Air India Presentation[1]
-
Upload
samvedna-shirsat -
Category
Documents
-
view
489 -
download
2
Transcript of Air India Presentation[1]
Air IndiaOrganizational Change
Aastha Chawla, Aniket Samat, Ashutosh, Deepali Sharma, Jagriti Gupta, Rahul Kishore Singh, Sawedana V. Shirsat, Tarun Saini, Ashish Kumar, Nidhi Kothari
About the Organisation:• State-owned flag carrier; Currently the oldest and largest airline of the Republic
of India.
• Operates a fleet of Airbus and Boeing aircraft serving Asia, Europe and North America.
• Corporate office : Air India Building at Nariman Point in South Mumbai.
Brief History:• Founded by J. R. D. Tata in July 1932 as Tata Airlines, a division of Tata Sons Ltd.
• Tata Airlines became a public limited company on 29 July 1946 under the name Air India.
• In 1948, after the Independence of India, 49% of the airline was acquired by the Government of India.
• 2001: Air India put up for sale by the then NDA government. One of the bids was by a consortium of Tata Group-Singapore Airlines. However the re-privatization plans were shelved after Singapore Airlines pulled out and the global economy slum
• 2007: the Government of India announced that Air India would be merged with Indian. As part of the merger process, a new company called the National Aviation Company of India Limited (NACIL) was established.
Size, Services and Employees:Products:AirlineGround Handling ServicesHotelsServices
Fleet size: 31
Destinations: 29
Employees: 32,000 Organisation Structure: Previous National Aviation Company of India Limited a. Air India
Air India ExpressAir India CargoAir India Air Transport Services
b. Indian Air India Regional (formerly Alliance Air)
Merger with IA
Cause
Turbulent times for airlines
Expected Synergies
Demand for new
hardware by both national carriers
Competition faced by the
previously monopolistic carriers
Huge Costs of
operation
o Expected Result:• Synergy of operations• Rationalized cost of hiring, IT etc• Large single entity instead of two
competing carriers• Limited purchase of fleet required
o Response:• Parliamentary Standing Committee on
Transport, Tourism and Culture slammed the merger in report
• Criticism of haste and inadequate planning
• Increase in losses post merger
The Cabinet meeting on 1st March, 2007 : approved the proposal to merge Indian Airlines and Air India.
A new company viz. National Aviation Company of India Limited (NACIL) was incorporated on 30th March, 2007 headquartered at Mumbai.
The brand name of the new airline is Air India and its logo is Maharaja and would operate in both the domestic and international sectors.
A 3-tier Grievances Redressal Machinery to address the employee’s grievances has been set up in Air India.
May 2007, India's Ministry of Civil Aviation announced that Air India Limited (AI), India's national flag carrier and Indian Airlines Limited (IA), the government owned domestic airline, would merge with effect from July 15, 2007.
Specific Steps
Downsizing
o Cause:• Huge financial loss• Excessive staff• 500 crew members per aircraft• Industry norm: 120 per aircraft
o Response:• Parliamentary Standing Committee on
Transport, Tourism and Culture slammed the merger in report
• Criticism of haste and inadequate planning
• Increase in losses post merger
Specific Steps and PoliciesAround 2000 employees have been directly downsized and around 10,000 employees have been indirectly downsized from Air India
AI offered the employees with the option of going on “Leave without Pay” for a period from 2-5 years.
A joint venture company has been entered into Singapore Air Terminal Services (SATS) to induct new employees into the joint venture company on lesser emoluments and lesser service conditions.
AI started recruiting employees on a contract basis at cheaper rates. The remuneration structure as well as compensation payment has been reduced and transfers take place on regular basis.
AI took up internal communication challenge where the MD-Arvind Jadhav delivered emphatic and practical statements, full of promises, describing the problems and the state of affairs of the company to all the stakeholders.
