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Posted

http://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/03/obituaries/herb-kelleher-whose-southwest-airlines-reshaped-the-industry-dies-at-87.html

 

http://www.dallasnews.com/business/southwest-airlines/2019/01/03/southwest-airlines-legendary-co-founder-herb-kelleher-dies-87

 

"Employees first, customers second, shareholders third. If the employees serve the customer well, the customer comes back, and that makes the shareholders happy. It’s simple, it’s not a conflict, it’s a chain. If you treated the employees well, if you cared for them, if you value them as people, if you gave them psychic satisfaction in their jobs, they would really do a great job for the customers and the customers would come back, which would be good for the shareholders. Most companies didn’t operate that way. So we turned the pyramid upside down, in effect, and said the employees come first and they always have. Not just in our minds but in our hearts as well."

 

What a "radical".

 

 


 

  • Like (+1) 3
Posted

It is NOT customers first if the credits expire so quickly.   It is accountants first.

Last time I flew on them I was asked my FF# and I said "Why bother since credits likely expire before plane lands?"

Posted
On 1/5/2019 at 11:20 AM, Doc said:

Credits expire a year after booking flights.  Unless you're talking about something else.

 

Yes. That is certainly not to customer's advantage.

Posted
On 1/5/2019 at 11:02 AM, Limeaid said:

It is NOT customers first if the credits expire so quickly.   It is accountants first.

Last time I flew on them I was asked my FF# and I said "Why bother since credits likely expire before plane lands?"

 

A lot of companies credits expire after a year if you do not have any activity. So it’s not unusual. 

Posted
52 minutes ago, \GoBillsInDallas/ said:

 

He won, and didn't even put his cigarette down!

 

I remember going to a Knicks/Bullets game in the 70's.  Phil Jackson was in the tunnel, leaning against the wall, signing autographs, while holding a cigarette.  That was the mid-late 70's.  Can't remember if they even had health warnings on the packs then?

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