Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
himarhernandez wrote:Hello everyone,
Please share your thoughts. I wonder what they have in plan for "new and enhanced inflight services" and also looking forward to the new uniforms.
https://grupo.iberia.es/news/20012020/i ... s-for-2020
https://grupo.iberia.es/news/20012020/2 ... -para-2020 (En espanol)
And as always...please participate responsibly!
vinaixa wrote:- The launch of "Hola Madrid Stopover". Similar to Icelandair's scheme, which would allow passengers to turn a short layover on Madrid into a lengthier stay of 1-7 days, with no increase in the ticket price
vinaixa wrote:I find that encouraging connecting passengers to spend some time in Madrid makes perfect sense and will have a positive impact on the city. I find that many tourists stay within the coast, ignoring that there is more to Spain than just the Mediterranean beaches.
vinaixa wrote:- Two A320NEOs to enter service this year
vinaixa wrote:- New destinations: Washington in May, Fez and Ljubljana in August
- A350 to fly to LAX, as well as NRT for the Olympics
zkojq wrote:vinaixa wrote:- New destinations: Washington in May, Fez and Ljubljana in August
- A350 to fly to LAX, as well as NRT for the Olympics
I'm still hoping for them to announce flights to Singapore or Hong Kong
smi0006 wrote:Are you able to translate key points into English?
- New uniforms?
- New inflight service? Perhaps moving to the same provider as BA?
Anything else?
tobsw wrote:Why would you expect Iberia to fly to HKG or SIN?
Its probability is close to 0.
vinaixa wrote:Translation of some of the 2020 plans:
- The launch of "Hola Madrid Stopover". Similar to Icelandair's scheme, which would allow passengers to turn a short layover on Madrid into a lengthier stay of 1-7 days, with no increase in the ticket price
.
tobsw wrote:The problem is Spain is very west, and south. So they can't get any meaningful connecting traffic to Asia (except Portugal and maybe Morocco). Even Spanish connecting traffic is complicated, since the ME3 fly to MAD, BCN, AGP (except Emirates) + Turkish flies to a few more cities.
To complicate things further, Spanish big companies have nothing in Asia. All their international market is in LATAM and USA and some in Middle East. But that's about it.
And finally, the cherry on the cake is that all this blah blah blah about IB making MAD a TRUE and competitive hub between Asia and LATAM *IF* they are allowed to get UX, is just loads of BS. KLM and Air France already do it, and I don't think there's space for another hub - plus, geographically, AF and KLM are way better located for European connecting traffic (they are able to get to smaller cities as well... you'll never see IB in a second or third tier UK, German, Scandinavian cities... - they barely can make it to FRA).
CanadianRedneck wrote:This looks like a great 2020 to come for Iberia. In relation to North America, could we see routes added to places like YYZ, YUL, and maybe a OneWorld hub like CLT?
Kadish wrote:
I could see growing in HOU or YUL in North América but where I see a great potential is in Africa. Ib can deploy a much cheaper 321lr to most Africa where the likes of AF/LH need to use wide birds.
Ib and Mad could work as a real hub for Africa-Europe- America
tobsw wrote:They have omitted IBs biggest plan... which is called Air Europa.
AstanaMagic wrote:Kadish wrote:
I could see growing in HOU or YUL in North América but where I see a great potential is in Africa. Ib can deploy a much cheaper 321lr to most Africa where the likes of AF/LH need to use wide birds.
Ib and Mad could work as a real hub for Africa-Europe- America
IB tried this and it didn’t work out.
The only Spanish speaking country in Sub Saharan Africa is Equatorial Guinea, which both IB and JK used to serve SSG. IB also for a short period served ACC, DSS and LOS (only DSS remains I believe). This was all done with a dedicated fleet of Airbus 319’s, with a dedicated fixed J cabin (the same planes ran to TLV). Unfortunately it didn’t last too long, and fares were expensive. All the 319’s were converted back to the Euro-Business Class format, and several aircraft are not being parted out.
Northern European (AF, BA, KL, LH, SN, for example) carriers have a better network and feed. Fares were cheaper, for example, when I used to travel from XRY to CPT or JNB the fare in J was €2K on BA and €3.5K with IB, via JNB. Besides this the quality of service on BA was significantly better, and still is compared to IB (IB service quality is continues to be atrocious for a “full service carrier”).
The exception to this is TP, which still has strong links to Africa, and works well as hub for the former Portuguese speaking colonies. IB does not have this benefit, it’s not just about location.
There may be potential, but IB does not have a good foothold in the continent and would have to do a LOT of work which may come to nothing.
Kadish wrote:I knew they tried N they failed but was years ago. IMO IB has improved a lot, product, service,ounctuallity...I spend 120 days per year travelling to Europe N America mainly un IB/UX/BA and I hace to say that BA/IB are pretty much the same.
