How did Bombardier gets its start? What was its first product? How did the company later enter
the markets for trains and commercial jets?
How would you analyze the root cause of what went wrong? Was the strategy flawed: a problem
of strategy formulation? Or was just the execution flawed: a failure of strategy implementation?
Justify your answer!
Why has the company now exited the markets for trains and commercial jets? Why did
Bombardier conclude it needed to sell these business lines?
submit succinct, but thoughtful, answers to the following questions relating to the article:
TORONTO-Bombardier Inc. tried to take on much bigger players in the global market for trains
and commercial jetliners. Having shed both those businesses in as many weeks, it now plans to
pare the debt that forced those retreats, and navigate a much smaller industry. business jets. The
Canadian company said earlier this week it would sell its train business - a maker of high speed
trains and New York City subway cars - to French giant Alstom SA, netting as much as $4.5
billion. It has promised to deploy that cash to significantly reduce $9.3 billion in long-term debt,
much of which was borrowed to finance an ill-fated effort to break into the commercial plane
market. It separately agreed to sell its remaining stake in that business last week to Airbus SE.
Bombardier had been engaged in parallel talks to sell the business-jet unit, too, in case a train
deal was derailed. Those talks, with Textron Inc., are now over. "We had to reduce debt,"
Bombardier Chief Executive Officer Alain Bellemare said in an interview. "We had two great
businesses, and one had to go." After the Alstom and Airbus deals, Bombardier is left as one of
several players in a much smaller industry, the roughly $20 billion global market for new
business jets. It competes at the top end with General Dynamics Corp.'s Gulfstream and France's
Dassault Aviation SA, and with Textron and Brazil's Embraer SA in the market for small and
medium-size planes. Bombardier makes the Challenger, Learjet and Global brands, and says it
has a backlog of orders worth \$14.4 billion. Growth in the sector is expected to be driven by
demand for bigger jets that travel longer distances. Bombardier's new Global 7500 ranks as the
world's largest and longest-range jet. Its Global 6000 made headlines earlier this year as the
deluxe aircraft that ferried former auto executive Carlos Ghosn in his clandestine escape from
bail in Japan. The train divestiture is expected to reduce Bombardier's annual revenue, which
stood at $15.8 billion in 2019 , by more than 50% . Its employee count is expected to shrink by
more than 70% to 18,000 . The retrenchment represents the most profound pivot yet for the
iconic Canadian company, which started off in 1942 , in a small township east of Montreal as a
manufacturer of passenger and commercial snowmobiles. It has reinvented itself, over almost a
century, with international expansion and deal-making.
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How did Bombardier gets its start- What was its first product- How did.pdf
1. How did Bombardier gets its start? What was its first product? How did the company later enter
the markets for trains and commercial jets?
How would you analyze the root cause of what went wrong? Was the strategy flawed: a problem
of strategy formulation? Or was just the execution flawed: a failure of strategy implementation?
Justify your answer!
Why has the company now exited the markets for trains and commercial jets? Why did
Bombardier conclude it needed to sell these business lines?
submit succinct, but thoughtful, answers to the following questions relating to the article:
TORONTO-Bombardier Inc. tried to take on much bigger players in the global market for trains
and commercial jetliners. Having shed both those businesses in as many weeks, it now plans to
pare the debt that forced those retreats, and navigate a much smaller industry. business jets. The
Canadian company said earlier this week it would sell its train business - a maker of high speed
trains and New York City subway cars - to French giant Alstom SA, netting as much as $4.5
billion. It has promised to deploy that cash to significantly reduce $9.3 billion in long-term debt,
much of which was borrowed to finance an ill-fated effort to break into the commercial plane
market. It separately agreed to sell its remaining stake in that business last week to Airbus SE.
