Case Lufthansa 2000 - Analysis and Conclusion
Case Lufthansa 2000 - Analysis and Conclusion
Case Lufthansa 2000 - Analysis and Conclusion
2000:
MAINTAINING
THE
CHANGE
MOMENTUM
Group
D
Tilda
Wikner,
921115
Isabell
Hultn,
930329
Emelie
Karlsson,
930214
Sara
Liljenstrm,
900424
Tao
Hemberg
Jankel,
900618
Executive
Summary
In 1991 Lufthansa was practically bankrupt. Eight years later, the company announced an all time high
result. In 1999, Lufthansa was one of the worlds leading airline companies. Lufthansa managed to
make every individual in the company aware of the urgency of change. It decentralized its structure
and moved from growth through strengths to growth through partnership and founded the network
STAR ALLIANCE. In only eight years the CEO, Jrgen Weber, succeeded in restructuring the
company.
This paper raises the challenges that Lufthansa faced in the beginning of the 1990s as well as the new
strategy to mitigate these challenges. Furthermore, this paper illustrates the challenges still remaining
in the late 1990s, how these occurred and how these challenges could be linked to the strategy
implemented.
Our
Conclusion
By the end of the 1990s, Lufthansa had managed vast conversions in organization structure. The
renovation of Lufthansa has shown great changes in results. At first, Lufthansa was a fixed and
bureaucratic organization with un-profitable outcomes. However, through the renovation it was
transformed into an organization with more openness to change and Lufthansa became one of the most
profitable airlines on the market. Giving birth to natural incentives throughout the company, creating a
more divisional structure, and forming the STAR ALLIANCE have all been parts among many others,
which have put Lufthansa in its position today. Remaining challenges for Lufthansa, among others,
involve managing external relationships in combination with coordinated strategic aims, continuously
envisioning an open culture for the whole company, and preserve efficiency through control systems.
Table
of
content
1.
LUFTHANSA
IN
THE
EARLY
1990S
........................................................
4
1.1
INTERNAL
CHALLENGES
.....................................................................................
4
1.2
EXTERNAL
CHALLENGES
.....................................................................................
4
7.
REFERENCES
.....................................................................................
15
people, and afterwards the majority of the senior managers were convinced of the need of a drastic
change, which resulted in the development of the following strategies.
5. Emboldening surroundings to perform according to the vision
Line managers were through the Programm 15 given more responsibility for decreasing costs. The
program also aimed at spreading the cost structure globally. By censoring activities closely through
this program, Lufthansa was able to see that vital control mechanisms were affected harmlessly.
Middle managers also succeeded in making employees engaged in the cost management processes.
Results of the program were more effective cost management and a change in culture. As Beer and
Nohria (2000) argue, reaching a sustainable competitive advantage was easier for Lufthansa as they
focused on both economic values and organizational aptitudes.
6. Setting up short-term goals
Weber understood the value of keeping employees motivated. Kotter (2007) describes the importance
of showing gratitude to short-term-successions in order to make employees aware of how the company
has succeeded thanks to the changes. In the Lufthanseat magazine distributed to all workers, chosen
success stories were published for everyone in the company to view. Kotter (2007) continues
explaining that a company lacking in screening short-term achievements to employees will result in
employees not understanding the urgency of change. By publishing the success stories in the magazine
employees were reminded of what some of the changes had resulted in. However, using extensive
methods in reminding the employees of their successes, could keep employees even more motivated.
individual areas. As part of the organizational change, collaborations between departments were not as
high, and existing synergy effects were damaged, according to Mintzbergs (1981) theory. The
damage of the brand can be echoed through one of the employees who explained how the IT Service
departments ways of working was influenced by the culture of Germany. An example of a department
in need of other cultures than the German is the food supplying business, like LSG Sky Chefs, who
are in need to adjust to various food traditions and preferences.
