Description
With the global economy
booming, globetrotting
is no longer a perk in the
corporate world. With
the advent of internet
and rapid innovations in
the field of communica-
tions and travel, the
world has truly shrunk insize. Plastic money is
passé. Time is the new
global currency.
Capital Magazine • April 2007 • 9
Business Strategy
8 • www. capital-me.com
T
he airline industry, which plays a
pivotal part in any country’s econo-
my, is one of the most volatile
industries, plagued with excessive losses,
restructuring and bankruptcies. There is a
long history of bailout packages in the
United States, and efficiency seeking
mergers in Europe. The industry is cycli-
cal.
Four or five years of poor performance
precede five or six years of improved per-
formance. But profitability in the good
years is generally low, in the range of 2-
3% (net profit). In times of profit, airlines
lease new generations of airplanes and
upgrade services in response to higher
demand. Consolidation is a trend, though
variable in shape. Airline groupings may
consist of limited bilateral partnerships,
long-term, multi-faceted alliances between
carriers, equity arrangements, mergers,
or takeovers.
Since governments often restrict owner-
ship and mergers between companies in
different countries, consolidation is
restricted within the country. The Middle
East is a textbook example of such weak-
nesses. Events such as September 11,
the Iraq conflict, the conflict in Lebanon
and Palestine, constitute to the socio-polit-
ical imbalance in the region. These factors
invariably affect the economy of the
region. Directly or indirectly.
Emirates Airlines was conceived within
this turbulent environment and has demon-
strated an unfailing ability to grow in these
unstable conditions. Moreover, it has been
able to develop a global strategy that has
taken it beyond the limits of the regional
market. (New Nation Online, 20 May,
2006).
The following case study explores
Emirates Airline’s rise to success and
questions present day strategies of the
airline and their sustainability in the long
run.
The Competitive Profile of Emirates
Airlines
Emirates Airlines is the product of a
search for effective key drivers for the
Dubai economy. It belongs to a package
Emirates Airlines
Is this
the Right
Strategy?
In a League of its Own
By Prof Dr M. S. S. El Namaki
With the global economy
booming, globetrotting
is no longer a perk in the
corporate world. With
the advent of internet
and rapid innovations in
the field of communica-
tions and travel, the
world has truly shrunk in
size. Plastic money is
passé. Time is the new
global currency.
(
Business Strategy
10 • www. capital-me.com
that includes air transportation, tourism,
hospitality and real estate. Lack of oil
resources and a search for alternative
sources of economic growth induced the
Dubai government to embark upon this
venture. The launch of the airline came in
1985 with the Dubai government as the
sole owner and the sole investor. Early
services extended to 60 destinations in
42 countries throughout Europe, Middle
East, Far East, Africa, Asia and Australia.
Early strategies stressed quality in prod-
uct, equipment, organization and ser-
vices. A multi national crew was recruited,
a modern fleet purchased and an overall
quality image was promoted. The airline
took off and managed within a fairly short
period of time to expand its destinations
network, achieve high returns, boost tech-
nology and enter new markets.
Emirates’ foray into new markets was a
subject of envy for major globals carriers,
who had till then perceived Emirates as a
global airline based in the Middle East and
not an Arab airline operating abroad. This
induced established carriers in Europe
and Australia, such as Air France, KLM,
British Airways, Lufthansa, and Qantas, to
perceive Emirates Airline's strategic posi-
tioning as a global carrier, as a major
threat.
Most of these carriers not only found it dif-
ficult to deal with Emirates’ competitive
cost advantage, but others such as, Air
France and Qantas, openly accused
Emirates Airlines of receiving hidden state
subsidies and of maintaining a too cosy
relationship with Dubai's airport authority
as well as its aviation authority, both whol-
ly state-owned entities. In addition, they
also accused Emirates Airlines of taking
unfair advantage of its government share-
holder's sovereign borrower status. They
claim that this masks its true financial per-
formance and reduces its borrowing costs
to below market rates. (The Economist
Oct 5, 2005; The Financial Times July 19,
2006)
Emirates Airlines competes directly with
nearly twenty-three airlines operating in
sixteen countries in the Middle East. They
all share the need for good management
and cost reduction especially when it
comes to major cost items such as taxa-
tion, security, insurance and fuel. A major
competitor in the Gulf area is Gulf Air, a
partly government owned airline (govern-
ment of Abu Dhabi) with strong support
and wide network. Gulf Air posed a seri-
ous threat to Emirates thanks to the so
called open skies policy, a policy that
allows free access to Dubai airport and
minimal entry restrictions. Yet profitability
histories of both airlines diverge strongly.
At a time when Gulf Air is facing negative
results and is compelled to cut on routes,
Emirates is experiencing one cycle of
expansion after another.
