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Profitability structure

On the profitability questions: is it almost always that you start with the revenue / cost tree or there are any other approaches? 
 

The below prompt is from Darden’s casebook and would really appreciate if any of the experts can show how to structure it:

 

Prompt:
Your client is a large US-based commercial airline that has lost profitability and market share. The company is under pressure to regain its foothold in the industry and grow its balance sheet. Can you brainstorm some areas you would like to investigate on behalf of the airline?

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Top answer
Moritz
Coach
on Apr 01, 2022
ex-McKinsey EM & Interviewer | 7/8 offer rate for 4+ sessions | High impact sessions + FREE materials & exercises

Hi there,

First off: This prompt is poorly written because P&L and balance sheet are two related but very different concepts. And you don't “grow” the balance sheet as an objective (it may be an outcome of growth through an expanding asset base, but that's different).

I would subdivide my approach into two areas:

  1. Restore profitability with current operational footprint and asset base
  2. Explore change & growth opportunities (maybe this is meant by growing the balance sheet?)

As for 1., you will want to explore a classic revenue / cost breakdown. Just make sure you're being concrete i.e. for revenue, you actually break it down into all the different revenue streams like tickets, luggage, snacks, 1st class, entertainment, partnerships, duty free sales, etc. And you explore both where they may have lost out and where they might want to adjust to turn things around. Don't just say “they have to increase revenue”.

As for 2., you may want to look at the current routes they're serving, make sure their asset base is utilized in the best geographies/airports. Maybe some changes can be made here. Secondly, they may want to increase their footprint to serve additional routes. Here you can explore different entry modes i.e. increase their own asset base, lease airplanes, do partnerships, etc.

Hope this helps a bit! Best of luck!

Maikol
Coach
on Apr 01, 2022
BCG Project Leader | Former Bain, AlixPartner, and PE | INSEAD MBA | GMAT 780

The prompt is both about improving the income statement and the balance sheet. 

There are two things here, EBITDA improvement and cash generation (which is the key way to have a better-looking balance sheet)

For EBITDA improvement it is always the same approach, revenues - costs.

For cash generation, beyond EBITDA, you have to focus on

  • reducing net working capital requirements (i.e., lower receivables, increase payables)
  • reduce CAPEX

Obviously, a better-looking balance sheet requires you also to understand how debt repayment work (if there is any debt) and if you have a net worth in excess of annual losses. 

This type of question requires a strong understanding of business, so it is not only about income statement but also balance sheet, something that is often neglected. 
 

Ian
Coach
on Apr 02, 2022
Top US BCG / MBB Coach - 5,000 sessions |Tech, Platinion, Big 4 | 9/9 personal interviews passed | 95% candidate success

Hi there,

Revenue/Cost is so so generic! Sometimes R + C works, and it's a good backup to have, but you really want to strive to not just regurgitate the classic profitability framework!

Rather, your framework should be through what lens are you looking at figuring out the issue.

So, you might segment by Product, Geography, Customer, Competitor, Company, Market, etc. You mgith do internal and external. You might look at the value chain.

It's all dependent on the case + industry!

In this case, we note that they've lost profitability AND market share, which indicates a revenue issue. Given the goal is to regain the foothold in the industry, that's our focus (not just generic Revenue/Cost).

Think through the major themes/areas in which we could regain our foothold in the industry! Once you've thought through it, message me with your approach and I'll let you know how you did :)

Deleted user
on Apr 01, 2022

Hi there, 

It looks like Revenue-Cost split is the way to go, because you are already prompted to think about the revenue side with the question on market share, and you are left with investigating costs to drill down on profitability. 

I wouldn't overcomplicate it too much, because I've noticed that clients (even big sophisticated companies, leaders in their respective markets) prefer simple structures in real life projects, and many of the presentations I've made had this very clear-cut division into the "revenue" and the “cost” components: the chapters of the deck were literally called this way.

Good luck!

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