Bombardier had been engaged in parallel talks to sell the business-jet unit, too, in case a train
deal was derailed. Those talks, with Textron Inc., are now over. "We had to reduce debt,"
Bombardier Chief Executive Officer Alain Bellemare said in an interview. "We had two great
businesses, and one had to go." After the Alstom and Airbus deals, Bombardier is left as one of
several players in a much smaller industry, the roughly $20 billion global market for new
business jets. It competes at the top end with General Dynamics Corp.'s Gulfstream and France's
Dassault Aviation SA, and with Textron and Brazil's Embraer SA in the market for small and
medium-size planes. Bombardier makes the Challenger, Learjet and Global brands, and says it
has a backlog of orders worth $14.4 billion. Growth in the sector is expected to be driven by
demand for bigger jets that travel longer distances. Bombardier's new Global 7500 ranks as the
world's largest and longest-range jet. Its Global 6000 made headlines earlier this year as the
deluxe aircraft that ferried former auto executive Carlos Ghosn in his clandestine escape from
bail in Japan. The train divestiture is expected to reduce Bombardier's annual revenue, which
stood at $15.8 billion in 2019 , by more than 50% . Its employee count is expected to shrink by
more than 70% to 18,000 . The retrenchment represents the most profound pivot yet for the
iconic Canadian company, which started off in 1942 , in a small township east of Montreal as a
manufacturer of passenger and commercial snowmobiles. It has reinvented itself, over almost a
century, with international expansion and deal-making. Bombardier was founded by Quebec
inventor Joseph-Armand Bombardier, who rolled out the world's first ski-steered European train
businesses through the 1970s, and then expanded into aviation in the 1980s. There were also
divestitures. The company jettisoned its legacy product-the snowmobile-in 2003 , when it spun
off its recreational unit, which included the Ski-Doo snowmobile, to a group of investors that
included the Bombardier family. A year later, Mr. Beaudoin set out to break into the manufacture
of big commercial jets, a business dominated by Boeing and Airbus. On paper, a fuel-efficient
narrow body jet in the 100-seat range made sense. Airlines were gravitating to smaller planes
that could more flexibly shuttle fewer passengers to more direct destinations. Neither Boeing nor
2. Airbus had a jet small enough at the time to accommodate the booming regional market. After a
series of foreign takeovers of Canadian corporate giants, the collapse of Nortel Networks and the
sharp decline of BlackBerry Ltd., Bombardier held on to its mantle of a Canadian national
champion. The Bombardier family, through multiple voting shares, continues to control the
business. Its global ambitions, though, began to falter several years ago, when Bombardier's new
commercial plane, called the CSeries, was plagued by cost overruns and delays. The reversals
forced the company to significantly increase its debts and seek financial aid from the province of
Quebec and the Canadian federal government. The financial woes deterred potential CSeries
customers, and in 2017 Bombardier yielded control of the plane program to Airbus . The
company's resources were also stretched by its launch of the Global 7500 business jet and
production setbacks at its train unit. "Things were piling one on top of the other, it was a very
tough situation," said Mr. Bellmare, who was appointed CEO in 2015. "People underestimated
the challenge. We didn't have the balance sheet to support this." While the CSeries sale improved
Bombardier's financial health, its global train business, which had generated enough profits to
finance Bombardier's expansion into business jets, was hitting obstacles. Bombardier's train
orders surged about 50% in 2011 to $14.3 billion as the company was struggling with the
CSeries program. Many of the new contracts added to Bombardier's burden. They involved
complicated work upgrading and automating aging networks, some of which still have operating
issues because of mechanical and software problems. "Bombardier sold us lemons," New York
City Comptroller Scott Strinqer said in a statement last month after the city pulled While the
CSeries sale improved Bombardier's financial health, its global train business, which had
generated enough profits to finance Bombardier's expansion into business jets, was hitting
obstacles. Bombardier's train orders surged about 50% in 2011 to $14.3 billion as the company
was struggling with the CSeries program. Many of the new contracts added to Bombardier's
burden. They involved complicated work upgrading and automating aging networks, some of
which still have operating issues because of mechanical and software problems. "Bombardier
sold us lemons," New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer said in a statement last month after
the city pulle hundreds of new subway cars from service because of malfunctioning doors. A
Bombardier spokesman said the compa has addressed the problem and the cars are back in
service. The company was also years late delivering street cars to Toronto and San Francisco. It
has only delivered about half of the 60 cars ordered in 2011 for an intercity train in Switzerland.
Deliveries were delayed by software and other automatic challenges, the spokesman said. "They
bit off more than they could manage," said Cameron Doerksen, an analyst with National Bank
Financial.