After Doug Parker dodged a career in computers, he's poised to run American Airlines instead

By JOSHUA FREED

The Associated Press
February 15, 2013 at 4:27PM
U.S. Airways CEO Doug Parker, right, and American Airlines CEO Tom Horton pose after a news conference at DFW International Airport Thursday, Feb. 14, 2013, in Grapevine, Texas. The two airlines will merge forming the world's largest airlines.
U.S. Airways CEO Doug Parker, right, and American Airlines CEO Tom Horton pose after a news conference at DFW International Airport Thursday, Feb. 14, 2013, in Grapevine, Texas. The two airlines will merge forming the world's largest airlines. (Associated Press - Ap/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Doug Parker has no problem donning rapper Psy's light blue tuxedo for Halloween and performing his own version of Gangnam Style before hundreds of employees. The CEO of US Airways even let a video of his dance get posted to YouTube. He's outspoken, confident, and persistent, and he is very close to being put in charge of the world's largest airline.

After the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Parker camped out in Washington for three months to secure a government loan to keep his airline in business. One executive who was with him said it often seemed like the other airlines just wanted America West to go out of business.

Parker later engineered an audacious merger of America West and the larger US Airways. Then he spent the next seven years looking for another partner. First Delta rebuffed him. Then United. Twice. Parker then went after the only big airline left: American.

American also resisted at first. But Parker convinced its unions and bankruptcy creditors to pressure American management until it relented. The two sides announced Thursday they'll combine to form an airline that's bigger than United and Delta. Parker will run it.

"It's taken a lot of grit, right? To hang in here, with someone telling you pretty much every day, `We ain't doing it,'" said Bill Franke, who was CEO of America West starting in 1993, and picked Parker to be his protege before promoting him into the airline's top job. Parker is now the longest-serving airline U.S. CEO.

Parker attracts comparisons to Herb Kelleher, the whiskey-drinking, cigarette-puffing lawyer who helped found Southwest Airlines.

"Doug can be Kelleheresque when it's appropriate," said Henri Courpron, a former Airbus North America CEO and now CEO of airplane leasing company International Lease Finance Corp. "But he also has a collection of suits and ties and can come across as an investment banker when that's necessary."

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In 1991 Doug Parker was a new finance guy at Northwest Airlines. He had recently arrived from American, where he was part of a sharp group of young finance whizzes. Among them were other future airline CEOs, including American's current chief, Tom Horton.

Parker's task: help create a team that would systematically figure out where the airline was making and losing money. Airlines are a notoriously complex business, where profitable flights turn into money-losers overnight if not enough business travelers showed up at the last minute. Tracking profits flight-by-flight in such detail was a big job and was a first for Northwest, said Jon Austin, who was a spokesman for the airline during the 1990s and met Parker on his first day on the job.

Parker quickly became a go-to person, and executives "threw him into some of their more challenging issues," Austin recalled. "It was a real loss when he jumped to America West."

That happened in 1995, when he was hired to be chief financial officer of the Arizona-based airline. Because Franke wanted to train him to be a CEO, he moved Parker around between finance, sales, and operations.

Parker was just 39 when he became CEO of America West on Sept. 1, 2001.

The aftermath of the terror attacks 10 days later devastated airlines. Travelers were initially hesitant to fly, and demand for business travel dropped.

Knowing his airline needed help, Parker testified before Congress about the need for bailout legislation. He and Bernie Han, America West's chief financial officer, and another executive lived there on weekdays for three months at the end of 2001, Han said. They made their case in a 6-inch thick book that was delivered to the Treasury Department, he said.

"The rest of the industry believed if you just let America West go away, that'll help everybody else, so don't give them a loan," Han said. Meetings would start at 6 p.m. and end at midnight with a grocery list of questions for America West to answer. Han believed the agency handling the loan hoped it the airline would struggle for answers. But America West staff in Tempe, Ariz., worked all night, and Parker and co. would deliver the answers the next morning.

Han, now the chief operating officer for Dish Network, said the pace was intense, but it didn't really seem like work.

"We could have gone on to get different jobs," he said. "But 12,000 other people's jobs were on the line."

The airline won a $380 million federal loan guarantee that kept it out of bankruptcy.

Parker trimmed America West into a leaner airline, with moves that he would repeat later. He cut 250 office jobs, and closed its hub in Columbus, Ohio. In July 2003, America West posted its first quarterly profit in more than two years.

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Parker, 51, and his wife Gwen — a former American flight attendant — have three children and live in Paradise Valley, a Phoenix suburb not far from US Airways' headquarters in Tempe. The airline said he wouldn't be available for an interview for this story.

In 1980, Parker was a new Albion College freshman who was "semi-decent at math," he told Albion graduates in a 2010 commencement address. The college shared video of the address with The Associated Press

He followed the advice of others and signed up for computer science courses. He hated it.

"I wasn't good at it, it never felt right to me," he said. But he liked philosophy and microeconomics, so he changed his major to economics in his sophomore year. He graduated in 1984, then earned a master's in business administration from Vanderbilt University in 1986.

He later landed in the finance department at American, then applied for a management job in a different department. Colleagues tried to talk him out of it. "But something was telling me that I'd be a good team leader," he said in the commencement address. "I enjoyed building teams. They accomplished more collectively than we could as individuals, and learning that about myself made a huge difference in my career path."

Parker has a loose, direct speaking style and a gravelly voice. On quarterly earnings conference calls, it doesn't take much prompting for him share his thoughts on what's wrong with the airline business and how it ought to get better.

Partway through the speech at Albion he pauses to fix his mortarboard, which has shifted. "These things, by the way, are ridiculous. You don't have to wear these things ever again."

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Most of the big airlines struggled all through the 2000s. By the end of 2005, three of the four biggest U.S. airlines needed bankruptcy protection. . The thinking on Wall Street was that too many airlines were chasing too few travelers, forcing fares too low to cover the cost of flying.

Parker was vocal about the need for airlines to consolidate.

In 2005 he kicked off the industry's recent merger wave by grabbing the larger US Airways. It was a daring move — US Airways had twice as many employees and flew to many more cities than America West. But US Airways was foundering during its second bankruptcy. Parker saw a chance to transform America West from a regional airline into a national one.

Parker has focused US Airways on profitable flying. He closed the former America West hub in Las Vegas and traded away many of its landing rights in New York for more slots in Washington. It's posted three annual profits in a row.

Airline mergers moved ahead without Parker, though.

In 2006, Parker tried to merge with Delta while it was in bankruptcy protection. Delta rallied workers and creditors against the hostile bid. Creditors rejected it in early 2007. A year later, Delta bought Northwest.

Parker turned to United in 2008, but after some talks, it walked away. The talks were rekindled in 2010, but United dropped them again in favor of Continental.

US Airways lost money in 2008 and 2009, and it was viewed as one of the industry's more troubled players. After Continental CEO Jeff Smisek agreed to merge with United in 2010, he called US Airways "the ugly girl." Parker, the biggest proponent of merging airlines, ran the one nobody wanted to merge with.

Parker approached American differently. He lined up early support from American's labor, and courted creditors. Seven years ago he said Delta would shrink if it merged. With American, he has said the airline will be profitable by being bigger.

Franke, who hired Parker at America West, and now runs Phoenix-based private equity fund at Indigo Partners, said Parker has "learned a lot from the issues he had with Delta and United."

"Doug's a very smart guy, he's a very energetic guy, he's a guy who listens to people and adapts accordingly," said Spirit Airlines CEO Ben Baldanza, who worked with Parker at Northwest and American. "So I don't think anyone should be surprised that he's in position to run the world's largest airline."

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AP Airlines Writer David Koenig in Dallas contributed to this report.

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JOSHUA FREED

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