Emirates have a fairly young fleet. The
average age of the fleet is 5.4 years
(February 2007). Favourable terms
offered by both Airbus and Boeing during
the post September 11 era encouraged
the airline to embark upon a massive
acquisition swing that included up to 150
long-haul wide-bodied jets. This order will
make Emirates the world's largest 777
operator. Global aspiration undoubtedly
stood at the heart of this decision. “By the
end of the financial year (2005-2006) we
had a fleet of 91 aircrafts, serving 83 des-
tinations carrying 14.5 million passengers
and one million tonnes of freight. By 2010
we will have 156 aircraft serving 101 des-
tinations, carrying an estimated 26 million
passengers per year. Such is the project-
ed growth of Emirates”. (Emirates Annual
Report 2005-2006)
Emirates continues to shine in its share of
glitter. It was awarded prestigious airline
of the year award for the first time in 2001
and repeated the feat in 2002 to become
a two-time award winner of the airline of
Emirates Airline's
revenues totalled
AED 22.7 ($6.3
billion) for the year
2006 or 27% above
2005 level. Passenger
seat factor also
reached 75.9%, 1.3%
above 2005 level too.
12 • www. capital-me.com
Business Strategy
the year. It was also named, in 2007, the
U.A.E.'s top brand among 25 other local
firms. It has a base value of US$ 6.3 bil-
lion. Emirates was also labelled by some
industry executives as “...one of the
region’s most forward-thinking and innova-
tive organizations in the area of technolo-
gy” for its acquisition of “the most innova-
tive storage infrastructures in the Middle
East”. Emirates, finally, has also begun
construction of its own luxury five star
hotel and towers. And 2007 will witness
the introduction of a docking capability for
Apple Computer's iPod portable music
and video player in Emirates fleet (Wall
Street Journal, Nov 14, 2006).
The Business Model
Emirates business model is based on the
following premises:
• Labour cost economies: A mix of
Emirates lean workforce and young fleet
account for its remarkable low cost and a
strong cost-based competitive profile. The
labour-triggered low cost is created by a
very lean workforce, comparable to the
leading low-cost "no frills" airlines rather
than other traditional "flag carriers". This,
along with a simpler organisational struc-
ture, allows the airline to minimise over-
heads. Its low cost base is according to
some industry analysts second only to
Ryanair on a cash cost per seat basis,
• Toothless workforce: Emirates work-
force is not unionised.
• Government blithe support: Emirates
received and continues to receive direct
and indirect financial and non-financial sup-
port from the Dubai government.
• Fleet cost economies: Emirates air-
line operates an all wide-body fleet result-
ing in lower unit costs compared with air-
lines operating mixed narrow/wide-body
fleets. This enables Emirates to use these
aircraft's cargo capacity to boost its over-
all revenues and total profits, especially at
times when the passenger business pass-
es through a seasonal trough or when an
economic downturn adversely impacts the
passenger numbers. Its Dubai hub also
allows it to take advantage of increasing
cargo business between China, India and
West Africa.
• Strategic distance: Emirates has so
far refused to join any of the major global
airline alliances and questions the advan-
tages such alliances bring for the airlines
as well as their customers, especially
after taking into consideration the high
costs of compliance of alliance member-
ship.
• Opportunistic strategies: Emirates’
strategic behaviour can best be described
as proactive and at times, opportunistic.
Market segment gaps are sought and
filled with speed. Price differentiation is
oits forte.
• Well positioned hub: Dubai airport is
an excellent hub that allows Emirates air-
lines to profitably serve secondary desti-
nations as well as connect such places via
its global Dubai hub.(The Economist 6
Oct, 2006)
The Strategies
Emirates’ strategies are a function of the
environment where it operates and the
product of intrinsic strategic thinking from
within the carrier. The environment could
be viewed in terms of Porter’s five forces
i.e. threat of entrants, power of suppliers,
and power of buyers, substitution effect
and rivalry:
• Threat of New Entrants: It seems, to
all appearances, that the airline industry is
a low entry barrier industry. Finance, the
prime entry barriers, is readily available in
the Middle East and technology and exper-
tise are purchasable.
• Power of Suppliers: Boeing and
Airbus are the two main suppliers and
competition among them is probable,
observable but not abominable! Also, the
likelihood of a supplier integrating vertical-
ly isn't very likely.
• Power of Buyers. The bargaining
power of airline industry buyers in the
Middle East is quite low.
• Availability of Substitutes. Threat is
really limited given the distances in the
Middle East and the fast pace that is
becoming a symbol of the area.
• Competitive Rivalry. The airline indus-
try is generally highly competitive and
highly competitive industries generally,
again, earn low returns because the cost
of competition is high. This can spell dis-
aster in low cycle times. The Middle East,
however, provides a different story thanks
to governments’ readiness to cushion the
shocks.
So the environment carries the threat of
new entrants and competitive rivalry but
not a real threat from substitution or buy-
ers and suppliers for that matter.
Emirates’ strategic behaviour, within this
Images courtesy Jeff Vergara, Dubai
Business Strategy
14 • www. capital-me.com
kind of environment, runs parallel to
Ansoff’s product market strategies Matrix.
