We Fixed It, You're Welcome - Replay: Southwest’s LUV Lost
Episode Date: April 14, 2026Southwest Airlines is financially strong. Record revenues. Stock price near multi-year highs. Yet longtime customers are walking away angry. In this episode, we unpack the growing tension between Wa...ll Street performance and customer loyalty at Southwest Airlines. Host Aaron Wolpoff sits down with brand strategist Rene Huey-Lipton, founder of The Dame Collective and former strategy lead on Southwest during its golden years. The question at the center of the conversation: How can a brand be winning financially while simultaneously losing its best customers? From controversial assigned seating to unpopular baggage fees to the triggering “Boarding Royale” Super Bowl campaign, we analyze how strategic shifts have taken the most beloved airline identity in America off course for many consumers. What We Cover 1️⃣ The Core Problem: Financial Success vs Brand Equity Southwest reported record revenue, yet load factors are declining Loyal flyers publicly declaring they are leaving The emotional equity of “We’re all in this together” is eroding The danger of extracting more revenue per customer while shrinking the customer base Rene explains how this mirrors classic Wall Street optimization: maximize short-term revenue, risk long-term brand health. 2️⃣ The Boarding Royale Backfire Southwest’s Super Bowl ad mocked its former open seating model. Instead of feeling like a self-aware evolution, customers felt: Belittled Gaslit Reduced to the punchline Rene breaks down why making your most loyal customers the joke is a strategic miscalculation. 3️⃣ Hierarchy Changes Behavior Referencing research from Harvard Business School and the University of Toronto, Rene highlights how: Class distinctions increase conflict Introducing hierarchy shifts employee roles from hosts to referees Southwest’s once-democratic seating model helped create community When tiered seating and baggage fees entered the picture, the cultural dynamic shifted. 4️⃣ Internal Culture Risk Southwest’s frontline employees have historically been its greatest asset: Humor Warmth Human connection But layoffs, operational constraints, and policy changes are altering that culture. The episode explores whether internal friction could accelerate brand decline faster than customer dissatisfaction alone. 5️⃣ What Should Southwest Do? Rene proposes a bold alternative: A Dual-Brand Strategy Modeled after Qantas and Jetstar: Preserve Southwest as a high-trust, economy-focused domestic brand Launch a separate premium or long-haul sub-brand Protect the emotional equity instead of diluting it Other ideas discussed: Restore fee transparency Recommit to “Bags Fly Free” Monetize passenger engagement through paid brand research partnerships Re-empower employees as ambassadors rather than enforcers Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives. Rene Huey-Lipton https://www.linkedin.com/in/hueylipton/ • Website – www.wefixeditpod.com • Follow us on: Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/wefixeditpod LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/wefixeditpod YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@WeFixedItPod If you liked this episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with your friends! Keep listening to find out how we fix companies and put them back better than we found them. Disclaimer A quick disclaimer. We are going into this somewhat cold and nothing we say should be construed as legal advice, financial advice or anything that would get us in trouble. These are our views and opinions. We're here to ask the kinds of questions everyone's thinking. Have an engaging conversation and maybe come to some conclusions that we feel are worth exploring. By the end, if we fixed it, you're welcome. All trademarks, IP and brand elements discussed are property of their respective owners. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hey everyone, Aaron here. This is a replay of our popular Southwest episode from earlier this season.
This is a one-on-one I got to jump straight in with Rini Huey Lipton, who is instrumental in guiding Southwest strategy from some of their best years,
including that Mike Drop Bags Fly Free campaign that came out. It was a seismic shift for the airline industry and passengers and everybody loved it.
And now bags do not fly free anymore at Southwest. There's a rumor that for the lowest tier price, they're looking at taking away even carry-on bags.
And you're even taking charges away from flyers.
Now we're limited down to one charger.
So, you know, there might be a safety issue there.
I understand it's probably a good move.
But people think something's being taken away and what's being given back.
We don't know.
So anyway, Southwest, we'll see what happens from here.
But meantime, enjoy my conversation with Rini, Huey Lipton, talking Southwest.
Welcome to We Fixed It.
You're welcome.
The show where we take over companies, you come along for the ride.
And we try to put them back better.
than we found them. Southwest stock price is doing great. It's trading new the best levels it's
seen in years. The company's revenues are up. If you followed their financials, it's quite a turnaround.
And yet, it does not feel like Southwest is back on top. A recent Reddit thread with 200
upvotes said, after 20 plus years of loyalty, I won't fly Southwest Airlines. Another said that Southwest
has thrown away all their goodwill in an attempt to be like every other carrier. Another recent
flyers said, this ain't the old Southwest. Another said, this is not what I signed up for.
Another said, I've flown Southwest exclusively for 10 years. This may be my farewell. Check all
the socials of the sentiment is the same. People, especially long-time flyers, are steaming mad.
This is not just the internet being the internet. People are pushing back on Southwest because it's not
what it used to be. And loyal customers are asking for exactly what they want, and the company just
isn't doing it. But they could, and we're going to give them a nudge in the right direction.
We're going to try and close the gap between financial success and customer satisfaction,
because when you're losing your most loyal customers with no end in sight, something's got to change.
It's a big one. And Melissa and Chino are not here today, so I've got to fix this myself.
Huh. Well, fortunately, I'm not flying solo. I've got a co-pilot here.
Amy is Rini Huey Lipton, founder and chief strategy officer of the Dame Collective.
Among other things, Rini was Senior Vice President and Director of Strategy and Insight
at the Agency GSDNM, where she led strategy on Southwest during some of its strongest years.
