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Keynote Address Onno van den Brink President and Chief Executive Officer, transavia.com.

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Presentation on theme: "Keynote Address Onno van den Brink President and Chief Executive Officer, transavia.com."— Presentation transcript:

1 Keynote Address Onno van den Brink President and Chief Executive Officer, transavia.com

2 Transforming the business model Airline Distribution 2006 Onno van den Brink President & CEO transavia.com Dublin 30 March 2006

3 Distribution 2006 Transforming the business model About transavia.com Founded in 1966 Ownership: independant division of the Air France-KLM group Operating revenues ‘04/05: € 521 mln. Pretax income ‘04/05: € 28 mln. Profitable: 27 years in a row since ‘77/78 Number of aircraft: 27 (10 B737-700, 17 B737-800) Average number of employees: 1,482 Passengers carried ’04/05: 4,5 mln. Bases: 2 (Amsterdam Airport Schiphol and Rotterdam Airport) Two main businesses: B2B (charter) 60%, B2C (low-cost scheduled) 40% Marketleader in the Netherlands in both B2B (55%) and low-cost (32%)

4 Dublin 30 March 2006 Distribution 2006 Transforming the business model CHARTERS TRANSAVIA SCHEDULED SERVICES low cost airlines Strategic reorientation! Profitability Transavia under pressure! vertical integrati on Position year 2000

5 Dublin 30 March 2006 Distribution 2006 Transforming the business model ComponentsTouroperators Travel agencies (retail) Neckermann (C&N) TUI (Preussag) Sudtours Neckermann Travel Broere Travel Holidayland... Arke/Holland Int. Travelplanet.nl Lastminute.nl... Touroperator market Great-Britain: 4 touroperators own 75% of the touroperator market. All have their own charter-company and in total more than 3500 travel agencies Position year 2000

6 Dublin 30 March 2006 Distribution 2006 Transforming the business model Marketshare traffic segments Schiphol (O&D Europe) 29.0% 1.4% 1.9% 2.5% 4.6% 10.4% 15.9% 30.5% 36.0% 37.8% 37.2% 36.7% 0.0% 5.0% 10.0% 15.0% 20.0% 25.0% 30.0% 35.0% 40.0% 199719981999200020012002 LCLF Hub (lscheduled)Charters (HV/MP)OC (scheduled)OC (charter) Introduction of low-cost in the Netherlands Source: Amsterdam Airport Schiphol, own analysis

7 Dublin 30 March 2006 Distribution 2006 Transforming the business model Cost development Basiq Air versus competition Cost reduction ‘04/05 versus ’00/01 Virgin Express-7% Basiq Air-22% Easyjet-9% Ryanair-25% Model Source: McKinsey, HSH Nordbank, Annual reports

8 Dublin 30 March 2006 Distribution 2006 Transforming the business model Cost per seat flown Basiq Air versus competition ’04/05 Model Source: McKinsey, HSH Nordbank, Annual reports

9 Dublin 30 March 2006 Distribution 2006 Transforming the business model 2000/01 2004/05 - Low fares V V - No refunds V V - 1 type of aircraft V - 1 class concept V V - Max # seats per aircraft V - No transfer/interline V - No FFP/lounges V - Short segments* v - Short turnarounds v V - Average utilization act > 12h V - Internet sales > 92% V - Ticketless* v - Fees for Changes V - Fee For Credit Cards V - Paid for catering/no frills v V - Additional Income V - Productivity cockpit/cabin crew v v Standardization low-cost concept for both B2B and B2C leaded to... merging the 2 brands in 2004 * Scheduled services only

10 Dublin 30 March 2006 Distribution 2006 Transforming the business model Traffic development (passengers carried x ‘000) *Basiq Air dec 2000- dec 2004 Average growth over the past 5 years 6.5 % is too limited

11 Dublin 30 March 2006 Distribution 2006 Transforming the business model 94 170182166 7 274 481 102 24 19 25 28 20 168 591 150 2001 200220042005 easyjet Ryanair SkyEurope AirBerlin Others Development of low-cost competition in the Netherlands (# of flights perweek) 56 97 184 154 transavia.com

12 Dublin 30 March 2006 Distribution 2006 Transforming the business model Profitability under pressure Increased competition from both low-cost and flag carriers Pressure on yields High fuel prices Flying becomes a commodity Market is price driven Very limited differentiation between carriers Limited customer loyalty Difficult to drive cost further down

13 Dublin 30 March 2006 Distribution 2006 Transforming the business model Further change is necessary Branding Low cost with attention From product oriented to customer oriented Increase customer loyalty through CRM Brandstretch: move from airline brand to travel brand Selling travel related products and services Selling holiday packages Adjusting the internet look & feel to the new strategy Increase travel partner loyalty by improving the E-infrastructure

14 Dublin 30 March 2006 Distribution 2006 Transforming the business model Business economics Decrease unit cost Additional income from ancillary products and services Economies of scale by further growth in – and outside the Netherlands Interline/transfer with KLM (group) Cooperation with other low-cost airlines Further change is necessary

15 Dublin 30 March 2006 Distribution 2006 Transforming the business model Being big is not the issue, but the ability to adapt fast to changing market circumstances!!


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