Actually the parallel is so close that one
doubts whether the top management or
those responsible for the strategy formu-
lation function within the corporation have
been working with this model in the back
of their minds. Emirates’ strategies
include penetration strategies, product
development strategies, market develop-
ment strategies and even a recent ele-
ment of diversification. Let us examine
these:
• Market penetration. The Middle East
is Emirates’ prime market segment and
the segment that justified the creation of
the company in the first place. This mar-
ket is being thoroughly penetrated by
Emirates in a deliberate policy of market
penetration.
• Product development: Emirates prod-
uct development is of modest proportion.
It related to product specifications and the
type of services offered more than the
introduction of changes in product mix.
• Market development: Emirates geo-
graphic expansion including the entry into
the United States market is a typical
example for market development.
• Diversification: Emirates’ entry into the
storage market is yet another example of
its attempts at diversification. One has to
state, though that these attempts are all
at related product and market diversifica-
tion.
Not only revenue, asset and capital expen-
diture performance improved over time,
but also other measures of performance.
Emirates Airline's revenues totalled AED
22.7 ($6.3 billion) for the year 2006 or
27% above 2005 level. Passenger seat
factor also reached 75.9%, 1.3% above
2005 level too. And capacity increased to
15,803 million tonne kilometres.
Breakeven load factor remained relatively
low at 60.3%, and yield improved for the
fourth consecutive year, to $0.55 cents
per Revenue Tonne Kilometre. Introducing
the 2006 annual report, the Chairman
said: "These results clearly show that
Emirates' customer-oriented approach
and investments in providing a quality
product - the best aircraft that money can
buy; top-flight service and travel experi-
ence at a competitive price - has paid off
in terms of retaining and winning new cus-
tomers globally…It has been another
tough year with pressure from fuel costs
continuously dampening our robust net
income production. Emirates has returned
its 18th consecutive annual profit, and we
are pleased to have achieved this solid
performance while expanding our opera-
tions in an increasingly competitive envi-
ronment."
There are strategic flaws, though. They
boil down to the following:
• Is Emirates really the product of Arab
strategic thinking? Emirates is managed
by a board whose chairman is Sheikh
Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum and Vice
chairman is Maurice Flanagan, an expatri-
ate, who is also a President of Emirates
Group. While there is little doubt that the
broad strokes are Sheikh Al Maktoum’s,
there is equally little doubt that Mr.
Flanagan is the strategic steward and the
prime decision maker within the airline.
“… While there is no pressure from his
employers to retire, Flanagan, who is 77,
explains that there is a succession plan in
place. The carrier has a programme to
bring along UAE nationals, and eventually
a local will run the show. But there are no
targets or timescales. .. Flanagan himself
shows no sign of slowing down, nor is
there any dimming in his enthusiasm for
the carrier …”(Airline Business Nov 16,
2006)
Key vice presidents of the airline are all
expatriate executives too. Those include
the President of Emirates Airlines, the
President of the Group Support Services
and the President of DNATA and associat-
ed companies.
Whose strategies are those followed by
the airline?
• Is Emirates’ disregard for the rising
regional competition strategically oppor-
tune? Competition, however, is on the hori-
zon. Etihad Airways, a government of Abu
Dhabi creation, is coming up with a differ-
ent approach to regional and international
travel in stark contrast with Emirates. In
contrast to the low-cost airlines, Etihad is
focusing on offering a product that
appeals to travellers who want a premium
service, at a competitive international
price. Key to the Etihad’s promise is a
move away from the traditional classes,
as it becomes the first regional airline to
take the concept of premium economy
and reworks it for the regional market-
place.
Etihad refers to passengers as guests and
has guest zones rather than fare classes.
The three zones - Diamond, Pearl, and
Coral - do not correspond directly to first,
business, and economy classes. Those
are potent rivals working hard to change
critical product features. Is Emirates able
to meet this challenge?
• How far can a cost cutting strategy go?
Emirates is under cost pressure. Fuel
costs remained the top expenditure in
2006 accounting for 27.2 per cent of
total operating costs, up from 21.4% the
previous year. Like other airlines, Emirates
was forced to increase the fuel surcharge
component of the fare, which only cov-
ered 41% of incremental costs (New
Nation, 20 May, 2006). This could lead to
the question of how far a cost cutting
strategy can go given the very lean staff
and the sharp eye that the airline holds on
other cost items.
• Why buy, why not integrate backwards?
Emirates have been embarking upon a
massive buying swing that will inflate the
size of fleet and expand capacity. The vol-
ume of investment is sizable and the
strategic implications are far reaching.
The strategic question that could be
posed here is why, buy? Why not integrate
backwards? Put differently why not acquire
equity into the aircraft building industry?
Qatar is flirting with the idea. It may even
be more than flirting but what is wrong
with that? They seem to be following the
Figure: Emirates Strategic Behaviour
Are they effective or unique?
Table: Emirates Performance 2005, 2006
Source: Emirates Group Annual Report 2005-2006
There is little doubt that Emirates strategies are effective. Results attest to that.