She's an award-winning strategist and speaker who's helped build global brands, guided presidential campaigns,
and has won gold effies and gold lions, along with other distinctions.
Over the course of her life and career, she's grown from a self-described
cringing inauthentic poser.
Those are her words, not mine.
Into a woman who's a mix of humor, grit, and sharp strategy
now helps others find their own unapologetic voices.
Rini, welcome to the show.
It's so great to have you.
Please tell us more about yourself.
Oh, no.
I'm glad to be here.
Glad to be here.
Yeah.
So, you know, I've done strategy for 30 years in this business.
So like any strategist with those amount of years under their belt,
there's just a lot of.
of experiences to draw from, which I love in terms of being able to cross-pollinate and do this
and ask what if and help my client sort of really see the possibilities, right, of what could be.
And as we all know in the advertising industry, once you hit a certain age, they all think, you know,
women over 45, you know, are wearing, you know, crocs with socks and elasticized pants and
we're totally out of touch. So I pivoted. And now, you know, with the Dame Collective,
I do. I've written a book called My Authentic Voice, which is how to sort of really stop performing for the system, how to stop shrinking yourself to fit in, and be yourself and say the thing. And I've also, you know, translated that into the work I do for brands. How to, how do brands be sort of authentic and get out of the sea of sameness we see in so many things, which is one of the things we're talking about with Southwest Air Lones today, yeah.
Our friends at the airline, yeah.
I was talking with someone just recently that we had worked on a project together for Mountain Dew, and they were saying, Rini, and I am blowing smoke up my own ass here, sorry.
We should have listened to you because at the time, which was a couple years ago, I had said, they were looking for a new creative direction, a new platform.
And I said, you really should lean into this whole anarchy thing that's going on with young folks.
And I'm just thinking it would have been so good today, right?
They could have, like, just lit it up.
So I'm a big brand of a big fan of brands being bold but also authentic.
And that would have fit, you know, Mountain Dew perfectly.
For sure.
That the idea of anarchy.
Absolutely.
Well, it's great to have you here.
I'm grounded in strategy myself.
And, you know, you have those conversations with brands and you try to save them from themselves
or point out something that's, you know, just on the surface that they haven't picked up on.
And sometimes they say yes and you're lucky.
And sometimes they say no.
There's nothing you can do about it except talk about them on a podcast, which is what we're going to do here.
Exactly.
Sometimes they look at you like you're crazy, which is okay.
Which is why I love this show because we get to tell them what to do.
And that's exactly what we're going to do today.
And I know you've had a few things to say about Southwest recently on LinkedIn and elsewhere.
And so we're just going to get into it.
Okay.
All right.
So let's ground our conversation a little bit.
For those of you who are longtime listeners of our show, you'll know that we'll know that
We covered Southwest all the way back in season one, and we basically told them what to do back then, too.
If you're going to modernize your business, which you do need to because you have to make profit,
you have to do it in a way that doesn't alienate your best customers.
Because Southwest's advantage was never just price. It was trust.
So you have to listen to your customers who trust you, be responsive to their feedback, and keep evolving,
while making sure that your loyalists stay on board.
At the end of that episode, we congratulated ourselves on a job well done.
we fixed it, you're welcome, but Southwest must have had some meetings without us because they didn't stay fixed.
Silly, silly, silly.
I mean, right?
Over the last six months, Southwest has moved from a big transformation narrative to a very public erasing of who they used to be.
So now there's a signed seat.
You pay more for the good ones.
They didn't walk back the baggage fees.
All these changes at once are creating confusion and resentment.
The problem isn't that Southwest is changing.
Things have to change.
The problem is that the fixes that customers keep begging for are all.
obvious. Bring back some of the things we like to value, and we'll come back, and Southwest keeps
not doing them. And this all came to ahead, right, with the Super Bowl campaign, which we've seen
called Boarding Royale. Southwest pre-released it the week before and then aired it during the big game,
and the ad portrays open seating. Remember when you could choose your own seats? And we all kind
of like that as they portrayed it as a jungle survival scramble. People, you know, fighting in each other's
faces and ends with the on-screen text. That was wild. And then followed by, don't worry, sign seating is
here. Oh, good. Thank you. Right. Because you've had 50 years, you know, and now you're gaslighting us all
into believing that we were wrong for those. Critics rightfully called it tone-deaf because it made
fun of a feature. A lot of customers, probably us included, actually liked. And sure, there were
boarding groups and a little bit of hierarchy like A and B, but you know, you could just choose an open
C. You walk onto the plane. It's easy and efficient. I'll take that one. And now you pay more
for something you used to get for free and consumers were supposed to applaud after that ad, right?
Thank you for saving us from ourselves.
And it didn't feel like a self-wear moment or even turning a griped about problem into a shared
cultural moment of diffusion, right?
It felt like a joke at everyone's expense.
Right.
I mean, the thing about Southwest always, you know, the wellspring of love really came from
this idea of we're all in this together.
There's no hierarchy, really.
people understood that you wanted to. You could pay, what, $15 more to be an A-list, but that wasn't first class. It was all, you know, class. And it was really interesting. The Harvard Business School and the University of Toronto did this huge study and found that air rage is 3.84 more times likely to happen in planes where there is a first class. So class distinction creates this air rage. And we already,
know that, you know, the crew of Southwest is now facing, you know, they were, they were hosts.
They were warm and welcoming and funny.
But now they're referees.
Right.
They try to be neutral.
And they are on the front line of this anger and confusion.
And even, you know, a lot of the social media was talking about how the crew seemed confused or angry or sad or upset.
And I think that's really heartbreaking for the people who fly.