Maybe they would have a chance...but Ib has always been very conservative.
AstanaMagic wrote:Kadish wrote:I knew they tried N they failed but was years ago. IMO IB has improved a lot, product, service,ounctuallity...I spend 120 days per year travelling to Europe N America mainly un IB/UX/BA and I hace to say that BA/IB are pretty much the same.
Maybe they would have a chance...but Ib has always been very conservative.
May 2016 is when IB stopped flying to LOS/ACC.
As a Life OW Emerald, IMHO BA and IB are the not the same. I agree service quality has deteriorated on BA but not to the extent that they are on par with IB. IB is in a league of their own.
I read some comments regarding how Conservative the company is, outside of Latin America. I noted this winter they operated a couple of charters to DWC (were they a success?) EK, QR and to a lesser extent EY have taken over the eastern connections, from my side I feel both IB/IAG have missed the boat... several years ago.
Kadish wrote:Not sure but those chartes have to do with Rally París-Dakar in Saudí Arabia.
julianrv wrote:Kadish wrote:Not sure but those chartes have to do with Rally París-Dakar in Saudí Arabia.
Not really, those charter flights are part of the Pullamntur Cruises / Royal Caribbean operation and were already operated last winter in the same way that during summer months IB flies to Athens, Bari or a handful of destinations in the Balti in order to feed cruises.
Like any other charter operation if they go full or half empty it doesn't matter to Iberia as they're just hired and paid to fly that route and the profit/loss burden is with the tour operator running those.
julianrv wrote:When discussing Iberia I think that something is fundamentally missed when comparing it to TAP or other european carriers, under IAG there's a strong mandate on profitability and reaching a 15% ROIC target and that's basically why IB tends to be so conservative when it comes to expansion and isn't shy to cut routes that don't provide good results. If you remember in the early/pre-IAG days Iberia used to serve a bunch of destinations on West Africa (NKC,ACC,DKR,LOS,SSG...) and now from that list it just serves DSS and same goes for other geographies where destinations have been cut or reduced, GRU was x2 daily for years and DME year-around while now GRU is just 1 daily and DME is just served as seasonal.
Anyway I think at the moment Iberia got a bigger fish to fry which is to manage the upcoming takeover of Air Europa if it's finally approved, personally I think concessions will have to be made but it'll go through. Only an scenario where the governement strongly opposes the takeover would cause the EU authorities to block it on competition grounds like was the case of the Aer Lingus takeover by Ryanair years ago.
I think if the deal goes through we might see a bit more 'exotic' expansion as eliminating a competitor would allow IB to increase margins in their bread and butter southamerican routes and allow to 'cross-subsidize' lower margin/ break even routes to Africa and Asia.
himarhernandez wrote:Any thoughts on the "new and enhanced inflight services"?
I agree that their punctuality has improved. Service is still bad, especially the phone service. I fly in J class with them every year and for the first time I have started buying my IB tickets through BA rather than through IB.
himarhernandez wrote:My guesses for inflight services:
-In business class: New blankets and new business kits (already implemented, although contents are a downgrade from the L'Occitanie products that they had before)
-Economy: Will probably be downgrades on what they already offered dressed up as improvements.
AstanaMagic wrote:From my own personal experience, and my biggest bug bear, IB need to sort out it’s ground services and flight crews. A former employer of mine said “People are our greatest asset”; IB ground/flight crews come across as unresponsive and rude.
tobsw wrote:
This is something it will take years to sort out. It´s basically a cultural heritage from the times IB was a state company. Newer staff, I think, are friendly and more pro-active; although I must say, if you speak Spanish, it helps a lot - but they mostly fly domestic and european flights.
tobsw wrote:AstanaMagic wrote:From my own personal experience, and my biggest bug bear, IB need to sort out it’s ground services and flight crews. A former employer of mine said “People are our greatest asset”; IB ground/flight crews come across as unresponsive and rude.
This is something it will take years to sort out. It´s basically a cultural heritage from the times IB was a state company. Newer staff, I think, are friendly and more pro-active; although I must say, if you speak Spanish, it helps a lot - but they mostly fly domestic and european flights.
tobsw wrote:AstanaMagic wrote:From my own personal experience, and my biggest bug bear, IB need to sort out it’s ground services and flight crews. A former employer of mine said “People are our greatest asset”; IB ground/flight crews come across as unresponsive and rude.
This is something it will take years to sort out. It´s basically a cultural heritage from the times IB was a state company. Newer staff, I think, are friendly and more pro-active; although I must say, if you speak Spanish, it helps a lot - but they mostly fly domestic and european flights.