Today’s product
Today’s
market
Tomorrow’s
market
Penetration
Market
Development
Diversification
Product
Development
Tomorrow’s product
PASSENGER CARGO OTHERS TOTAL
2005 2006 2005 2006 2005 2006 2005 2006
2006 Revenue 13.8 17.5 3.5 4.5 0.6 0.7 17.9 22.
Total assets 23.0 30.5 0.06 0.3 0.6 0.6 23.7 31.3
Capital expenditure 3.0 4.4 0.06 0.2 0.05 0.2 3.2 4.7
Business Strategy
16 • www. capital-me.com
References
• The Sunday Times (Emirates boss heads for bigger goals), Times Newspapers Ltd., London, 23
July 2006.
• The Economist (Eazy Oz - Emirates Airline, Low cost is coming to long haul flights, next could be
low fares), pp. 82/3, The Economist Newspaper Ltd., London, 29 October 2005
• The Economist (Flights of fancy), www.economist.com, 5 October 2006
• Financial Times (Row erupts between Qantas and Emirates), UK Edition, London, 9 November 2005
• The Airline Business in the 21st Century." Rigas Doganis, Routledge, New York, 2001.
• Flanagan: the elder statesman of Emirates, Airline Business, 16.11.2005.
• Emirates Airlines- A product of vision, New Nation Online Edition, Sat, 20 May 2006,
• Apple: 6 Airlines to Offer In-Flight iPod Connection In '07. The Wall Street Journal. November 14,
2006
• Emirates Group Annual Report 2005-2006
Prof El Namaki is a graduate of the universities of Brussels (Ph D, 1977), Erasmus (MA, 1967), Cairo
(B.Com, 1960) and MIT (Executive Program, 1982). He teaches and consults on strategic thinking,
entrepreneurship and international business. He has also been a founder and Dean of the Maastricht
School of Management (MSM), Maastricht, The Netherlands (1984-2002). He has developed and intro-
duced management degree programs (MBA, EMBA, DBA and Ph D) into no less than 25 countries and
consulted Fortune 500 companies, landmark national corporations in countries as varied as China and
Egypt and been part of consultancy missions for the European Union (EU), The World Bank, The United
Nations Development Organization (UNDP), and the International Trade Center (ITC) among others.
right track. Shareholding into Airbus or
Boeing will have obvious long term advan-
tages and may even transform the for-
tunes of Emirates altogether.
• Is it strategic growth or a windfall?
Emirates’ growth is impressive by any
measure but is it genuine or it a by-prod-
uct of Dubai’s own economic upsurge.
One can entertain the notion that the air-
line’s growth was largely a windfall from
Dubai’s Economic bonanza. After all a
GDP rate of growth of 8% for the UAE as
a whole, and figures near that in earlier
years, has a spill over. And if tourism is
one of the drivers of this growth that spill
over is very likely to reflect on the prime
air carriers within the region.
• Is there a risk in shunning strategic
alliances? Strategic alliances are one of
main the business tactics that have domi-
nated the airline industry for decades. It is
rather surprising, therefore, that Emirates
shuns this strategy at both regional and
global levels. Arguments for this evasion
are not spelled out in the airlines docu-
ments and ulterior motives may not be
ruled out. The issue remains however that
alliances within the airline industry have
their justifications and benefits and an
alliance aversion may not work to the
advantage of Emirates in the longer term.
• Is Emirates’ fleet composition congruent
with market needs? Airline fleets are usu-
ally built around a mix of profiles and
capacities. The mix is between interna-
tional carriers, or 130+ seat planes that
have the ability to take passengers just
about anywhere in the world producing a
company revenue of $1 billion or more;
national airlines seating 100-150 people
and have revenues between $100 million
and $1 billion; regional companies with
revenues less than $100 million that focus
on short-haul flights and cargo airlines
whose main purpose is to transport
goods and whose revenues are well below
the $100 million mark.
Emirates has strategically positioned
itself, market wise, in the first and third
category and technology wise, in the first.
Whether this is strategically and opera-
tionally opportune remains to be seen.
Summary and conclusions
The airline industry in the Middle East does
not differ from that elsewhere. It is volatile
and subject to cyclical fluctuations.
Emirates has risen within this environment
and has been able to withstand this “air”
turbulence in the most trying times to grow
in recognition and become a global airline
that is based in the Middle East.
Points of weakness within this very posi-
tive picture however relate to the extent to
which the organisation’s adopted strate-
gies are really the result of Arab thinking
and Arab management, the limits of the
cost cutting strategy pursued by the air-
line, the prudence of buying instead of
integrating backward, the wisdom of shun-
ning global alliances and ignoring regional
competition, and the asset composition
framework maintained by the airline today.