Southwest because the clapping and the jokes and, you know, I know that I've sort of rolled my eyes a couple
times flying them when, you know, a joke, but we still all laugh together. True. Yeah, we had
moments together because we were, like you said, there's not this hierarchy class system.
There's not this year better than me. There's not walking through that first cabin where everyone's
sitting a little straighter and a little happier. You know, we're all, yeah, we're all flying Southwest.
And it's also, it wasn't the ultra budget carrier. It's not frontier.
It's not spirit.
We talked about spirit elsewhere.
It's for the people.
It was an economy airline.
Yeah.
And, you know, they won the customer satisfaction award for the last four years running from J.D. Power.
For the economy airline.
And I wonder if that's stuck in their craw, right?
That, oh, yeah, we won it.
But for the economy airline, who cares who you win it for?
You are the ultimate in this one place.
And that should be good enough.
Well, here's the problem.
We could just say, we could say walk it back.
okay, you had something good going.
But the twist to all this is financially,
Southwest has been showing strong signals.
So the changes they've been implementing
from a pocketbook perspective,
they've been working, right?
So they reported record revenue
of $28.1 billion in 2025.
But with that, the load factor,
like how packed the planes are,
fell down to 77.2%.
And it's down from 80% a couple years back,
meaning the planes were on
average less full. The drop-off might seem, that percentage might seem small, but it's a downward
trend year after year, and it doesn't seem to be reversing. So, I mean, that's really really.
That's the core tension is that Southwest can make more money at the moment, temporarily by
losing customers and charging more for the customers that stay with them. Exactly. It's classic
Wall Street optimization. You know, you're extracting more per customer. But how long will that last,
given the fact that with a lot of Southwest flights, you're having to stop.
You know, there's very few non-stops comparatively to the other airlines.
Price-wise, people are saying, oh, I can do an American or United or Delta for basically
the same price.
Yeah, there's price parity.
Yeah.
Why wouldn't you?
Exactly.
And the people are hearing these Southwest fanatics narrating their leaving.
narrating their leaving. It's not just a stranger saying, oh, I'm never going to fly it again.
It's people you know who have defended Southwest Airlines for 20, 30 years and are now narrating
their leaving in the sense of, well, you know, I just can't justify the cost. They're not this.
They're not that. And that is the type of negative feedback that swells. You know, that really makes
an impact over just some random on a, on a lot, you know, on a social media.
Right. Absolutely. It's not just a little bit of market fluctuation. Okay. A little bit here,
a little bit there. These are the most loyal customers, not just quietly saying, okay, you're,
you, you separate it for what I, what I wanted from you. It's they're standing up on a table
and saying Southwest, you suck, you know, and everyone's got to listen to that.
You know, everyone except Southwest seems to be listening to that. Yeah, I mean, Kyle Potter,
from Thrifty Traveler said,
we're talking about one of the most beloved brands of all time,
and they just completely newt it over a course of the last 11 months.
And they have.
I mean,
even they assigned seating,
you can't switch seats.
Right.
Once you're assigned,
because they want to keep those,
I don't know why,
the double plane's taken off.
You can't switch sheets.
Heaven forbid somebody moves two rows up and to the left and gets,
you know,
a $39 seat versus the $15 one or whatever it is.
Right.
And people are used to.
being able to sort of switch sheets on an airplane. So even that, it feels like they've done
more constrictive. They created another tension point that didn't used to be there.
Exactly. And they're churning customers, their most loyal customers. They're hanging on to the
base level of customers. And it's diminishing in software, you'd call that a legacy model, right?
Like, we're just going to keep people trapped in charge them more until there's no company anymore.
Exactly. And, you know, and there's precedence for this.
not only outside the airline industry with like Harley and Livewire, right?
Harley didn't, you know, didn't want to sort of screw up there, you know, the Harley lore and legacy of so many years.
And yes, it's slow to start, but they turned their electric bike into a different brand into Livewire, right?
And their whole theme was, don't mock the rumble to sell the silence, which is exactly what Southwest has done.
They've mocked their legacy of we're all in this together, basically.
Right.
And they, with that Super Bowl commercial, they didn't do it at their own expense.
They didn't it at our expense.
No, exactly.
Right.
We were the punchline.
We were the punchline.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that does not feel good.
That doesn't feel good.
No.
Well, I'll say, when we get to doing like, what would we do?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That'll come.
But we have to earn our way there.
But, you know, that's what we're fixing together is it should Southwest.
keep doing what's financially beneficial, profitable for the moment.
Is that built to last?
I don't think it is, or is that going to be its downfall?
And if Southwest's actually doing better now and it got itself out of crisis mode,
who, or on the other side of it, can't they start doing changes to say,
thank you for bearing with us and can they win customers back?
Loyalists and everybody else, can it be more likable?
Let's, you know, Rini, you and me, let's bring back the friendly skies together.
Yeah.
Yeah, on social media, a lot of people's complaints are being responded to.
We're looking into that.
But short of rolling things back, what can they do?
Right.
And their employees were always their best advertisement, whether it was the people doing the bags or the flight attendants, you know, employees who are happy and people can see them loving their job, create this.
sense of trust. And again, we're all in this together. You become friends. If you're flying Southwest,
like a lot of people do on a route that you do every week, you know, you start to know these people.
And then you see this happen. And these people that you've come to know are now, well, A, for the past,
what, for seven years, they haven't got raises. They've been installed discussions. And as part of this,
you know, the flight attendants were asked to sort of move their bags to sort of the back of the
plane and they said, you know, no, that's just going to make it harder for us to get our bags and
make it to the next flight. And, you know, we're all about on time takeoffs and stuff. So it's not
just affecting the passengers. There is an internal strife now that can take down a brand faster than
anything. My dad flew for Pan American. And when that went under, you know, all the, I could
hear, you know, pilots, my dad's, but pilots, what he talked about it, all the old. All the
flight attendants from Pan American.
