Four recent safety incidents within 10 days have tested the strength of the Qantas brand, an airline that for many years has maintained a peerless safety record. The integrity of its brand has suffered by reports that essential servicing has been transferred overseas as part of a company-wide cost cutting exercise. The airline is now subject to a Civil Aviation Safety Authority investigation. This comes at a trying time for Qantas as it waves farewell to long standing chief Geoff Dixon, who tried to assure shareholders and passengers that there are no ‘systemic problems’ and reinforced that the vast majority of servicing is completed in Australia. Passengers belief systems need more than this from the lips of an outgoing chief, who was once heralded as the vision and voice of Qantas. Statements by engineering boss David Cox reported in the media that ‘some such incidents are just part of running a major airline’ have served to cast further doubt on the strength of the brand and the competency of its guardians. Sadly the damage seems to be done and Qantas must now try very hard to repair the damage and wait for a new chief with a new strategy to rescue the brand. This comes at a time when media articles question the brand’s ‘Australianism’ and diminishing emotional connection with Australians and particularly Australian travellers. For here is a brand that based its values on ‘safe flying’. Sadly its bottom line obsession at a time of high fuel costs has eroded employee commitment, damaged belief in the brand and diminished customer loyalty. The ‘perception of ‘high value service delivery’ has been lost to competitors such as Singapore Airlines who have seized the baton and are way ahead. Qantas now needs a lot more than the recently redrawn kangaroo and italicised lettering in its logo to regain brand altitude, recover its bottom line and respect for its brand. I strongly recommend that now is the time for Qantas to go back to its roots, redefine its Australian values, identify real differentiators, analyse its competitors’ brands and create a strategy that will win back the hearts and minds of its customers.
Tony Heywood is a Fellow of the Design Institute of Australia, founder of Heywood Innovation in Sydney Australia and joint founder of BrandSynergy in Singapore.
View some of Heywood’s work on www.heywood.com.au
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Tuesday, August 12, 2008
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