In under 10 months since it started operations, the airline has cornered about five percent market share, while adding a record 19 aircraft to its fleet. All eyes are on where it manages to go from here
For Vinay Dube, it all started with a bit of frustration.
An industry veteran with stints at Delta Air Lines and American Airlines, Dube relocated to India from the US in 2017 to join Jet Airways as its CEO. The Mumbai-headquartered Jet Airways, which in many ways had redefined the way millions of Indians took to the skies, was India’s second-largest airline with a nearly 20 percent share of the domestic market at that time.
Two years into his tenure, Jet Airways folded up, largely due to its mounting debt, prompting Dube to resign a month after the airline operated its last flight in April 2019.
A short stint as the CEO of the now-troubled Go First followed in 2020, after being brought in as an advisor in October of 2019. But, ill-timed as it could get, Dube took charge of the airline in February as the global economy, and more specifically the global aviation sector, went into a tailspin as Covid-19 wreaked havoc. For almost two months, air traffic in the country came to a standstill and by August of that year, Dube had resigned from Go First.
“It was frustrating not being able to work for an airline that I thought had a professional and empowered management team, which was based in Mumbai,” Dube tells Forbes India. “Working out of Delhi was not an option for me and my family.”