Fly the Branded Skies

 

Airline: United Airlines

These are posts from Fly the Branded Skies about United Airlines.

ICAO Code: UAL

United Airlines Future Pilot Wings
United Airlines Jr. Stewardess Wings
United Airlines Junior Stewardess Wings
United Airlines Wings
United Airlines Arlene Airess Junior Stewardess Club Wings
United Airlines Future Pilot Wings
United Airlines Jr. Stewardess Wings
United Airlines Junior Flight Stewardess Wings
United Airlines Future Pilot Wings
United Airlines Jr. Stewardess Wings
United Airlines Junior Stewardess Wings
United Airlines Future Pilot Wings
United Airlines Future Pilot Wings
United Airlines Future Stewardess Wings
United Airlines Future Stewardess Wings
United Airlines Future Stewardess Wings
United Airlines Junior Stewardess Wings
United Airlines Wings
United Airlines Future Flight Attendant Wings
United Airlines Future Pilot Wings
United Airlines Future Stewardess Wings
United Airlines Future Flight Attendant Wings
United Airlines Future Pilot Wings
United Airlines Wings
United Airlines Wings
United Airlines Mystery Tiki Wings
United Airlines Wings
United Airlines Wings
United Airlines Wings
United Airlines Wings

Tropes: Sunsets

Every kind of advertising has—well, let’s call them “conventions.” Airline advertising is no different. This is part of a series of posts on the clichés of airline advertising.

So relaxing. So reassuring. So predictable. It’s just not a real airline ad unless it finishes with an airplane flying off into the sunset—or, in the case of Eastern Air Lines, flying directly at the camera from the sun. Hey, if your tagline is “The Wings of Man,” you’ve clearly got chutzpah to spare. The clips in this video span decades and this cliché shows no signs of going away. The only difference is now the sunsets are computer generated.   Read more

Continited

Image of the tail of a new United Airlines plane“Airlines are an ego-driven business,” according to airline analyst Robert Mann. “I joke, but only partly, that the three biggest issues in airline consolidation are: What are we going to call it? Where is it going to be based? And who is going to run it?”

It makes sense. If not for ego, why would anyone go into the airline business? To make money? You’d be better off stuffing your money under a mattress. And then setting the mattress on fire.

In any event, the parties to the merger of United and Continental have been careful to treat egos on both sides of the deal equitably. The combined company will be based in Chicago, United’s hometown, but will be led by Continental’s CEO. And it will pair the United name with Continental’s logo, livery, and colours.

You have to wonder how close we were to an airline with Continental’s name and United’s logo. Did they flip a coin? Surely there were no high-priced brand consultants involved. The decision was made in a board room. Then they sent one of the lawyers out to mock up a picture of the new plane in Photoshop.

It remains to be seen how long this arrangement will last. The Continental identity is already nearly twenty years old and looking a bit dated—there may be a redesign in the combined airline’s future.