4.3
Suggestions
A way of preserving positive synergy effects within and between divisions could be to create a middle
unit with the purpose of arranging frequent meetings with delegates from each division. Through these
meetings, the meaning of the brand could be discussed and the true brand culture could be repeated
towards the divisions that are lacking the same beliefs. Preserving synergy effects is essential both for
STAR ALLIANCE and the divisions of Lufthansa. Divisions would, through such confrontation, be
able to discuss how to best coordinate and work while at the same time practicing in being
independent. Research and development issues could in this way follow a more unified path, in all
divisions. Collaboration among the different parts of the company would thus grant all parts
advantages. However, communication activities need to be organized in a smart way to enable
collaboration. Lufthansa has used these methods before, for example as part of their Programm 15.
Simons (1994) theory explains how management can be looked upon as having different levers of
control. There are four categories included in his theory, belief systems, boundary systems, diagnostic
control systems and interactive control systems. According to the author, the four features of control
need to be approached during both the opening and the continuing phase. Weber has successfully
created belief systems and boundary systems. Through town meetings and the management programs,
Weber managed to make the company and its surroundings realize the belief needed to influence
change. Programm 15 envisioned managers to be more effective in their managing while at the same
time having to follow certain rules and operation declarations. Employees and middle managers also
took after management methods through the programs, which would help maintain the philosophy of
Weber, and therefore Programm 15 also worked as a belief system. The founding of Lufthansa
School of Business also helps preserve the beliefs being strived for by Weber.
The diagnostic control systems and interactive control systems became weaker further in the process
of change. These systems were expected to be cultivated easier at the time when the company was
more compact and not as divided, as part of the subsidiary process. Measuring performance goals was
10
not done by the top management to the same extent as before the divisional structure, since each
division was meant to take own responsibility. Furthermore, the separation into divisions caused
further distance from the top management and discussion. The exchange of information was thus more
difficult. If Lufthansa would manage to create a middle unit to function as a communication
platform between the top management and the leaders of the divisions, diagnostic control systems and
interactive control systems could be improved in Lufthansas current organization structure. But
before such a unit is created, diagnostic control systems and interactive control systems can be seen as
areas to further develop (Simons, 1994).
5.
Challenges
in
1999
5.1
Internal
Perspective
Since 1997, Lufthansa was fully privatized and from being a company facing bankruptcy, it became
one of the worlds leading airlines and core element of the strongest worldwide alliance in the airline
industry. From a rather conservative organization, believing in immortality, Lufthansa managed to
change its corporate culture to become an organization striving for change and improvements.
Decentralization was a fact in 1997 and by 1999, the Lufthansa Group Management Board directed
activities of the entire Group through three central functions; the Chairmans Office, the finance, and
the Human Resource Management. Lufthansa moved from the functional organizational structure
toward a divisional structure with the purpose of achieving a higher degree of decentralization. The
divisional structure, according to Mintzberg (1981), is not as integrated and instead a set of rather
independent units joined together by a loose administrative overlay. The decentralization process
resulted in seven main businesses with different strategies for growth and globalization. This new
structure arose challenges and internal tensions regarding the use of Lufthansa as a brand, since the
degree of internationalization and use of the brand varied significantly across the different businesses..
This organizational structure also created difficulties for lone business units as they lacked experience
in working autonomously. Lufthansa Cargo AG, for example, had never been an autonomous
organizational unit before, but a dependent child and a mental change was needed in order to sustain
as an independent unit. The challenges facing independent businesses, which was now forced to tackle
operations by their own, was a result of the decentralization process.
As mentioned above, different growth and globalization strategies were undertaken by companies in
The Lufthansa Group. As a result, different units had different relationships to the brand Lufthansa
and internal tension was created within the company. A challenge caused by the new strategy was
therefore to preserve the Lufthansa identity, which can be linked to the lack of an overall vision and
thus a vital hinder when trying to maintain sustainable change (Kotter, 2007). Internal costs,
restructuring, and external relationships were main focus aspects when Lufthansa implemented the
new strategy and the change process. However, a clear vision of the overall aviation group was
lacking. Grant (2013) points out the sense of a common purpose, shared goals, and values as keys to
achieve coherence and cooperation throughout the organization. In order to coordinate the use of the
Lufthansa brand, a strong corporate culture is needed and Lufthansa should use control systems and
performance incentives to direct division in a coherent manner. Simons (1994) states control systems
as tools in order for managers to frame beliefs, norms, values, as well as boundaries on acceptable
11
strategies and behavior. These control systems can also be used to manage measurements of
performance variables and enhance cross-functional dialogues. The Lufthansa School of Business was
established at a corporate level in 1998. The school was used as a tool in order to establish a cultural
and knowledge platform and can thus be claimed to be a belief system used to control the use of the
Lufthansa brand (Simons, 1994).
