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    American Brat Pack: where airline CEOs came of age

    NEW YORK (AP) — From an office at the end of a Dallas runway in the 1980s, the modern airline business was born.

    There in cubicles with thin, gray carpet and shared computers, young graduates of the top business schools were tasked with making sense of deregulation — a new era when the government no longer dictated routes or prices.

    Under American Airlines' then CEO Robert L. Crandall, they issued the first frequent flier miles, developed the hub system and found a way to fill empty seats with deeply discounted fares. Standards were high. Perfection was demanded. Those who excelled were quickly promoted, regardless of how young or new to the company they were. At the time, being a financial analyst on the second floor of American's headquarters was unlike any other job in the industry.

    Today, four of them are running airlines — including American — themselves.

    "It was a magical time," says Virgin America CEO David Cush, 51. "You didn't know where these guys were going to end up, but you knew you were hanging around with a bunch of smart guys."

    US Airways CEO Doug Parker, 50, and Spirit Airlines CEO Ben Baldanza, 50, got their start alongside Cush.

    Tom Horton, the other member of this airline Brat Pack, arguably hit it even bigger — taking over as CEO of the airline where they all started. But the job that he inherited is a long way from American's glory days under Crandall.

    The 1980s "was sort of a golden moment for American," says Michael Useem, director of the Center for Leadership and Change Management at The University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School.

    Today, American is struggling with old jets and high labor costs. Once the largest airline in the world, American is now in third place behind Delta Air Lines Inc. and United-Continental Holdings Inc., which became bigger and more efficient through mergers. But the most-painful jab for the carrier came last month when American's parent, AMR Corp., sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection — the same day it promoted Horton, 50.

    Horton and Parker declined requests for interviews.

    American's success at molding future leaders echoes the success of big companies such as General Electric and Procter & Gamble. Those companies were known for weeding out underperforming executives and giving those who showed promise responsibilities well beyond their rank.

    "These companies made developing great leaders a defining element of their DNA," Useem says.

    American didn't just create CEOs. Dozens of its young financial analysts from the 1980s went on to become top executives at most of the major airlines. Others held senior roles at travel companies including Orbitz and Royal Caribbean.

    They all came to American because it was the center of innovation in an industry on the verge of a revolution. There were challenges found nowhere else. For instance: how do you create the first curbside check-in system? These young analysts were driven by their bosses and each other. And nobody pushed harder than Crandall.

    "The most competent got promoted very rapidly," says Crandall, who retired in 1998. "That made American a very good place to work. And the consequence of that is we attracted a lot of very, very bright people."

    Crandall required major initiatives in other departments — from marketing to flight planning — to be vetted by the finance department, exposing the analysts to all aspects of the industry. He wanted to know the exact cost and potential benefit of any change.

    Three decades later, most still recall the CEO's persistence.

    The worst thing you could do was say you didn't want to waste his time with the details. Crandall thrived on those details and demanded them of his staff. He was known to quiz station managers on how much they spent on rags. If they didn't know, they were told they didn't really understand their operation.

    "They didn't care if you were too young or didn't have enough years of experience. All they cared about was if you were competent and able to do a good job," says Bernie Han, who worked at American from 1988 until 1991. He later became the chief financial officer at America West and then held that title at Northwest. He is now chief operating officer of Dish Network.

    American's headquarters was an energetic place. Competition was fierce but friendly. The analysts often bounced ideas off each other while playing Nerf basketball in a cubicle.

    "If somebody did good work, the other guy wanted to do better work," says Jeff Katz, an American alumnus who went on to become CEO of Swissair, then led the online travel company Orbitz before landing the top job at Nextag, an online shopping website.

    Despite being at competing airlines today, many of the former American analysts still keep in touch. From the start, they were a social group.

    After work, beers were had at the Euless Yacht Club — a land-locked dive bar that was the closest place to headquarters. Other nights, it was margaritas at Esparza's, a nearby Mexican restaurant.

    There were Texas Rangers games, a basketball league that Parker played in and the occasional lunchtime trip to Sonny Bryan's Smokehouse.

    "We were all single and many people met their spouses there," says Teri L. Brooks, who rose to head human resources at American before leaving in 1996. She started the same year as David Brooks. Five and a half years later, they were married. He now runs American's cargo division.

