between Ireland and London, in a very saturated market, which competed with two strong companies owned by the government and with great experience: Aer Lingus and British Airways (who also had come together to improve their perform). And also entered the market independent carriers Such as British Midland. Another important factor was that the Dublin-London route was the only one that provided reasonable returns for Aer Lingus, so it was not going to let customers easily take him by force, and Ryanair will be difficult without a really differentiating strategy. Ryanair's differentiate notion was delivering first-rate customer service "with lower fares”. But for a new company as Ryanair would not be able to compete in prices following the same strategy as other companies in the market focus on meals and amenities and good service. Ryanair also has high fixed costs (characteristic of this industry) and has enough volume in order to face a price war (economics of scale).
Although the market was saturated, Ireland is a small country with a small population and the two big companies were operating at 60-70% capacity. If since 1986 was using new Boeing 747s with room for nearly 400, means that every plane carried 360 passengers on average, which was down the performance of the planes. But on the other hand, Ryanair could only get a license for aircraft with room for 44 Passengers, so it had to make eight flights, with the maximum capacity to carry the same number of passengers than BA or Aer Lingus. This could decrease the efficiency of Ryanair and increase the cost per flight management. Although it also because of the low initial demand Ryanair (only 4 flights per day to 44 passengers, 176 passengers) can be a good strategy to distribute the flights throughout the day and get more customers.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Ryan Air Case Analysis

    • 510 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Ryan Air started ‘small’ by initially focusing on the Dublin-London service four round trips per day with a 44-seat turboprop. At this time, they have yet to receive permission to fly larger jet aircraft on the route. They also focus on 2 main areas: First-rate customer service and simple, single-fare tickets with no restrictions. Additionally, Ryan Air would offer meals and amenities that were comparable to what is provided by Aer Lingus and British Airways.…

    • 510 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    As mentioned before, Europe has around three thousand short-haul airlines meaning that the competition of easyJet can be very wide. Although, the main threat in terms of competition for easyJet is the low-cost Irish company named Ryanair. This company bases its competitive strategy in “cost leadership” approach (supply same service at lower cost) and is double the size of easyJet in terms of profit. It covers the main destinations of Europe offering around 27 different countries and main cities in every country. From 2011 to 2012 Ryanair had an increase in profit after tax of 25% leading to a new record of €503 million. On the other hand, easyJet in 2012 got €255 million of profit after tax (half of Ryanair`s profit).…

    • 528 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    United Airlines

    • 544 Words
    • 3 Pages

    RyanAir stands out as it is the only low-cost carrier among the airlines examined. The strengths of this LCC compared to the “legacy carriers” such as Delta, United, and American is that the company serves only relatively short-haul routes throughout Europe which cost cheaper to operate and generally are not a huge loss in case of non-full flights. This allows for flight cost structure to be controlled easily and RyanAir has perfected the formula for offering cheaper flights to value-conscious consumers while realizing high margins for their flights. The disadvantages of RyanAir involve its network that is controlled in growth which only allows it to compete in the European market as opposed to the international market. The advantage of the legacy carriers compared to LCCs such as RyanAir involves the global network serviced by these airlines. American, United, and Delta are very strong not only domestically in the United States but internationally with service among 6 continents. The disadvantage of operating as many routes as a legacy carrier would is that profit margins would be lower as long-distance flights are less cost-effective than short-distance routes. On an investment standpoint, RyanAir should be a strong competitor in the market due to its business structure that allows it to maximize profits while maintaining a busy network…

    • 544 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The current market is a stabilized market, with a duopoly amongst the two strong players: British Airways and Aer Lingus. Both airlines established routes in the lucrative Dublin - London markets and tap on profits from this route to finance their other less profitable operations. The demand for air travel between the Dublin and London has probably stabilized over the 10 years from the stagnant market share of half million air travelers. Ryanair's strategy is focused on breaking this duopoly with the introduction of Ryanair's low costs and efficient service on the same route. The strategy entails to achieve the following:…

    • 533 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Best Essays

    Ryanair was established in the year 1985 by the RYAN family and has grown from a small airline flying a short hop from Waterford to London, into one of the Europe’s largest carriers. The company expanded and within 4 years it had 350 employees, 14 aircraft, and carried 600,000 passengers a year. It is currently serving to 26 European Countries with 148 destinations. It operates on 794 different routes daily serving by more than 1050 flights in a day. It has totally 169 aircrafts running for different routes with 5986number of employees working in it However, Ryanair’s costs rose drastically and it recorded losses of £20 Million sover four years despite its growth. Although consumers were continuing to fly Ryanair due to its low costs, some type of change was needed in order to revamp the company. Under a new management team, a major overhaul of the airline was undertaken in 1990/91 and it was relaunched as the first of the new breed of ‘Low Frees/no Frills’(Scribd.com(2009))…

    • 3150 Words
    • 13 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    industry is very profitable, mainly for the concentrate producers than the bottler’s. The leading players…

    • 2566 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Best Essays

    IntroductionRyanair was founded in July 1985 by the three brothers, Catlan, Declan, and Shane Ryan, with the financial assistant of their father Tony Ryan. As a beginner commercial carrier, its operations began with 25 staff and a single 15-seat turbo-prop commuter plane between Waterford in the southeast of Ireland and Gatwick Airport, the second busiest airport in London after Heathrow. Later on, regulatory authorities permitted the Ryanair Airlines to have at least four flying flights a day on Dublin-London route, with more seating capacity. Nowadays, Ryanair, with its rapid growth, occupies the most sought position in its own field, being "Britain's favorite airline" and the oldest-low cost air carrier in Europe.…

