Business·Analysis

WestJet and the leap into no-frills flying

Ultra-low-cost carriers go mainstream in Canada with WestJet's leap into the business. It may be good for fares, but is it good for WestJet?

The message for passengers? You're on a plane flying somewhere, so be happy that's it, says tourism expert

Calgary-based WestJet is launching an ultra-low-cost carrier later this year. (Darren Bernhardt/CBC)

A flight on an ultra-low-cost carrier can be a trying experience.

There's the limited leg-room, of course, and ULCCs, as they are called in the business, have an almost magical ability to "unbundle" the trip.  

Passengers pay extra for food and luggage; we're all used to that. There's a fee for carry-on baggage as well, in most cases. You want to get on early, so that you can stow that bag in the overhead compartment?  There's a fee for that. Can't print your boarding pass at home. That'll cost you. The innovation is limitless. Uzbekistan Airways and Samoan Air charge passengers by weight. Just saying.

We put you in a plane and we fly you from Ireland to Eastern Europe, or something like that. Be happy, that's all we're doing for you.- Frederic Dimanche, Ryerson University

Most Canadians have flirted with ULCCs in Europe or the U.S., or even here in Canada with NewLeaf in the past year, but the no-frills airline is going mainstream now with WestJet's entry into the market.

Pending an agreement with its pilots (which just got trickier because of an upcoming unionization vote) the airline's plan is to take 10 of its existing Boeing 737s, paint them, add more seats, hire a cheaper crew, and get in the air with low prices and no-frills service. It hasn't said where it will fly, but has hinted that the U.S. is in its sights.

It seems obvious that Canadians are keen for lower fares and will probably put up with at least some additional misery. But are there enough people and places to go to sustain another airline?

WestJet defends its turf

WestJet's move may have come as a surprise to employees, analysts and Canadians at large, but it makes more sense when you look at how the aviation market has developed in the past decade, particularly with the entry of NewLeaf last summer, and the expected entry (now questionable) of two other ULCCs.

NewLeaf stumbled out of the gate, having to delay its launch and then cancel destinations as WestJet targeted its routes. The head of NewLeaf said at the time that it was a case of the big guy trying to squash the little guy.

"WestJet realizes that the proposed low-cost carriers in the market were primarily targeting WestJet's core domestic routes," said Fred Lazar, an associate professor at York University who follows the aviation business.

"They decided they might as well just go head to head with NewLeaf and try to stop any new entrants."

WestJet couldn't do that with its existing cost structure, which, according to research done by the investment firm Raymond James, is much lower than Air Canada's, but much higher than Ryanair's.

Passengers both love and hate ULCCs

There's not much question that ULCCs are a success particularly in Europe.

Passengers seem to love and hate them in equal measure.

Ryanair carries more passengers than any other airline in Europe. It and EasyJet dominate inter-city travel in Europe, increasingly pushing the legacy carriers like British Airways to the long-haul market.

This comes despite the fact that the travel can be miserable.

"If you look at the rankings of airlines, the ULCCs always come in at the bottom," said Lazar. "The quality of service on the ULCCs makes United look like the premier airline in the world, and their service really sucks."

Ryanair in particular doesn't apologize for its service, said Frederic Dimanche, professor at Ryerson University's School of Hospitality and Tourism Management.

"We put you in a plane and fly you from Ireland to Eastern Europe, or something like that. Be happy, that's all we're doing for you."

However, Dimanche isn't totally convinced the formula will work here.

"They have a much bigger market to work with," he said. "Europe has lots of destinations and lots of population that they can draw to their flights. It remains to be seen within Canada if the market is large enough for an ultra-low-cost carrier."

Bay Street unconvinced

The market was not totally convinced, judging by WestJet's share reaction on Thursday when the airline announced plans to launch an ULCC by the end of the year.

Its shares dropped on a day when the broader market was higher and Air Canada's stock barely budged.

In a research report, Ben Cherniavsky of Raymond James said he views WestJet's decision to launch a ULCC as a defensive move. But he's not sure the tactic will work, in part because of the mixed history of having an "airline within an airline."

Cherniavsky wrote that, "the problem with the model is that usually any cost savings related to denser seats and a cheaper crew (which is usually the extent of the savings) is offset by yield cannibalization, increased complexity and brand confusion."

In other words, WestJet will be competing with itself with the new airline.​

However, Lazar thinks that it had no choice. "It's better that you cannibalize your market than let a competitor do it."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Tracy Johnson

Business reporter

Tracy Johnson is the executive producer of CBC's western digital business unit. She's been a business reporter/producer with CBC on radio, television and online for 15 years. @tracyjohnsoncbc