An empirical investigation into the changing visual identity of full service and low cost carriers, 2000 vs. 2012

<p>This paper reports on the findings of a semiotic content analysis of the visual branding of over 630 airline tail fins as they appeared in 2000 and 2012. Unlike existing studies of airlines’ visual identities that rely on a snap shot in time and examine all airlines, this paper focuses on c...

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Main Authors: Adam Taylor, David Pitfield, Lucy Budd
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: OmniaScience 2013-09-01
Series:Journal of Airline and Airport Management
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jairm.org/index.php/jairm/article/view/16
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spelling doaj-077b9373ce7e4f25bc9434669df3b55c2020-11-24T21:31:40ZengOmniaScienceJournal of Airline and Airport Management2014-48652014-48062013-09-013111710.3926/jairm.169An empirical investigation into the changing visual identity of full service and low cost carriers, 2000 vs. 2012Adam Taylor0David Pitfield1Lucy Budd2Transport Studies GroupTransport Studies Group Loughborough UniversityTransport Studies Group Loughborough University<p>This paper reports on the findings of a semiotic content analysis of the visual branding of over 630 airline tail fins as they appeared in 2000 and 2012. Unlike existing studies of airlines’ visual identities that rely on a snap shot in time and examine all airlines, this paper focuses on changes that have occurred in the visual branding of full-service carriers (FSCs) and low cost carriers (LCCs) between 2000 and 2012. The results confirm that there have been significant changes in the visual content of FSC and LCC tail fins and the way in which these airlines portray non-price competitive characteristics. The research shows that while an increasing number of LCCs now use aircraft tail fins to display their corporate name, FSCs are increasingly employing icons of nationhood. This suggests that while LCCs are trying to appeal to a wide passenger demographic who value low fares over service, FSCs are responding to the competitive threat by explicitly drawing on the cultural rhetoric of symbols of sovereign national identity to differentiate themselves in an increasingly competitive market.</p>http://www.jairm.org/index.php/jairm/article/view/16Airlinesvisual identitybranding.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adam Taylor
David Pitfield
Lucy Budd
spellingShingle Adam Taylor
David Pitfield
Lucy Budd
An empirical investigation into the changing visual identity of full service and low cost carriers, 2000 vs. 2012
Journal of Airline and Airport Management
Airlines
visual identity
branding.
author_facet Adam Taylor
David Pitfield
Lucy Budd
author_sort Adam Taylor
title An empirical investigation into the changing visual identity of full service and low cost carriers, 2000 vs. 2012
title_short An empirical investigation into the changing visual identity of full service and low cost carriers, 2000 vs. 2012
title_full An empirical investigation into the changing visual identity of full service and low cost carriers, 2000 vs. 2012
title_fullStr An empirical investigation into the changing visual identity of full service and low cost carriers, 2000 vs. 2012
title_full_unstemmed An empirical investigation into the changing visual identity of full service and low cost carriers, 2000 vs. 2012
title_sort empirical investigation into the changing visual identity of full service and low cost carriers, 2000 vs. 2012
publisher OmniaScience
series Journal of Airline and Airport Management
issn 2014-4865
2014-4806
publishDate 2013-09-01
description <p>This paper reports on the findings of a semiotic content analysis of the visual branding of over 630 airline tail fins as they appeared in 2000 and 2012. Unlike existing studies of airlines’ visual identities that rely on a snap shot in time and examine all airlines, this paper focuses on changes that have occurred in the visual branding of full-service carriers (FSCs) and low cost carriers (LCCs) between 2000 and 2012. The results confirm that there have been significant changes in the visual content of FSC and LCC tail fins and the way in which these airlines portray non-price competitive characteristics. The research shows that while an increasing number of LCCs now use aircraft tail fins to display their corporate name, FSCs are increasingly employing icons of nationhood. This suggests that while LCCs are trying to appeal to a wide passenger demographic who value low fares over service, FSCs are responding to the competitive threat by explicitly drawing on the cultural rhetoric of symbols of sovereign national identity to differentiate themselves in an increasingly competitive market.</p>
topic Airlines
visual identity
branding.
url http://www.jairm.org/index.php/jairm/article/view/16
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