    Parker met his wife Gwen — then an American flight attendant — thanks to Cush, who knew her through a college friend.

    Working at an airline meant free flights. Thursday night or Friday morning a weekend destination was selected — New York, London, the Caribbean or skiing in Utah.

    "We'd all pile into hotel rooms, sleep on the floor," Brooks says.

    Sometimes a random gate was picked. The plane might be heading to Cancun or Kansas City. Fate would decide.

    "I was never a fan of that game," says Virgin America's Cush. "It never worked out very well."

    For the most part, the young analysts were respected by those outside the finance department. Occasionally, a veteran manager would ask how long they'd been at American, suggesting they weren't qualified to be asking questions. That was the exception.

    Crandall wanted the facts and would take them from whoever knew the business best. Those working around him learned how to gather information about a complex issue and then make a decision.

    "If you were aggressive, intelligent and were willing to work hard," Baldanza says, "there was no limit on the types of things you could be involved in."

    With reports from David Koenig in Dallas.

    ___

    Scott Mayerowitz can be reached at http://twitter.com/GlobeTrotScott.

     

    8 comments

    • JohnM  •  4 mths ago
      Loved this! ""It was a magical time," says Virgin America CEO David Cush, 51. "You didn't know where these guys were going to end up, but you knew you were hanging around with a bunch of smart guys....they have all either bankrupted the companies they "manage", or are on their way. HUBRIS. Wharton School, Bain Consulting, IPOs...Citizens, if you want to blame someone, look at how we "teach" the young, white, rich, "gangstas" to make money. GREED is GOOD, (for me, personally).
      • pr 4 mths ago
        That's a good point. Ghetto gangstas look around for where the money is, find a street corner and sell crack. White gangstas look around for where the money is, go get an MBA and plunder industries. Who does more harm to the country?
    • Bill  •  Deforest, Wisconsin  •  4 mths ago
      Sociopaths just grow older as they sharpen their greed. They don't mature or grow wise, just older.
      • L K 4 mths ago
        Yes, they are sociopaths. Energetic, ambitious, greedy sociopaths. Not much different from the mafia.
    • Joseph  •  4 mths ago
      Airline deregulation was a huge mistake. Flying was a much better experience when it was regulated. Deregulation allowed greed to take over, and it became a race to the bottom, resulting in the mess we have now.
    • pr  •  Fort Wayne, Indiana  •  4 mths ago
      These guys are poster children for what's wrong with American industry. The leaders all come from the finance department, rather than from production. The focus is on bean counting, mindless parsimony, and financial tricks. This creates the short term appearance of success, while ensuring a long term death spiral for the company, the industry, and the entire country.
    • Joseph  •  4 mths ago
      Well, now we know who are the culprits that are responsible for the disaster that is today's airline industry.
    • L K  •  4 mths ago
      Too bad those punks weren't all in a plane crash. We'd be better off today if they had all died young before they had a chance to mess everything up. They're just a bunch of greed-heads.
      • NYU1232 4 mths ago
        Wow, you are simple. Good luck with that GED.
    • Dumby  •  Minneapolis, Minnesota  •  4 mths ago
      Hooray! This just goes to show us we can trust corporations to do the right thing even when industries are deregulated! We don't need the government to restrict us and tell us what to do. Go Big Business, right?!
      • Nony 4 mths ago
        You do know most of those airlines are broke and have lousy customer service, right?
      • L K 4 mths ago
        Greed and deregulation have turned flying into a nightmare experience for the passengers.
      • pr 4 mths ago
        Deregulation on the whole was a good thing. The only really bad thing was the
        insane pricing games, pioneered by Crandall and his spawn. Airlines use pricing games to drive out competition so they can ultimately charge more. One need look no further than American's dominance of DFW to see how that game works. Stupidity like charging a fortune for last minute flights, charging more for one-ways than round trips, and charging less for longer flights than short ones cause most of the nonsense. Solution: make each airline publish a single, simple fare policy. They still set the prices, they just have to be consistent (with a tolerance) across the company. You wouldn't need a cozy bureaucracy like the CAB setting prices (to the advantage of the airlines). Anyone could download the policy and check that the prices were consistent with it.
    • L K  •  4 mths ago
      By the way, the hub system sux big time.
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