And when I say, oh, they were, they were probably women, you know, in my age, 60 and above,
have now gone to United.
And there was a huge brouhaha then because United had these young, younger flight attendants
that were good looking.
And now all of a sudden, you know, you're getting, you know, 68 year old Betty.
I'm sort of hype.
Who's been doing this for 40 years and who's grumpy as hell?
Right.
No, but you're absolutely right.
that Southwest, one of their biggest assets is, and they would say it themselves,
they're people, right?
And they create the environment, whether it's dad jokes when you first, you know,
when they're showing how you buckle the seatbelt.
But they later make us all settle down and be complacent in a good way, right?
Yeah.
We all know what we're here to do.
We're all going to be in this together for the duration of the ride.
And it's a, you know, it's more than a transactional experience.
And it creates the right environment.
If you walked into a restaurant with singing waiters, you know, you're probably going to be in a good mood before long.
And you're probably not going to use that moment to break up with your significant other.
Exactly.
So you get with the program.
So up until recently, that had been the vibe.
And now it's, you know, what you're saying and what we're hearing elsewhere, that's just not.
Yeah.
So that's part escalates the tension when it's not just your customers or are telling you.
Or pundits or Wall Street, it's your employees.
It's your employees.
And you get a sense they're not on board with all the changes.
No.
They don't want to charge you more for the bag that, you know, with these bag fees that have been initiated.
And they don't want to be referees.
They don't want to have to be the hardasses.
Right.
Right.
To say, oh, now, you know, put your bag here.
You have to sit here.
That's not what they've been doing for 15, 10, 20, 30 years.
Right.
Now the company line is, I'm sorry.
No.
Yeah.
Right.
So, and these bag changes don't all make sense because, you know, now people don't have been trained.
It's really hard to untrained behavior, right?
So people have been trained for, have 50 years, however many years that you can bring your, you know, bags fly free.
And now they don't.
So you try to squeeze everything you on into a compact carrier size bag and you're crushing all your clothes and you made it happen.
And then what happens, right?
you get to the airport and they say this flight's full, we're going to go ahead, complimentary.
You can check that bag.
We'll take care of it for you.
And it extends boarding time.
One line of discussion I saw on Reddit was, you know, 15 minutes to board.
Yeah, it was like bam, bam, bam, right?
People would go and sit down.
Now it's like 55 minutes because people are trying to figure out where to put their bags.
There's not enough place to put their bags.
you know, people who board early or, I mean, board late and all this sort of stuff have to, you know,
and or maybe a group have to find place in the back for their bags.
It's a bit of a mess.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We're hearing about boarding times at a 45 minutes to 55 minutes or more.
Yeah.
Simply because of the changes that have been implemented.
Yeah.
So, and are there, what other friction points are you seeing?
Well, we talked about the seat stuff in terms of not being able to really,
change your seat after you've been on. Also, the loyalty program was really sort of, I'm not
exactly sure how it is, but we do know that the loyalty program, the A-list customers are losing,
the people who are paying for that A-list customer are losing basically their perks. Right.
That they had under the old system, bins and all that sort of stuff. So it is not as, it's becoming
hierarchical again, like everything else. And so between paying for seats, because I think there's
four or five different seat hierarchies, there's four or five different seats, paying for bags,
you know, the different, the longer boarding system, you know, what is there, the staff having to
become referees or not as loose? What is there left, quite frankly, of the Southwest Airlines
ding, you're free to move about the country.
I mean, that whole line, you're free to move about the country, wasn't just about fees.
It was also about an economy airline and you're free to move about emotionally well, right?
Right.
You know, we would, when we were working on bags fly free, we would joke about why, you know,
oh, I'm going on vacation after, and I have to pay to bring my clothes with me.
It's like, it's antithetical, right?
But Southwest, that was one of the reasons I was in the room with a bunch of other
great GSD&Mers with Gary Kelly when, you know, it was decided, okay, we're not going to charge for bags.
And GSDM, you better make this work, you know.
And we did.
And it wasn't that hard because, A, the employees, the bad guys, you know, the guys, you know, they made it fun.
We utilize the people that make Southwest fantastic.
And bags fly free, done.
Yeah.
And at the time, that was when the airlines were really.
starting to nickel and dime everyone.
It's interesting because companies aren't really known for restraint.
You know, if there's a way to make another buck off a customer, they'll do it.
So they, but Southwest came to you all and said, we're going to do bags fly free, make this happen.
Yeah, because they were getting a lot of pressure from Wall Street, you know, for not getting those
incremental money.
And the challenge was, okay, don't charge for bags, but how are you going to make up that money?
Right.
Right.
And $900 million in extra revenue because we didn't charge for bags where people were flying us because they could save a couple hundred dollars.
You know, that was an extra hotel room.
We're a nice night out for dinner wherever they were going.
So, yeah, we did, you know, we, GST&M and Southwest Airlines proved that you could, you know, make money by not charging.
Right.
Which is, yeah, like a great example of corporate restraint and pivoting, you know, saying we're bucking the trend.
get that everywhere else is going to charge you. We're not. But it's really interesting that
that came. We're kind of like a client mandate. You know, we're doing something. I love bold moves.
We're doing something bold. And this is going to be a seismic shakeup in the industry.