These factors amongst others makes one
question whether this growth was really
the result of genuine strategic thinking or
the outcome of Dubai’s impressive eco-
nomic bonanza? You decide.
doc_239166772.pdf
With the global economy
booming, globetrotting
is no longer a perk in the
corporate world. With
the advent of internet
and rapid innovations in
the field of communica-
tions and travel, the
world has truly shrunk insize. Plastic money is
passé. Time is the new
global currency.
Capital Magazine • April 2007 • 9
Business Strategy
8 • www. capital-me.com
T
he airline industry, which plays a
pivotal part in any country’s econo-
my, is one of the most volatile
industries, plagued with excessive losses,
restructuring and bankruptcies. There is a
long history of bailout packages in the
United States, and efficiency seeking
mergers in Europe. The industry is cycli-
cal.
Four or five years of poor performance
precede five or six years of improved per-
formance. But profitability in the good
years is generally low, in the range of 2-
3% (net profit). In times of profit, airlines
lease new generations of airplanes and
upgrade services in response to higher
demand. Consolidation is a trend, though
variable in shape. Airline groupings may
consist of limited bilateral partnerships,
long-term, multi-faceted alliances between
carriers, equity arrangements, mergers,
or takeovers.
Since governments often restrict owner-
ship and mergers between companies in
different countries, consolidation is
restricted within the country. The Middle
East is a textbook example of such weak-
nesses. Events such as September 11,
the Iraq conflict, the conflict in Lebanon
and Palestine, constitute to the socio-polit-
ical imbalance in the region. These factors
invariably affect the economy of the
region. Directly or indirectly.
Emirates Airlines was conceived within
this turbulent environment and has demon-
strated an unfailing ability to grow in these
unstable conditions. Moreover, it has been
able to develop a global strategy that has
taken it beyond the limits of the regional
market. (New Nation Online, 20 May,
2006).
The following case study explores
Emirates Airline’s rise to success and
questions present day strategies of the
airline and their sustainability in the long
run.
The Competitive Profile of Emirates
Airlines
Emirates Airlines is the product of a
search for effective key drivers for the
Dubai economy. It belongs to a package
Emirates Airlines
Is this
the Right
Strategy?
In a League of its Own
By Prof Dr M. S. S. El Namaki
With the global economy
booming, globetrotting
is no longer a perk in the
corporate world. With
the advent of internet
and rapid innovations in
the field of communica-
tions and travel, the
world has truly shrunk in
size. Plastic money is
passé. Time is the new
global currency.
(
Business Strategy
10 • www. capital-me.com
that includes air transportation, tourism,
hospitality and real estate. Lack of oil
resources and a search for alternative
sources of economic growth induced the
Dubai government to embark upon this
venture. The launch of the airline came in
1985 with the Dubai government as the
sole owner and the sole investor. Early
services extended to 60 destinations in
42 countries throughout Europe, Middle
East, Far East, Africa, Asia and Australia.
Early strategies stressed quality in prod-
uct, equipment, organization and ser-
vices. A multi national crew was recruited,
a modern fleet purchased and an overall
quality image was promoted. The airline
took off and managed within a fairly short
period of time to expand its destinations
network, achieve high returns, boost tech-
nology and enter new markets.
Emirates’ foray into new markets was a
subject of envy for major globals carriers,
who had till then perceived Emirates as a
global airline based in the Middle East and
not an Arab airline operating abroad. This
induced established carriers in Europe
and Australia, such as Air France, KLM,
British Airways, Lufthansa, and Qantas, to
perceive Emirates Airline's strategic posi-
tioning as a global carrier, as a major
threat.
Most of these carriers not only found it dif-
ficult to deal with Emirates’ competitive
cost advantage, but others such as, Air
France and Qantas, openly accused
Emirates Airlines of receiving hidden state
subsidies and of maintaining a too cosy
relationship with Dubai's airport authority
as well as its aviation authority, both whol-
ly state-owned entities. In addition, they
also accused Emirates Airlines of taking
unfair advantage of its government share-
holder's sovereign borrower status. They
claim that this masks its true financial per-
formance and reduces its borrowing costs
to below market rates. (The Economist
Oct 5, 2005; The Financial Times July 19,
2006)
Emirates Airlines competes directly with
nearly twenty-three airlines operating in
sixteen countries in the Middle East. They
all share the need for good management
and cost reduction especially when it
comes to major cost items such as taxa-
tion, security, insurance and fuel. A major
competitor in the Gulf area is Gulf Air, a
partly government owned airline (govern-
ment of Abu Dhabi) with strong support
and wide network. Gulf Air posed a seri-
ous threat to Emirates thanks to the so
called open skies policy, a policy that
allows free access to Dubai airport and
minimal entry restrictions. Yet profitability
histories of both airlines diverge strongly.
At a time when Gulf Air is facing negative
results and is compelled to cut on routes,
Emirates is experiencing one cycle of
expansion after another.
