Detailed Information on Publication Record
2021
At Their own Will: Success and Failure of Airlines After Deregulation
MUDROŇ, Róbert, Pavlína ŠIROKÁ and Michal JIRÁSEKBasic information
Original name
At Their own Will: Success and Failure of Airlines After Deregulation
Authors
MUDROŇ, Róbert, Pavlína ŠIROKÁ and Michal JIRÁSEK
Edition
Reading, Proceedings of the 16th European Conference on Innovation and Entrepreneurship, p. 590-597, 10 pp. 2021
Publisher
Academic Conferences International
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Stať ve sborníku
Field of Study
50204 Business and management
Country of publisher
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Publication form
printed version "print"
Organization unit
Faculty of Economics and Administration
ISBN
978-1-914587-09-2
Keywords in English
success; deregulation; breakthrough event; Icarus paradox; strategic persistence; qualitative comparative analysis
Změněno: 13/10/2021 08:23, Ing. Michal Jirásek, Ph.D.
Abstract
V originále
The deregulation of the U.S. air transportation industry in 1978 has served both as an inspiration for subsequent deregulation efforts and as a natural experiment of firm behavior under significant environmental change. The deregulation hurled many airlines into a qualitatively different business context in which they needed to re-establish their competitive positions. Our research aims to identify airlines' characteristics connected with success or its absence in the early postderegulation era. For this purpose, we use Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA) that allows us to observe airlines' characteristics in their combinations, not as independent factors. The method enables us to point out the equifinality in airlines' success, meaning that there were several ways how airlines could have become successful. We find that there were no clear pathways towards post-deregulation success. Yet, the results suggest (with borderline significance) that large airlines that changed their strategy succeeded. Regarding the absence of success, we find three combinations of conditions that explain the lack of success with a relatively high significance. Both results for the presence of success and its absence provides some support for the Icarus paradox. In this phenomenon, a satisfactory past performance causes a strategic persistence that is rendered dysfunctional during and after the breakthrough event and causes airlines' decline.