Now tell people about it. That's a cool place to be. Yeah. Are there other, you know, in your,
in your experiences with Southwest and elsewhere too, but are there, were there situations like that
were, there were maybe moves that were not the right ones or different types of approaches
to get to what we ended up seeing coming out of, we'll say Southwest.
Well, it's a small thing, but not too long ago, Southwest started teasing pistachios for,
you know, A-listers, which is, I mean, so antithetical to, you know, maybe beer nuts.
That's what we all want.
Right, exactly.
But of course they did pistachios, which then not only created this sort of hierarchy again,
but then it's like, hello, people are allergic to nuts.
It felt, again, like no one's A, thinking about the brand, thinking about the passengers.
And if you're not thinking about the brand and the passengers, that leaves Wall Street.
And if you're only thinking about Wall Street, that's not a brand that will.
I don't believe it will be as strong in the long run as it could have been.
Well, and that could have been a setup to fail scenario anyway.
It could have been checks mix.
And then people say, weed allergy and, you know.
Right, exactly.
But even that, that's, you know, a token, you know, we took away so much.
Let's give you it.
Let's give you something token back.
Let's give the token to the A list.
To the A listers.
Heaven forbid the people not on a list who could be sitting right next to you in 27C.
because that's where they choose to sit, you know, gets pistachios and you get the pretzels.
Right.
It's like, yeah.
Yeah.
It's a small thing, but it's, but it's, I think it's indicative of how they're thinking.
There was a big pushback on that.
But even if they said, okay, pistachios for the masses or or Czechs mix or Australian
licorice, whatever you're elevated snack is, that's still a token, you know, let's do something to
normalize our behavior
and say we're all still cool, right?
Exactly.
Here's a little something from us.
You know, that doesn't diffuse the situation.
That doesn't get us back to, oh, good.
You are seeing our best interests in mind.
No, I still paid for the bag and I still paid for my seat.
Exactly.
But hey, pistachios.
Yeah.
Now, they probably would have went with the red ones, too, that got the red all of your hands, too.
So I think because they're cheaper.
I think I saw them somewhere.
But, you know, it's so interesting because it's like all of these things, it's like they've diagnosed a wound, sold you the Band-Aid while hiding the knife behind their back, right?
Because they created the wound that they're selling you the Band-Aid for, selling you this sense of, you know, we'll fix it with whether it's pistachios or charging for bags or, you know, giving you, quote-unquote an easier way to board.
Yeah, well, we'll get to our fix sooner or later or not, but they could have used that moment.
I mean, they could have won us back and said, it's not pistachios.
You get, you get a kit, you know, a meal kit of pre-market test products.
You know, you get to try it before everyone else just from flying Southwest.
And do a while you're there, while you're a captive audience, do a, do a, do a question there.
Help us, help us decide what you're going to mean.
That would have been so Southwest, you know, again, we're all in this together.
We're trying these things out.
Tell us what you think.
Right.
You know.
Right in on the news.
napkins. We'll collect the napkins, you know, just like when they created the, you know, the, the, the legend is they were sitting in a bar and he put the, you know, the, I'm going to fly from here to here to here on the napkin. And, and people love that story. People who love the brand tell that story. And they could have done something like that with the, you know, with the napkin. It doesn't take much with a brand like Southwest who has all these different cues for you to think to sort of involve. And they could have done. And
and make change not only fun, but again, we're on this together.
We helped do this, and it was the right thing to do for the brand.
Right.
And we probably fall for it.
You know, we're susceptible.
We probably say, okay, I paid for the bag, I paid for my seat, and I get to try
the newest flavor of Coke and Pringles, and I get to tell my friends about it.
Aren't it every special?
Yeah.
I'm winning.
I came out of head.
We really need to change the definition.
should have winning, don't we? I think we do. But, you know, but we're wired that way.
We, okay, good. You listen. You gave us something. You gave us something substantial, at least,
that got us through the flight, made it more pleasant. Yeah. Maybe it didn't even cost the company
anything. These are pilot studies or market tests. Like, companies are going to walk up and pay for
a sitting audience that has nothing but time on their hands to experience and grade their
products, you know, and give market, give feedback.
So. Yeah. And, and we know the Southwest passengers on the plane are interactive.
We know that they interact with the jokes. They interact, you know, with what the pilot is saying.
And they clap when we, you know, when they land, it is a very, they expect that interaction.
Well, I was going to say, can you, can you still, the tiered system, you know, like we all, like the A,
boarding, B boarding, it still was, there was a feeling of democracy about it, right?
Yeah, because you could choose.
You know, you said, okay, well, I'm going to get up five minutes before.
I'm going to be on five minutes before I have to check in so I can get A or B or C.
People who didn't care waited and checked in at C.
They knew they were probably going to get a middle seat.
They didn't care.
Right.
At a concert, you know, you go early and you wait to see your band and then you get in the, you stand up at the front because it's their standing room only area.
You feel great about it because you planned ahead and did all those things.
Right.
If your last one in, you get to the, you stand in the back and you, you know, that's, you still get to the concert.
Exactly, right.
Yeah.
You know.
But the minute they start introducing, you know, loz and balcony and all those, in front row seats or are super premiums.
And then put barriers in front of those even.
Okay, if you have this many points, you can do this or you can pay this for nine more centimeters of space or you can pay this for 15 more centimeters of space.
Right.
Each of those barriers adds a conflict moment for the staff.
And the trickle down is then, is the staff going to be in the right frame of mind to keep creating that sense of warmth on the playing?
Or is that going to go away too?
Exactly.
And then so one of the fundamental questions is can you have that we're all one big family feeling the minute you introduced tiered pricing or you paid for that scene?