Emirates have a fairly young fleet. The
average age of the fleet is 5.4 years
(February 2007). Favourable terms
offered by both Airbus and Boeing during
the post September 11 era encouraged
the airline to embark upon a massive
acquisition swing that included up to 150
long-haul wide-bodied jets. This order will
make Emirates the world's largest 777
operator. Global aspiration undoubtedly
stood at the heart of this decision. “By the
end of the financial year (2005-2006) we
had a fleet of 91 aircrafts, serving 83 des-
tinations carrying 14.5 million passengers
and one million tonnes of freight. By 2010
we will have 156 aircraft serving 101 des-
tinations, carrying an estimated 26 million
passengers per year. Such is the project-
ed growth of Emirates”. (Emirates Annual
Report 2005-2006)
Emirates continues to shine in its share of
glitter. It was awarded prestigious airline
of the year award for the first time in 2001
and repeated the feat in 2002 to become
a two-time award winner of the airline of
Emirates Airline's
revenues totalled
AED 22.7 ($6.3
billion) for the year
2006 or 27% above
2005 level. Passenger
seat factor also
reached 75.9%, 1.3%
above 2005 level too.
12 • www. capital-me.com
Business Strategy
the year. It was also named, in 2007, the
U.A.E.'s top brand among 25 other local
firms. It has a base value of US$ 6.3 bil-
lion. Emirates was also labelled by some
industry executives as “...one of the
region’s most forward-thinking and innova-
tive organizations in the area of technolo-
gy” for its acquisition of “the most innova-
tive storage infrastructures in the Middle
East”. Emirates, finally, has also begun
construction of its own luxury five star
hotel and towers. And 2007 will witness
the introduction of a docking capability for
Apple Computer's iPod portable music
and video player in Emirates fleet (Wall
Street Journal, Nov 14, 2006).
The Business Model
Emirates business model is based on the
following premises:
• Labour cost economies: A mix of
Emirates lean workforce and young fleet
account for its remarkable low cost and a
strong cost-based competitive profile. The
labour-triggered low cost is created by a
very lean workforce, comparable to the
leading low-cost "no frills" airlines rather
than other traditional "flag carriers". This,
along with a simpler organisational struc-
ture, allows the airline to minimise over-
heads. Its low cost base is according to
some industry analysts second only to
Ryanair on a cash cost per seat basis,
• Toothless workforce: Emirates work-
force is not unionised.
• Government blithe support: Emirates
received and continues to receive direct
and indirect financial and non-financial sup-
port from the Dubai government.
• Fleet cost economies: Emirates air-
line operates an all wide-body fleet result-
ing in lower unit costs compared with air-
lines operating mixed narrow/wide-body
fleets. This enables Emirates to use these
aircraft's cargo capacity to boost its over-
all revenues and total profits, especially at
times when the passenger business pass-
es through a seasonal trough or when an
economic downturn adversely impacts the
passenger numbers. Its Dubai hub also
allows it to take advantage of increasing
cargo business between China, India and
West Africa.
• Strategic distance: Emirates has so
far refused to join any of the major global
airline alliances and questions the advan-
tages such alliances bring for the airlines
as well as their customers, especially
after taking into consideration the high
costs of compliance of alliance member-
ship.
• Opportunistic strategies: Emirates’
strategic behaviour can best be described
as proactive and at times, opportunistic.
Market segment gaps are sought and
filled with speed. Price differentiation is
oits forte.
• Well positioned hub: Dubai airport is
an excellent hub that allows Emirates air-
lines to profitably serve secondary desti-
nations as well as connect such places via
its global Dubai hub.(The Economist 6
Oct, 2006)
The Strategies
Emirates’ strategies are a function of the
environment where it operates and the
product of intrinsic strategic thinking from
within the carrier. The environment could
be viewed in terms of Porter’s five forces
i.e. threat of entrants, power of suppliers,
and power of buyers, substitution effect
and rivalry:
• Threat of New Entrants: It seems, to
all appearances, that the airline industry is
a low entry barrier industry. Finance, the
prime entry barriers, is readily available in
the Middle East and technology and exper-
tise are purchasable.
• Power of Suppliers: Boeing and
Airbus are the two main suppliers and
competition among them is probable,
observable but not abominable! Also, the
likelihood of a supplier integrating vertical-
ly isn't very likely.
• Power of Buyers. The bargaining
power of airline industry buyers in the
Middle East is quite low.
• Availability of Substitutes. Threat is
really limited given the distances in the
Middle East and the fast pace that is
becoming a symbol of the area.
• Competitive Rivalry. The airline indus-
try is generally highly competitive and
highly competitive industries generally,
again, earn low returns because the cost
of competition is high. This can spell dis-
aster in low cycle times. The Middle East,
however, provides a different story thanks
to governments’ readiness to cushion the
shocks.
So the environment carries the threat of
new entrants and competitive rivalry but
not a real threat from substitution or buy-
ers and suppliers for that matter.
Emirates’ strategic behaviour, within this
Images courtesy Jeff Vergara, Dubai
Business Strategy
14 • www. capital-me.com
kind of environment, runs parallel to
Ansoff’s product market strategies Matrix.
