BusinessWeek: How Delta Did Bankruptcy



by Dean Foust
BusinessWeek

delta-ceosDelta Air Lines (DAL) plunged into bankruptcy in September 2005, marking the culmination of more than a decade of management missteps made largely out of hubris. The Southeastern airline allowed itself to go through many of the stages of decline outlined in Jim Collins’ new book. Its sense of infallibility helped foster an undisciplined pursuit of practically every new jumbo jet that aircraft manufacturers rolled out, forcing it to fly large planes even on one-hour routes. Add to that a distinct denial of the increasingly grim realities of the airline business, exemplified by the errors made earlier this decade by then-Chief Executive Leo F. Mullin. He launched the trendy Song discount airline, which fizzled amid high costs and stiff competition from JetBlue Airways (JBLU). Worse, Mullin negotiated a 2001 labor deal that paid top pilots a record-shattering $300,000 a year. “Management always had to have the biggest and the best,” recalls a former exec. “It was the Delta way.”
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About Stephen Michaelson
Publisher, editor, and principal author of «ex-United.com». Freelance project writer and researcher based in Carol Stream, Illinois. New media veteran since 1998.

  • I think sometimes businesses make bad decisions because they think things will just work themselves out. But they don’t always. Too bad they weren’t able to do things a bit differently. Hopefully they have learned their lesson this time around.
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