You didn't, you're part of the open, you're a fill in, you know.
Can you have, yeah, can you have a family type of feeling anymore?
Yeah.
I think that study by University of Ontario and Harvard Business School really proved that you can't.
That hierarchy, if it doesn't induce, at least airwage, it still induces that feeling of either I'm better than or I'm lesser than or I'm not as important as.
which never existed before on Southwest.
What are some other brands you've worked on
or maybe you're seeing lately
that have had similar or comparable situations
where they change something?
We see it, you know, like, we heard you.
No more fees.
What are some others that you're, you know,
like give it another example?
One of the things when I was working on McDonald's,
they were seriously talking about going cashless.
And we were like the discussion in the room amongst, you know, because a lot of people at McDonald's brought it up well, but with the agency, it was we have to remember who our customer is.
Cashlish means cards. A lot of them don't have that. They're unbanked or underbanked. They use cash. And that is a big, huge part of your customer. If we go cashless, you'll lose them. And it's not like there's a bunch of people waiting who, you know, only use cards to sort of come in and use them at at a McDonald's.
that wasn't, you know, to make up for, especially the people who cashless, who eat there more often, you know, the quantity of times.
So something like that is, is again thinking, but they didn't do it.
So that's, thing.
Other brands that have done things.
When I worked on, you know, General Motors, I was working on the escalade, you know, in Asia.
And it was like, okay, we're going to take it to Japan.
And we're like, it's not going to fit on those roads, right?
It is too big for the streets in Japan.
They weren't built for that.
Sure.
Korea, whose streets were built, quite frankly, for tanks, can, you know, have the thing.
It's somewhere, you know, decision making loses sight of reality.
And I think we've seen that in various ads over the time, you know, the Pepsi ad with Kendall Jenner or, of course, now I'm losing.
all of them. I should have written them down, but there's
a good history of
of ads that have
really missed the mark in
terms of either knowing
their customer or denigrating
people are coming off as
sort of not funny. A baby,
oh, a baby brand
recently was selling all
of its baby stuff with very
overt, is it a
no, it's American, with very
overt sexual punts,
right? And it was
Like, have you read the room? Do you know what's going on in America? Let's not use sex and small
children in the same. Let's not ever do that. Ever do that, but especially right now.
Yeah. These are good examples. And we see, you know, we see companies that make mistakes in public.
And we see them sometimes go into apologetic mode and triage and say, we're doing it anyway, deal with it.
And sometimes we say, you're right. You know, let's, let's undo all of it. And sometimes there's a
middle ground. You know, I think that's what we're going to try to get to is that what's the middle ground? Like, obviously, obviously, you're a for-profit company. You've got to adapt. You've got to make industry changes. Maybe the problem was with the bags fly free was, it was such a great move. It boosted the company for so many years. And it seemed like a forever promise. It should have been a forever promise. Based on the purpose of the brand and the whole freedom, it should have been a forever promise. And the minute you take away something,
like that without messaging it right and without getting your best customers on board.
And to say, you know, I just paid for a bag and it felt great. You know, I saw them handle it with
more care and it came with a sticker on it, whatever the exchange is. Whatever it was.
Yeah. It just didn't happen. There's a lot of like TED from United or song from Delta,
Metrojet from U.S. Airways. They all tried to create sort of these.
Economy Airlines, these things.
But they all fail for operational reasons, not because there wasn't the need.
But if you look at Quantus and JetStar, that is a success story for the ages.
There's a two-brand strategy, Quantus for a premium full service, and then JetStar for the economy service.
And they feed each other, right?
Because for certain trips, people do buy down.
And for other trips, people buy up.
And, you know, they are, they did it right.
They kept the Qantas values.
They kept the Qantas what makes the brand the brand.
They kept it within JetStar, just branded it differently and had different operational systems.
And that's, I mean, duh.
Right.
It's not that hard, right?
A new airline from scratch, what costs 10 to 50,000.
million, right? That's a small regional one. You get a low cost with multiple aircraft, it goes up to maybe 300 million.
You know, JetBlue launched with 130 million in 2000. Virgin America launched with 300 million in
2007. It seems like nothing these days. Right? But Southwest wasn't starting from scratch.
They already have, what, 6, 800 Boeing 737s. They have the maintenance infrastructure nationwide.
They've created the partnerships with Iceland Air, China Airlines, Condor, all those things.
They have gate relationships at every, they had all the infrastructure.
So for all the operational reasons that Ted and Song didn't have, they had the infrastructure
in place to do something, didn't.
And they already spent massively in this transformation they did make, right?
Layoffs, the first layoffs in 53 years, the 1550 percent of corporate, like,
1,500 people, right?
A corporate redesign of the structure, the booking system, the boarding process, the seats,
all these things they spent money on.
So if they were spending the money, why didn't they go to a dual brand strategy?
And do you think that would work for Southwest?
You think they could do?
Because the budget carrier, they can't, you know, we run into Spirit Airlines elsewhere,
but the ultra-low budget, build your fees back up way, they're in trouble too.
Like, do you, though, is the model, if we did a two-pronged approach, two-tiered strat?
Is the model we're looking at now?
Is that the economy tier?
And then, you know, we all have to live with that.
And then there's a premium.
Like, how, how, walk me through it?
How would that work?
Yeah, Kwanis and Jetstar did that.
So they could do it either way.
They could keep Southwest as the four-year winning customer satisfaction economy airline.
But then they could also create either a separate sub, you know,
subsidiary or a sub-brand that has, and because they want to start, you know, overseas,
they want to start going to create, you know, that brand for the long-haul trips.