Actually the parallel is so close that one
doubts whether the top management or
those responsible for the strategy formu-
lation function within the corporation have
been working with this model in the back
of their minds. Emirates’ strategies
include penetration strategies, product
development strategies, market develop-
ment strategies and even a recent ele-
ment of diversification. Let us examine
these:
• Market penetration. The Middle East
is Emirates’ prime market segment and
the segment that justified the creation of
the company in the first place. This mar-
ket is being thoroughly penetrated by
Emirates in a deliberate policy of market
penetration.
• Product development: Emirates prod-
uct development is of modest proportion.
It related to product specifications and the
type of services offered more than the
introduction of changes in product mix.
• Market development: Emirates geo-
graphic expansion including the entry into
the United States market is a typical
example for market development.
• Diversification: Emirates’ entry into the
storage market is yet another example of
its attempts at diversification. One has to
state, though that these attempts are all
at related product and market diversifica-
tion.
Not only revenue, asset and capital expen-
diture performance improved over time,
but also other measures of performance.
Emirates Airline's revenues totalled AED
22.7 ($6.3 billion) for the year 2006 or
27% above 2005 level. Passenger seat
factor also reached 75.9%, 1.3% above
2005 level too. And capacity increased to
15,803 million tonne kilometres.
Breakeven load factor remained relatively
low at 60.3%, and yield improved for the
fourth consecutive year, to $0.55 cents
per Revenue Tonne Kilometre. Introducing
the 2006 annual report, the Chairman
said: "These results clearly show that
Emirates' customer-oriented approach
and investments in providing a quality
product - the best aircraft that money can
buy; top-flight service and travel experi-
ence at a competitive price - has paid off
in terms of retaining and winning new cus-
tomers globally…It has been another
tough year with pressure from fuel costs
continuously dampening our robust net
income production. Emirates has returned
its 18th consecutive annual profit, and we
are pleased to have achieved this solid
performance while expanding our opera-
tions in an increasingly competitive envi-
ronment."
There are strategic flaws, though. They
boil down to the following:
• Is Emirates really the product of Arab
strategic thinking? Emirates is managed
by a board whose chairman is Sheikh
Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum and Vice
chairman is Maurice Flanagan, an expatri-
ate, who is also a President of Emirates
Group. While there is little doubt that the
broad strokes are Sheikh Al Maktoum’s,
there is equally little doubt that Mr.
Flanagan is the strategic steward and the
prime decision maker within the airline.
“… While there is no pressure from his
employers to retire, Flanagan, who is 77,
explains that there is a succession plan in
place. The carrier has a programme to
bring along UAE nationals, and eventually
a local will run the show. But there are no
targets or timescales. .. Flanagan himself
shows no sign of slowing down, nor is
there any dimming in his enthusiasm for
the carrier …”(Airline Business Nov 16,
2006)
Key vice presidents of the airline are all
expatriate executives too. Those include
the President of Emirates Airlines, the
President of the Group Support Services
and the President of DNATA and associat-
ed companies.
Whose strategies are those followed by
the airline?
• Is Emirates’ disregard for the rising
regional competition strategically oppor-
tune? Competition, however, is on the hori-
zon. Etihad Airways, a government of Abu
Dhabi creation, is coming up with a differ-
ent approach to regional and international
travel in stark contrast with Emirates. In
contrast to the low-cost airlines, Etihad is
focusing on offering a product that
appeals to travellers who want a premium
service, at a competitive international
price. Key to the Etihad’s promise is a
move away from the traditional classes,
as it becomes the first regional airline to
take the concept of premium economy
and reworks it for the regional market-
place.
Etihad refers to passengers as guests and
has guest zones rather than fare classes.
The three zones - Diamond, Pearl, and
Coral - do not correspond directly to first,
business, and economy classes. Those
are potent rivals working hard to change
critical product features. Is Emirates able
to meet this challenge?
• How far can a cost cutting strategy go?
Emirates is under cost pressure. Fuel
costs remained the top expenditure in
2006 accounting for 27.2 per cent of
total operating costs, up from 21.4% the
previous year. Like other airlines, Emirates
was forced to increase the fuel surcharge
component of the fare, which only cov-
ered 41% of incremental costs (New
Nation, 20 May, 2006). This could lead to
the question of how far a cost cutting
strategy can go given the very lean staff
and the sharp eye that the airline holds on
other cost items.
• Why buy, why not integrate backwards?
Emirates have been embarking upon a
massive buying swing that will inflate the
size of fleet and expand capacity. The vol-
ume of investment is sizable and the
strategic implications are far reaching.
The strategic question that could be
posed here is why, buy? Why not integrate
backwards? Put differently why not acquire
equity into the aircraft building industry?
Qatar is flirting with the idea. It may even
be more than flirting but what is wrong
with that? They seem to be following the
Figure: Emirates Strategic Behaviour
Are they effective or unique?