So-called silent killers of implementation, as described by Beer and Eisenstat (2000), can be traced in
the organization of Lufthansa and can be stated as blocking learning from being distributed throughout
the corporation. As mentioned above, ambiguous strategies and conflicting priorities are silent killers
still present in the organization. The autonomous business units of Lufthansa Group entail strategic
dissimilarities. The feedback system needs to be more extensive, and include lower-level unit
managers, in order to refine and delineate a common strategy into a coherent business direction.
One crucial question concerned the influence that the close integration within the STAR ALLIANCE
would have on Lufthansas companies. Critical issues regarding branding and identity within the
Lufthansa Group were connected to the network strategy and cultural integration. STAR
ALLIANCEs influence on the independent companies within Lufthansa was sometimes problematic,
particularly due to the planned extension of joint procurement. Several units were highly dependent
upon STAR ALLIANCE, which complicated their independent business. Lufthansa Technik, for
example, which had a strategy in 1999 that mainly focused on growth through cooperation with the
alliance and its partners, faced problems with creating an alliance independent from STAR
ALLIANCE. On one hand, Lufthansa Technik was dependent on an alliance with STAR ALLIANCE
in order to grow. On the other hand, such an alliance was almost impossible due to the perception
within STAR ALLIANCE that technical maintenance was not a real business. As a result, Airlines
Materials was founded in 1998 by Lufthansa Technik, United Airlines, and Air Canada. Airlines
Materials became a trade and service center for spare parts in Chicago and turned out to be a serious
competitor to Lufthansa Technik. From this example, we can see that STAR ALLIANCE constituted a
serious challenge for the subsidiaries operations and market positions.
When the radical change process was first implemented, Lufthansa tightened its awareness of weak
signals and other features in the environment. The achieved record performance was in large part due
to openness for change and the willingness to tackle the crisis. A crucial challenge for Lufthansa is to
keep people motivated when the pressure has eased off and prevent them from falling into a
comfortable zone. This phenomenon is described by Kotter (2007), where the tendency to declare
victory too fast is stated as a common error in change processes. Several managers at Lufthansa imply
that a serious crisis was needed in order to motivate people and achieve real change. After turnaround
was reached it took ages to realize changes, even small ones. Kotter (2007) explains that a sense of
urgency is needed in order to motivate and drive for change. It is important for Lufthansa to maintain
an open culture with strive for continuously improvements. It is also important to encourage and
empower employees, showing that risk-taking and innovative projects is important regardless of the
current market situation. The Lufthansa School of Business is partly used in order to enhance future
performance, whereby links are tightened between strategy, organizational and individual
development in order to strengthen the key priorities.
12
13
Internal
Proposed Solutions
STAR ALLIANCE
14
7.
References
Beer, M. Eisenstat, R.A (2000) The silent killers of strategy implementation and learning, MIT Sloan
Management Review.
Beer & Nohria (2000) Cracking the code of change, Harvard Business Review
Gadde, L-E; Huemer L, Hkansson H (2003) Strategizing in industrial networks, Industrial Marketing
Management
Grant, R. (2013) Contemporary Strategy Analysis, Seventh edition, Blackwell Publishing
Kotter J. P (2007) Why transformation efforts fail?, Harvard Business Review
Mintzberg, H (1981) Organizational design: fashion or fit?, Harvard business review
Simons R (1994) How new top managers use control systems as levers of strategic renewal, Strategic
Management Journal, Vol. 15
15