Change in Leadership
Restructuring Of Management Overhaul of the Air India management in
2009
Creation of a new post of Chief Operating Officer to assist the current MD Mr. Arvind Jadhav --- globally advertised in order to get a truly professional and qualified person (Capt. Gustav Baldauf was ultimately appointed as the COO)
Five independent directors appointed on the Board of Directors----Brought in from the private sector in order to place due emphasis on efficiency and transparency
Specific Steps and policies
With approval, the Board of Directors of erstwhile Air India and Indian Airlines was dissolved. Shri V. Thulasidas and Shri Vishwapati Trivedi took over charge of CMD and Joint MD respectively of NACIL.
The Aviation Minister, Praful Patel, had allayed fears and assured the employees unions of the two airlines that employment conditions, wages, seniority and career progression, would largely remain unchanged.
The merger was closely followed by the recession in which airlines all over the world were showing losses.
The company decided to followed a step by step approach to a change in leadership i.e. a partial sale of equity through an initial public offer to begin with to help induce professionalism in the leadership.
However this has not taken place primarily due to opposition from the staff.
Independent Directors—5 on a Board of 14
Shri Anand MahindraVice Chairman & MD, Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd.Shri F. H. Major Air Chief Marshal (Retd.)Dr. Amit MitraSecretary General, FICC Shri Harsh Vardhan NeotiaChairman, Ambuja Realty Development Ltd.Mr M.A. YusuffaliManaging Director, Emke Group
ControversyFaultlines within the new management : The dismissal of the COO of subsidiary Air
India Express, Pawan Arora, hired by the Air India COO, despite reservations expressed by the independent directors
Under scrutiny : Stefan Sukumar, Air India's chief of training,
who has managed to get reprieve from a panel formed by the Directors, ( Irony: A panel to investigate an appointment, which the Board has clearly disapproved of)
An obvious truth : Air India is sorely missing a true visionary
leadership, like that of Y.C. Deveshwar
Hurdles in Organizational change in Air India
Organizational culture: •Government organization rigidity•Lower level work force synchronization
Brand Name•Name identity problem •Business differences
Hierarchy •Downsizing •Order of positions
Overcoming the Hurdles in Organizational change
Organisational culture
• Restructuring: The process of restructuring has been started at a slow pace.
• Remuneration structure : The remuneration structure as well as the compensation payment had been reduced
• Transfers:Airlines managers are now recruited and the managers form air India are transferred to Delhi and Pune.
Brand name
• Combined Identity
• Logo: a red colored flying swan became the logo base with the Konark Chakra in orange color partially put inside it.
Internal communicators as Change ManagersInstil a sense of belonging to the current crisis and rally them to overcome it together
Single leader empowered to communicate and take decisive actions
Buy-in from employees as to the turnaround plan and how each one can play a role
Sharing the new short term goal, the overall vision and a detailed action plan to get there
By keeping all channels of communication open
Drawing employees and the leadership in conversations
Jet Airways: downsizing 2000 employees overnight
Internal communicators as Change ManagersCommunicator can role in key change agents from all strata of the organization to be ‘models’ of change and lionize their effort.
Managing rumoursIdentify respectable & believable key employees to tap this informal channel to route key messages on change.
Leaders with not just acumen but tenacity to stick through the ride.
Peter Senge’s Five Disciplines in AI
Team Learning instead of a complex hierarchical structure.
Senior management engaging in true dialogue
Dialogue+Systems thinking=Creates a language to deal with complexity
Building shared visionWhen there is a genuine vision, people excel and learn not because they are told to but because they want to
Increased clarity, enthusiasm and commitment
Peter Senge’s Five Disciplines in AI
Mental ModelsAssumptions/generalizations about the senior management, decisions taken
Turn the mirror inward and unearth internal pictures of themtranscend internal politics and game playing
distribute business responsibly widely while retaining coordination and control i.e. localized AI
Personal MasteryContinuous learning and implementation
Peter Senge’s Five Disciplines in AI
Systems ThinkingDynamic organization:Competition, changes in consumer behavior, external environment factors
Focus on whole rather than on parts:Too much of departmentalization
Thank You