Table: Emirates Performance 2005, 2006
Source: Emirates Group Annual Report 2005-2006
There is little doubt that Emirates strategies are effective. Results attest to that.
Today’s product
Today’s
market
Tomorrow’s
market
Penetration
Market
Development
Diversification
Product
Development
Tomorrow’s product
PASSENGER CARGO OTHERS TOTAL
2005 2006 2005 2006 2005 2006 2005 2006
2006 Revenue 13.8 17.5 3.5 4.5 0.6 0.7 17.9 22.
Total assets 23.0 30.5 0.06 0.3 0.6 0.6 23.7 31.3
Capital expenditure 3.0 4.4 0.06 0.2 0.05 0.2 3.2 4.7
Business Strategy
16 • www. capital-me.com
References
• The Sunday Times (Emirates boss heads for bigger goals), Times Newspapers Ltd., London, 23
July 2006.
• The Economist (Eazy Oz - Emirates Airline, Low cost is coming to long haul flights, next could be
low fares), pp. 82/3, The Economist Newspaper Ltd., London, 29 October 2005
• The Economist (Flights of fancy), www.economist.com, 5 October 2006
• Financial Times (Row erupts between Qantas and Emirates), UK Edition, London, 9 November 2005
• The Airline Business in the 21st Century." Rigas Doganis, Routledge, New York, 2001.
• Flanagan: the elder statesman of Emirates, Airline Business, 16.11.2005.
• Emirates Airlines- A product of vision, New Nation Online Edition, Sat, 20 May 2006,
• Apple: 6 Airlines to Offer In-Flight iPod Connection In '07. The Wall Street Journal. November 14,
2006
• Emirates Group Annual Report 2005-2006
Prof El Namaki is a graduate of the universities of Brussels (Ph D, 1977), Erasmus (MA, 1967), Cairo
(B.Com, 1960) and MIT (Executive Program, 1982). He teaches and consults on strategic thinking,
entrepreneurship and international business. He has also been a founder and Dean of the Maastricht
School of Management (MSM), Maastricht, The Netherlands (1984-2002). He has developed and intro-
duced management degree programs (MBA, EMBA, DBA and Ph D) into no less than 25 countries and
consulted Fortune 500 companies, landmark national corporations in countries as varied as China and
Egypt and been part of consultancy missions for the European Union (EU), The World Bank, The United
Nations Development Organization (UNDP), and the International Trade Center (ITC) among others.
right track. Shareholding into Airbus or
Boeing will have obvious long term advan-
tages and may even transform the for-
tunes of Emirates altogether.
• Is it strategic growth or a windfall?
Emirates’ growth is impressive by any
measure but is it genuine or it a by-prod-
uct of Dubai’s own economic upsurge.
One can entertain the notion that the air-
line’s growth was largely a windfall from
Dubai’s Economic bonanza. After all a
GDP rate of growth of 8% for the UAE as
a whole, and figures near that in earlier
years, has a spill over. And if tourism is
one of the drivers of this growth that spill
over is very likely to reflect on the prime
air carriers within the region.
• Is there a risk in shunning strategic
alliances? Strategic alliances are one of
main the business tactics that have domi-
nated the airline industry for decades. It is
rather surprising, therefore, that Emirates
shuns this strategy at both regional and
global levels. Arguments for this evasion
are not spelled out in the airlines docu-
ments and ulterior motives may not be
ruled out. The issue remains however that
alliances within the airline industry have
their justifications and benefits and an
alliance aversion may not work to the
advantage of Emirates in the longer term.
• Is Emirates’ fleet composition congruent
with market needs? Airline fleets are usu-
ally built around a mix of profiles and
capacities. The mix is between interna-
tional carriers, or 130+ seat planes that
have the ability to take passengers just
about anywhere in the world producing a
company revenue of $1 billion or more;
national airlines seating 100-150 people
and have revenues between $100 million
and $1 billion; regional companies with
revenues less than $100 million that focus
on short-haul flights and cargo airlines
whose main purpose is to transport
goods and whose revenues are well below
the $100 million mark.
Emirates has strategically positioned
itself, market wise, in the first and third
category and technology wise, in the first.
Whether this is strategically and opera-
tionally opportune remains to be seen.
Summary and conclusions
The airline industry in the Middle East does
not differ from that elsewhere. It is volatile
and subject to cyclical fluctuations.
Emirates has risen within this environment
and has been able to withstand this “air”
turbulence in the most trying times to grow
in recognition and become a global airline
that is based in the Middle East.
Points of weakness within this very posi-
tive picture however relate to the extent to
which the organisation’s adopted strate-
gies are really the result of Arab thinking
and Arab management, the limits of the
cost cutting strategy pursued by the air-
line, the prudence of buying instead of
integrating backward, the wisdom of shun-
ning global alliances and ignoring regional
competition, and the asset composition
framework maintained by the airline today.
These factors amongst others makes one
question whether this growth was really
the result of genuine strategic thinking or
the outcome of Dubai’s impressive eco-
nomic bonanza? You decide.
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