That makes complete sense to me because long-haul trips, you do need a sort of different experience
on the plane, right, for anything over, you know, five hours or whatever.
And, you know, Ted, which was a sub-brand, launched, it doesn't need any new certificates.
It launched within three months.
They've been working on this for a while.
They've been spending money.
And while the subbrand and fashers and cheaper, the brands could blur.
If you go with a fully separate subsidiary like Kwanis and Jetstar, it takes a little more time, a little more money.
But it gives you also more freedom, which is what Southwest Air is supposed to be all about.
Yeah.
And I wonder if that would help with operations to do the short hot flights under one brand, one category.
And then do, because they've, like you said, they've kind of bolstered their international partnerships and do the long haul and the handoff flights as another side by side entity, you know?
Exactly.
And people will still, you know, if I'm, you know, going from Seattle to Chicago five or six times a month, I'm going to do Southwest.
If I'm then going to go from Seattle to, I don't know, Iceland or, you know, Puerto Rico or whatever, I'll take.
the long haul flight.
Yeah.
The same brand, though, because I know them, I trust them, and I'm building something
with them, you know, how people think about it with the credit card points and all of that.
Yeah.
No, that's really funny because we came up with something similar for Starbucks when we talked
about Starbucks.
You know, if you know your order, you're there every day.
Yeah.
It's repeat, rinse and repeat.
You go to Starbucks Express.
This is our creation.
But if you want to sit around and listen to the soundtrack and work for a while, go to Starbucks lounge, you know, and there's two different entities that are under the same family, right?
And they're both Starbucks, but it's, it's, you're not backing up the queue.
If you say, uh, when you first get to the front and say, oh, what's, what's in your, your cinnamon latte, you know, go to go to the lounge.
Yeah.
You know, the app was such a disaster, right?
Because you'd order on your way to work.
you'd go in there and then there's 70 people waiting for their app order, you know, so it's,
sweaty and crowded and, well.
Yeah.
So if I go to LA to Denver, you know, twice a week on, I'm a business commuter, then I'm going to take the Southwest, you know, that we know it now.
And there's going to be accommodations for me as a passenger.
Right.
If I'm doing the international, you know, going to Paris and I've got Southwest as my domestic transfer
point, that's going to be a different experience, but it's going to be under the Southwest family.
And maybe we can use some of our operations to tailor how each of those experiences are and make it more
pleasant for everyone involved.
Exactly. And they're not cashing in the equity that the old, that Southwest created, right?
It's created a halo for them to use.
You know, they're not draining it, which is what they're doing.
I'm with you on it.
So in a market like this, where, you know, you talked about the layoffs, you talked about there could be more, you know, there's always could be more layoffs. There's, we're seeing it everywhere. But then there's also American Airlines where the story is that the unions or the, they want to oust, they want to, the employees are bandied together. They want to oust the president. And I didn't look today. Maybe it happened. I don't know. But, you know, in a fear-based market where everyone's jobs on the line, do you think something like the Southwest?
situation. If enough employees got together and said, we want to impact meaningful change. They
started to make the rounds, you know, the media circuits and said, we are the employees of Southwest.
We don't agree with the corporate decisions. We want new leadership. Do you think that number one,
would they be fired tomorrow? And number two, do they have power, you know, in numbers to regain
some of what people used to like about the company? Yeah, I don't want to talk out both sides of my mouth,
but I do believe they have power.
They flexed a little bit when they wanted the flight attendants to sort of put all their bags in the back.
The flight attendants said, no, we're not going to do that.
They followed the flight attendants lead.
But with the job market the way it is and with all the people out of work,
I have no doubt they could fire a good portion of them and have them replaced really quickly.
I could just see that causing more problems, right?
because there are no crews like the Southwest crews.
And wanting to recreate that now without sort of the whole brand behind it, I don't think that'll happen.
So again, you just continue the walk towards the sea of sameness, right, towards every other airline out there.
Right. Totally.
Okay. Well, I think we've got enough to fix this.
I feel, I feel calm. We did good here.
I think so.
I mean, they could roll.
The window is narrow, but they could fix it in a day.
You know, they could say, you know what?
We tried this boy where we made a really big mistake.
We're going to do this instead.
They could fix it.
Yeah.
Well, okay, here's what we're going to do.
Right.
We're going to do two companies over time, not tomorrow,
because that's just going to create more market confusion.
Mm-hmm.
But let's do the short hops and, you know, the one leg to another.
Yeah.
Let's call that a company.
I don't have a name for it.
Maybe you do.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
And that's for the everyday traveler, you know, and then we go a little bit premium just to acknowledge we're doing what every other airline's doing.
Yep.
And you get the Southwest flavor.
And we're bringing back some of the joy and some of the personality that you liked because you, you know, you were a Southwest passenger for a reason.
Okay.
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They have 800737s.
They could chop off 50 of those for the first group of long halls, repaint them, rebrand them, fix some stuff on the inside, and, you know,
Rob's drunkle. Okay. For the economy version, at least, we're going to monetize our passengers and give them something they like and they're going to be part of, you know, they're going to watch a show as a pilot and give feedback to the network. They're going to eat snacks that are pre-market and companies are going to pay for the privilege of getting in front of your passengers.
And I'd roll back, I mean, I'd come back with bags fly free and not pay, you know, end up, and I'd change the boardied system back.
What about free, free transparency? So we've seen, you know, with ticketing and, you know, concert tickets and.
and hotels and all that's, you know, you pay what you pay. What about that? You know, you bring a bag that's...
