Boeing airlines

23
BOEING is a trademark of Boeing Management Company. Copyright © 2007 Boeing. All rights reserved. The BOEING Company Presented by: Sagar Sood Simran Madan Manpreet Singh Dhanoa Manpreet Singh Birdi Gurpreet singh Rajvir singh grewal B.Com 1 (a)

Transcript of Boeing airlines

Page 1: Boeing airlines

BOEING is a trademark of Boeing Management Company.Copyright © 2007 Boeing. All rights reserved.

The BOEING Company

Presented by:

•Sagar Sood•Simran Madan•Manpreet Singh Dhanoa•Manpreet Singh Birdi•Gurpreet singh•Rajvir singh grewal

B.Com 1 (a)

Page 2: Boeing airlines

HISTORY

• Founded in 1916 by William E. Boeing in Seattle, Washington

• Boeing went to Yale and worked in timber industry. Used his wealth and knowledge from this experience in his subsequent design and assembly of airlines

• Became “Boeing airline company” on may 9,1917.

• Largest civil aircraft company

• Largest exporter in the united states.

• The company has expanded over the years, and merged with Mcdonnell Douglas in 1997.

Page 3: Boeing airlines

BUSINESS OVERVIEW

• Design, assemble and support commercial jetliners

• Design, assemble and support defense systems

• Design and assemble satellites and launch vehicles

• Integrate large-scale systems; develop networking technology and network-centric solutions

• Provide financing solutions focused on customer requirements

• Develop advanced systems and technology to meet future customer needs.

Page 4: Boeing airlines

CORPORATE OFFICES

Headquartered in Chicago with presence in several other locations around the world

Focused on:

Global growth strategies

Financial goals and performance

Sharing best practices, technologies and productivity improvements

Leadership development

Ethics and compliance

Page 5: Boeing airlines

COMPANY PROFILE

Customers and customer support in 150 countries

Total revenue in 2012: $81.7 billion

70 percent of commercial airplane revenue historically from customers outside the United States

Manufacturing, service and technology partnerships with companies around the world

Contracts with 26,500 suppliers and partners globally

Research, design and technology-development centers and programs in multiple countries

More than 170,000 Boeing employees in 50 states and 70 countries

59.3% 16.10%

1%

12.20%

5.70% 2.70%

1.50% 1.40%

By geography

US

Asia

Canada

Europe

Middle East

Oceania

Africa

Others

Page 6: Boeing airlines

PRODUCTION

Boeing is organized into two business units:

-Boeing commercial airplanes

-Boeing integrated defense systems.

Supporting these two units is:

-Boeing capital corporation, a global provider of financing solutions.

-The shared services group, which provides a wide range of services to Boeing.

-Boeing engineering, operations and technology, which helps develop, acquire, apply and protect innovative technologies and processes.

Page 7: Boeing airlines

MARKET SHARE

Page 8: Boeing airlines

Major airlines are the largest customers for civil aerospace product manufactures. (78.5% Market Shares) Their demand is driven by the need and desire for airlines to expand their fleet or replace ageing models

Industry revenue will rise at an average annualized rate of 2.7% over the five years through 2016 to reach $161.6 billion.

Page 9: Boeing airlines

COMPETITORS

Main Competitors

Commercial Airplanes: Airbus, Embraer and Bombardier

Military Aircrafts (BDS): Lockheed Martin Corporation, Northrop Grumman Corporation, Raytheon Company and General Dynamics Corporation

Page 10: Boeing airlines

PRODUCTS AND SERVICES

Boeing is organized into two business units:

Boeing airlines

Commercial Airplanes

Integrated Defense Systems

Page 11: Boeing airlines

COMMERCIAL AIRPLANES

Headquartered in the Puget Sound region of Washington state

2012 revenues of $49.1 billion

Approximately 85,000 employees

Offering a family of airplanes and a broad portfolio of aviation services for passenger and cargo carriers worldwide

Page 12: Boeing airlines

There are mainly five commercial aircrafts of Boeing used by airlines these days:-

Boeing 737

Boeing 747

Boeing 767

Boeing 777

Boeing 787

Page 13: Boeing airlines

BOEING 737

First flight :April 9,1967

Seating capacity: 85-215

Primary users: southwest airlines , american airlines

Maximum speed: 544mph

The 737 has flown more than 113 billion miles equivalent to approximately 806 round trips from earth to sun.

Page 14: Boeing airlines

BOEING 747

First flight :feb 9,1969

Seating capacity: 365-605

Primary users: British airways, Lufthansa

Maximum speed: 594mph

The US president’s aircraft is also 747.

Page 15: Boeing airlines

BOEING 767

First flight :September 26,1981

Seating capacity: 180-375

Primary users: Delta airlines , American airlines

Maximum speed: 567mph

It is a mid-size, wide body twin engine jet liner built by boeing commercial airplanes.

Page 16: Boeing airlines

BOEING 777

First flight :June 12,1994

Seating capacity: 300-550

Primary users: United airlines , Emirates

Maximum speed: 590mph

777 is the very first commercial jet to be designed entirely on coomputer. No paper drawings were ever produced

Page 17: Boeing airlines

BOEING 787

First flight :December 15,2009

Seating capacity: 210-330

Primary users: Air India , Japan airlines

Maximum speed: 593mph

Page 18: Boeing airlines

INTEGRATED DEFENSE SYSTEMS

Headquartered in St. Louis, Mo., with global operations in four nations and 21 states

Formed in 2002 integrating Boeing’s defense, space, intelligence and communications capabilities

Designing, building and supporting net-enabled platforms and systems for government and commercial customers

Approximately 60,000 employees.

Page 19: Boeing airlines

SWOT ANALYSIS

Page 20: Boeing airlines
Page 21: Boeing airlines

OBJECTIVES

Continuous improvement in quality of products and processes.

A highly skilled and motivated workforce

Capable and focused management

Technical excellence

Financial strength

Commitment to integrity

Page 22: Boeing airlines

BOEING IN FORTUNE 500

Boeing

Rank: 39

CEO: W. James McNerney

The 97-year-old aerospace and aviation company reached record revenues last year of $81.6 billion, fueled by increased orders of commercial airplanes like the 737 and the delivery of 11,000 military weapons systems. But its 787 “Dreamliner,” a new carbon composite-laden plane that promises 20% more fuel efficiency than the competition, hit a rough patch when the Federal Aviation Administration grounded it for two separate battery fires.

Page 23: Boeing airlines

BOEING AIRLINES