Passez à l'illimité avec Magzter GOLD

Passez à l'illimité avec Magzter GOLD

Obtenez un accès illimité à plus de 9 000 magazines, journaux et articles Premium pour seulement

$149.99
 
$74.99/Année

Essayer OR - Gratuit

Can Boeing Be Fixed? Aerospace Leaders Offer a Repair Manual

Mint Hyderabad

|

January 08, 2025

Restore trust and forget the stock price: Experts from inside and outside the company share advice for the troubled jet maker

- Sharon Terlep & Andrew Tangel

fuselage panel that blew off in midair. Mishaps on the factory floor. Stranded astronauts. A crippling strike. Five straight annual losses.

Boeing's travails keep piling up, and that list doesn't include a pair of fatal accidents in 2018 and 2019 that killed 346 people. The 108-year-old jet maker this summer agreed to plead guilty in a federal criminal case related to those crashes. The string of crises has left the company bleeding cash, mired in manufacturing problems and at odds with airlines, regulators and its own employees. On Dec. 29, 179 people were killed in a South Korean crash whose cause is now under investigation.

"We're at a low here, folks," Boeing's new CEO, Kelly Ortberg, told the company's employees in a November all-hands meeting.

There's a lot riding on Boeing's ability to pull out of its nose dive. Boeing is the biggest U.S. exporter and one of the world's two major manufacturers of large commercial jetliners, along with Europe's Airbus. Boeing makes jets, bombs and helicopters for the U.S. military. It makes rockets and spacecraft for NASA. It employs some 170,000 people around the world and is the central cog in a global supply chain of thousands of companies from small parts shops to multinational giants like GE Aerospace.

"Everybody wants us to succeed," Ortberg told workers. "They're all also expecting us to kind of clean up our act and, you know, deliver good products and not have these snafus." undefined Ortberg, who took the helm of Boeing in August, has signaled his intention to shrink the company and slash layers of bureaucracy. We asked dozens of people—current and former Boeing leaders, airline executives, employees, suppliers, safety regulators and others—in recent months what Boeing should do to turn itself around. Here's what they said.

1. Think big.

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

GDP growth of 8% plus: How to sustain this pace

Last quarter's economic expansion has cheered India but the challenge is to sustain a brisk rate for years to come. For private investment to chip in, revive infrastructure partnerships

time to read

2 mins

December 01, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

Green hydrogen: Fast fashion could help bump up demand

A boom in its use for clean synthetic inputs might make a difference

time to read

3 mins

December 01, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

THE PROBLEM IS NOT JUST ABOUT DYNASTIC POLITICS

These days Tejashvi Yadav is the target of intense trolling. Before him the Huda family in Haryana and Thackerays in Maharashtra got the same treatment. So, is the battle of victory and defeat in electoral politics a tussle between dynasts vs the rest? Absolutely not.

time to read

3 mins

December 01, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

India stands out for purposeful policymaking in a choppy world

Steady, pragmatic and long-horizon policies have been giving our economy the strength to convert volatility into possibility

time to read

4 mins

December 01, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Creative conservatism can make our foreign policy more effective

India needs a framework that secures its national interests amid fast evolving geopolitical realities

time to read

3 mins

December 01, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

Trump’s focus on drug war means big business for defense startups

Drones, sensors and AI platforms developed for other theaters are being rebranded as tools for the fight against ‘narco-terror’

time to read

6 mins

December 01, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

Why MF distributors haven't grown as fast as MF assets

may not be substantial. More than banning upfront, what possibly was more damaging to the product was the lowering of TERs. Asa country, our financial footprint isstill at the foothills given our potential. ‘Thismove wasmuch ahead of itstime.”

time to read

2 mins

December 01, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

Tobacco cess set to expire, enter health and national security cess

Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman will introduce a bill in Lok Sabha on Monday to levy a new cess for public health and national security, replacing the GST compensation cess on tobacco, which will lapse when the Centre completes repayment of the loans raised to compensate states.

time to read

1 mins

December 01, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Let chats stay easy

India's Department of Telecommunications has directed messaging apps like WhatsApp to ensure that users aren't allowed to access these services without active SIM cards in their phones.

time to read

1 min

December 01, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

China used to be a cash cow for western companies. Now it's a test lab.

turn to price cuts to entice shoppers.

time to read

3 mins

December 01, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size