    • 2150 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Best Essays

    Ryanair - Economic Analysis

    • 3532 Words
    • 12 Pages

    Ryanair is an Irish airline founded in 1985 by Tony Ryan who teamed up with Christy Ryan and Liam Lonergan to set up the airline (Creaton 2004). The company started off with 5,000 passengers in 1985 and in 2009, they carry over 65 million customers (Airport Watch 2009). In 1991, when Michael O’Leary became the deputy CEO, he developed a strategy heavily influenced by Southwest Airlines in the US, the world 's first low-cost carrier and has posted its first ever profit since it started operating (Vallely 2006). By December 2009, Ryanair is Europe’s leading low cost airline serving 26 countries with 150 destinations and through 1000 routes (ELFAA 2009). As shown in Appendix A, Ryanair is ranked the fifth in Europe for the largest airline company measured by the number of passengers carried (Europa 2010a). Among the low cost carriers in Europe, Ryanair has the biggest market share, accounting for 40% as shown in Appendix B. Besides air flights, Ryanair also provide non-flight services such as car rentals, accommodations, travel insurance, internet-related services and in-flight merchandise sales. These non-flight services have accounted for 20% of Ryanair’s total revenue for the financial year ended 2009 (Annual report 2009).…

    • 3532 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ryanair case

    • 738 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Both carriers were already well-established in the Dublin-London route and the route provided a high volume of business and return on capital especially for AL. In order to eliminate loss of passengers to Ryanair, both carriers would probably opt to offer lower fares and greater frequency of flights.…

    • 738 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    But both companies have a significant disadvantage, they have a cost structure very difficult to cut (Staff + Accommodation, ground… + Selling + Handling and catering represents more than 45% of the costs per passenger, approx 90L and they need to add landing fees and oil); also it was too difficult to start an strategy based in differentiation because Ryanair was trying to offer a service of a similar quality to these companies (first-rate customer service).…

    • 357 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ryanair used its innovative ideas to subtract instead of adding to create a whole new business model which saved on cost and simplified how it operated. It enabled it to compete, up market and is some cases displace its competitors.…

    • 714 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Best Essays

    Since its inception in 1985, the Irish based airline (Ryanair website) Ryanair, is currently Europe’s leading budget carrier has experienced a rapid growth of the airline as a result of providing low cost, no frills service and designed low fare flights to stimulate demand whose idea originated by Michael O’Leary who was appointed CEO in 1994. It originally provided scheduled airline services between Ireland and the UK, with its biggest operational base at London Stansted Airport, UK. Following Michael O’Leary’s intervention, thanks to his determination, the company has now grown massively into one of the Europe’s first and largest low fares, no-frills carrier. Furthermore, it delivered 12% increase in profit despite a 74% increase in fuel cost, ancillary revenue grew by 36% later turning the airline to the most profitable airline in the world, on the basis of operating, and net profit margins. This steady growth has carefully guided by the genius yet controversial methods that have been used while competing with their main industry rivalries at the time- Easyjet, BA and KLM.…

    • 2283 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The political environment can have a significant influence on businesses as well as affect consumer confidence and business spending. The political environment is one of major advantages to Raynair, as the majority of its operations are contained within Europe. This region maintains political stability, thus Ryanair does not experience issues with governmental instability in Europe as a concern regarding passenger volumes or flight destinations. Political factors in our case are:-Irish government policy from September, 1989. This policy were known as "two airline policy" valid for three years and was directed at benefiting both Irish carriers Aer Lingus and Ryanair. The new policy ruled that the two major Irish airlines will not compete on any international route and they both had to have separate routes-European Union deregulation of the airline businesses from 1997; set up a number of low-cost airlines offering no-frills services. This deregulation enabled Ryanair to open new…

    • 1713 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Ryanair is Europe 's largest low-fares, no-frills short-haul carrier. The organisation was founded in 1985 as a conventional airline but re-launched itself in 1990/1991 as a low-cost carrier, replicating American Southwest Airlines ' business model. Since then Ryanair has grown substantially and successfully. The company currently has 146 routes to 84 destinations in 16 countries, and carries more than 15 million customers annually. Ryanair aims to be Europe 's largest airline in 8 years (www.ryanair.com).…

    • 4400 Words
    • 18 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Dogfight over Europe

    • 717 Words
    • 3 Pages

    As the case states, the environment in which they launched their business was first shaped by Europe’s national governments. The individual governments controlled the prices of the fares and the domestic fares were intentionally kept high to subsidize international service. As time went on, free competition was eventually permitted, thus creating a great opportunity in the industry. Fare prices plummeted as the airlines competed for customers and market share. This is a perfect environment to enter the industry if you are able to compete with the bigger businesses. Since the Ryan brothers had money from their father, they were able to offer a low price from the beginning and didn’t have to worry as much about covering their costs. This allowed them to be competitive. They planned to offer the same full service flights at a fraction of the cost of the other airlines and without the money from their father they might not be able to cover all their operating expenses. They also noticed that some of the fares from the other airlines were so high that many people were opting to use other means of transportation. If the brothers could attract these customers with their low prices they could make a great deal of money very quickly as well.…

    • 717 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays