Barbara Cassani *84 was founder and CEO of Go Fly Ltd., a European low-cost
airline — an experience chronicled in her book Go: An Airline
Adventure (with Kenny Kemp). The airline was later sold. Cassani
also launched London’s successful bid to stage the 2012 Olympic
and Paralympic Games. She is now working on new business ideas.
As the founder of an airline, I know that the line between success and
failure is finely drawn. This venture easily could have failed. But it
succeeded against very high odds.
The low-cost airline Go, which started up in 1998 as a subsidiary of
British Airways, was fourth in the London market. Detractors abounded
in the British press and within the parent company, which had a poor record
of success with subsidiaries. No one thought traditionally schooled managers
had the creativity, guts, or resilience to make it in the cutthroat world
of low-cost airlines. Our competitors tried to take us to court to stop
the airline from flying. It was not an auspicious start.
Nonetheless, the airline went on to make profits in less than three
years, turning the $44 million initial investment into $654 million in
four years. Not coincidentally, the airline was voted the best low-cost
airline in the United Kingdom by customers.
The visible reasons for success — some strategic and fundamental
— were the sorts of things you read about in business-school journals.
But other, less tangible, factors involving people and how they work together
were equally important. In my mind, only by aligning the strategic issues
with these less-understood factors did we achieve success in our highly
competitive arena.
Though it may seem odd, we encapsulated the essence of our airline in
a whimsically derived equation, “3x + y.” The idea came about
when we were trying to define who we were. As fourth in the market, it
was important to be clear about that in our own minds, so that customers
and our people were, too. The “3x” referred to our near-religious
fervor for creating a low-cost airline. “3x” referred to productivity
in the operation: quick aircraft turnarounds, flying the planes more,
linking crew pay to how many hours they worked, and outsourcing key areas
like maintenance and check-in when it was more efficient to do so. Getting
rid of frills and middlemen was also part of “3x,” so we sold
more than 90 percent of our seats on the Internet and charged people to
eat and drink on the aircraft. Relentlessly lowering the cost of flying
was vital to our survival.
But let’s face it: Relentlessly lowering costs isn’t very
motivating to the average employee. The finance department and senior
management may find it exciting, but to most people it sounds more like
working at a jail. That’s where the “y” came in. “Y’s”
were the little differences that would set Go apart from other airlines
— to customers and employees.
There couldn’t be too many “y’s” and they couldn’t
cost a lot, but they were the reasons you felt proud of the product and
the company. In our early days, the “y’s” were things
like freshly made high-quality pastries and coffee sold on board and our
bright, distinctive branding, including a name that tells customers exactly
what we do. As time passed, we realized that our employees and how we
worked together were actually our most important “y’s,”
and things our competitors could not copy.
We chose people for their personalities, even in roles requiring a high
degree of skill. Once we were happy with their flying skills, we asked
pilot recruits to undergo personality profiling and a group task. Watching
a group of nervous prospective pilots undertake a trivial group task separated
the loners and bullies from the team players. We did the same thing with
cabin crew, but required even more empathy and caring. Hurtling through
the air with just two other colleagues and 148 customers requires humor,
teamwork, and unflappability. We didn’t hire for looks and legs.
The same principles were in force in choosing the executive team. We
were all different in terms of gender, nationality, education, professional
background, and personality characteristics. But we all had a will to
win, a sense of humor, and respect for each other.
We succeeded only because everyone behaved as though he or she owned
the company. Here’s one example: When the baggage-handlers disappeared
at an Italian airport, the captain unloaded all the bags single-handedly
— not a common occurrence at most airlines.
I cannot explain precisely how we created a culture where everyone felt
part of our adventure to build a great airline that would break even financially
in three years. It may have had something to do with sharing financial
secrets — like which routes were losing or making money —
with employees. We welcomed employees’ ideas for improvements. Star
employees were applauded each month through a recognition program that
offered the winners colleague adulation and a dinner for two, or free
passes on the airline. We also divided profits into equal payments among
all employees, having shared the pain of a pay freeze in the first three
years. When we did a management buyout of the company from British Airways,
every single employee owned shares or options.
The leadership was honest about making mistakes and fixing them. Early
on, we realized that our business plan wasn’t working: Demand was
growing, but too slowly to justify the new planes we had ordered. We needed
a survival plan, and drafted ideas from all quarters. We learned from
employees with different perspectives that there could be massive growth
in demand for travel to Spain with low, low prices. But to start flying
to these new destinations in just a few weeks required much goodwill:
Pilots and cabin crew had to change their agreed-upon flying schedules,
the maintenance team needed to juggle engineering work, and the marketing
team had to craft a hard-hitting campaign.
The lessons were clear. It’s OK to make mistakes to keep moving
forward. Innovating means taking risks. Finding solutions means working
together. Without this type of culture, our airline would have failed.
Without flexibility, initiative, and commitment, we wouldn’t have
met our goal of breaking even in three years, let alone become profitable.
Success against the odds is much more elusive than one would suspect
from reading newspaper business sections and academic journals. Without
a doubt, conceiving a sensible business plan and competitive strategy
is crucial. My experiences offer a twist on commonly accepted wisdom for
explaining success. Our strategic positioning was not enough to win. Factors
less well understood and discussed — like the culture, decision-making,
and the personalities of the people — were as much a part of the
success as a ruthlessly well-developed business plan.
This essay was adapted from a longer essay, “Success Against the
Odds,” to be included in A&C Black Business Database, a compendium
of business thinking to be published later this year.