Transparency is key, especially these days. The amount of trust people have for our classic, you know, institutions is that are all-time low. We need somebody to trust. And Southwest Airlines had that in the bag. So absolutely, make it transparent and say, you know, as part of our mea culpa, we're just, we're going to make it all transparent for you guys. So you know, we're not.
gaslight at you again. Yeah, and maybe we all pay a little bit more. If we all did, do you think
that being able to reserve your seat, you know, first come first serve basis, but pre-reserve it?
Do you think that would be a good compromise? Well, that's what happens. That's what happens
with A-list, you know, anyway. You reserve the right to join, to get on the plane first,
and choose whatever seat you want. Not everybody chooses the first three rows aisles or windows,
you know. So if you continue in that vein, right, I think they all.
only have like the first 15 or somebody can do that. Yeah. You know, extend it to 30. I don't know.
But that is something people are used to on Southwest Airlines. And again, if they want to
choose a very specific seat and have the ability to do so, you know, fast, then you can do that.
If not, I don't know, I boarded in Stee Group. You get a seat. You arrived at the same place.
All right. So give freedom of choice for those who want, you know, need control and want the choice.
Don't mock us the rest of us for enjoying your open seating policy.
It was very efficient.
Fe transparency.
Again, maybe we all pay a little more.
Those who bring bags.
You bring bags.
Those who got an aisle seat, they get good for them.
They get an ILC.
Again, monetize your passengers if you, if there's a way to do it as a nice exchange and
make up some of your bag fees that way.
Economy carrier, short hops.
You all know where you're there.
Do it that way.
If you're going to look like at every other airline for your longer haul flights,
do it the Southwest way.
There are people who sign up for, you know, the online, the digital research anyway.
Yeah.
You're sitting in.
You're sitting on Southwest.
You're, I mean, we are Southwest customers.
There's a salt of America.
They're what everybody wants, you know, the sort of.
So they fill out a survey on a little thing.
They get some miles.
The, you know, Southwest gets some money and, yeah.
You've worked with enough brands and, you know, market research count.
Wouldn't someone pay $50 ahead for?
Oh, totally.
Yeah. So done.
You have them for, you know, an hour?
Yeah.
A couple hours.
Exactly.
You know.
Yeah.
And you can choose not to do it if you want.
Sure.
Yeah.
Don't eat it.
It's fine.
And I'll go, so we'll go one further.
So we're going to get an ambassador, someone who's very camera ready, you know, who's an actual from Southwest flight crew.
It's not going to be Betty who's burned out.
It's going to be someone fresh-faced energy saying.
Or somebody who's been there for.
for a while and just knows it by heart.
It's one of those flight attendants who get on and are funny, you know, online.
And yeah, one of those women or men.
And maybe a baggage handler.
Or a group of, yeah.
But somebody who represent this coalition, maybe they've got a petition with signatures
or something in the thousands.
And they say, look, that's the corporate face of the company.
That's one voice in this equation.
Here's what you're not hearing from.
These are us.
We dissent.
We don't, we're not following.
You know, and like I said, they make the media rounds.
They're fresh face.
They, they have tons of energy.
They want what we want.
You know, and we're going to maybe align more with them than with the corporate overlords that are saying, you know.
Right.
We need more money, you know, for Wall Street.
Right.
Right.
And I'll say I out a tiny insignificant amount of Southwest stock.
So if a stock does well, like that tiny part of it,
me, it could go up, you know, 10 times. It's not going to change anything in my life.
But that tiny part of me is like, great, good. They're doing good as a company. But the rest of me.
But they can succeed. But they can succeed doing, being who they were and continuing the positive.
Yeah. Totally. So and I think, you know, from within, if they get those employees that are, you know, like you said, Rooney, if they're fired tomorrow, that's a good story.
just for saying what everyone else is saying.
If they impact medieval chains, that's a good story.
So it's kind of a no loose situation there.
Okay. Ambassadors, two companies,
exploit your passengers in a good way
in a mutually beneficial way with products and market feedback.
Fee transparency, maybe we all pay a little more
and then we all get what we want.
If we walked this, you know, walked it over to Southwest door
and said, here you go.
did we fix, did we diffuse the tension in the room,
did we fix their situation?
If it was southwest of 12 years ago, 15 years ago,
I think they would absolutely listen.
I don't think we'd be in this position in the first place.
But if we were, absolutely, I think they'd listen.
Now with the money people and the management they have, VC,
all that sort of stuff, I don't think so.
I think, you know, they look at that Wall Street number and that's it.
Well, if they, let's do the hypothetical.
If they listen to us, would we fix it?
Oh, absolutely.
I believe we would.
Okay.
I mean, who does it like a comeback story like this?
Yeah.
And, I mean, there are no passengers like Southwest passengers who just love that brand.
And they're all out there right now, filling the world with negative stuff, flip that around.
I bet we'd convert some never Southwest's because there are people who would say, I will never fly Southwest.
having never flown it not knowing anything about it, right?
I bet we'd convert that.
I think we would.
And I think our load factor would go up.
I think we could do something in a month,
and I don't think their stock price would go down because of it.
Now.
All right, Southwest, your move.
I love this conversation.
Yeah, we're going to wrap up our episode,
so let's take it in for a landing.
And before we go, I would like to give a big thank you to Rini,
who you lipton, for joining me.
Rini, I want people to find you.
So tell everybody where they can keep up with what you're doing.
Yeah, you can find me at the website, the damecollective.com, and also it's just Reney, R-N-E-N-E, at the damecollective.com for my email.
And I'd love to sort of hear from you and let's solve the world or let's, you know, let's do cool things.
Yeah, absolutely, fantastic.
Thank you, Rini.
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