American CEO Robert Isom’s Turnaround Plan Is To Keep Doing More Of The Same

American CEO Robert Isom’s Turnaround Plan Is To Keep Doing More Of The Same

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American Airlines CEO Robert Isom is under a lot of scrutiny right now. American’s 2025 financial results paled in comparison to the results of Delta and United, and many employee work groups received 0.3% profit sharing, given the lack of profits to share.

American’s flight attendant union has issued a vote of no confidence in Isom, the first time in history that the union has done such a thing. Meanwhile American’s pilot union has also called on “decisive action” from management, demanding to speak with the board.

Given all the pressure, Isom has just issued a direct message to employees, laying out his vision for the company, and how things will improve… but it doesn’t seem like there’s all that much to it?

Robert Isom lays out plans to improve profitability

JonNYC shares how Robert Isom has recorded a video message for employees, regarding plans to improve financial and operational performance in 2026. We only have a transcript of the audio, but one person opines that “he sounds kind of nervous and not very confident,” and “the speech is kind of milquetoast as well.”

Here’s the message, with some possible transcription errors:

Good afternoon, everyone. Given all that’s going on with our airline right now, I wanted to share more about where we’re heading in 2026. Last year was a tough year, no doubt about it. And I know some of you are still recovering from the winter storms just a couple of weeks ago.

As we look forward to 2026, it’s with a lot of excitement and confidence. I know we’re going to do better financially and operationally. We have a plan to be solidly profitable this year, which will mean good things for our customers, our shareholders, and all of you, especially in regard to future profit sharing to go along with our industry-leading contracts. We will reclaim American’s reputation as the world’s premium global airline. And we shared how we’ll do that with our 6,000 frontline leaders last week at our Journey Leadership Conference.

It’s a strategy that our board is behind, and our senior leadership team is committed to and accountable for. And we look forward to working with all of you to make it happen. Thanks to your efforts, we’ve laid the foundation for all of this over the last few years. And in 2026, these efforts will produce meaningful results. Here’s what we’re doing.

First, we’ll continue to improve the customer experience. We’re following through on this commitment with free Wi-Fi, new lounges, better food and beverage offerings, and even more advanced technology to help our customers along their journeys, especially when it comes to recovering from disruptions. On top of this, we’re making significant investment in facilities at several of our hubs, including DFW, Los Angeles, and Miami. Customers are noticing, and their approval is showing up in our net promoter scores. We need to execute on these improvements every day, and we are.

Second, in 2026, we have a plan to maximize the power of our network and our fleet. The US is the most important aviation market in the world, and no one serves it better than American. This year, we’re excited to grow the airline at its fastest rate in years. You’ll see this in Philadelphia, Miami, Phoenix, and of course Chicago, and throughout the rest of the system.

And you’ve heard about some of the new routes that we’ve announced for the summer and beyond. We’ve added thousands of frontline team members over the past few years to support this growth, including more than 7,500 flight attendants and more than 5,000 pilots and thousands of airport and tech ops team members. All of this is great news for our team.

And to further support all this, we’ve taken delivery of hundreds of new aircraft over the past few years, with another 55 expected to join our fleet this year, including the premium Boeing 787-9 and Airbus A321XLR, both of which include our Flagship Suites. We’re also retrofitting hundreds of additional aircraft across our existing widebody and narrowbody fleets. And all of this is the culmination of work that began years ago.

Third, our AAdvantage program, the first and still the largest airline loyalty program, offers tremendous opportunities to strengthen ties with our customers and our partners. We invented airline loyalty, and AAdvantage is the best and most valuable loyalty program in the industry. Our new card partnership with Citi, which started in January, is key to unlocking future growth and revenue, and that’s a big deal.

Finally, we’re doing a much better job of selling our product, and we must do more. We’ve regained our share of corporate revenue, and the next step is to push it even further. We’ve brought on resources and tools to make sure our products are easier and more accessible for customers, and I know that will make all of our products, especially our premium products, more appealing to our customers and ultimately drive more revenue.

Now, we all know that to accomplish these goals and take care of our customers, we need to run a fantastic operation, much better than our customers experienced over the last year. Disruptions are going to happen, and I commit to you that we will do everything possible to make recovery go more smoothly and painlessly for you and for our customers. You’ll notice that we’re rebanking DFW beginning in April to pull down peaks. And in addition, we’ve buffered the system with spare resources, including people and time.

Just know this: we’re committed to setting up our team for success, no matter the conditions they face, to meet the needs of our customers. And that’s why we’re in this business — to care for people on life’s journey. The better we take care of our customers and team, the better off our company will be. To accomplish all this, it’ll take all of us working as one team.

And please know this: I’m always open to meeting with our union partners. And to you, as you know, I always look forward to our interactions, whether it’s at the gate, on the flight deck, in the cabin, in your break rooms, or here at the Skyview campus. Leading American is a privilege and a great responsibility. I’m proud to work with all of you, and I’m more confident than ever in our future and what we’ll accomplish this year. It starts with leadership at the top, with me. And it’ll take all of us focused on our future. And I know we can do it together. Thank you for everything you do.

Isom thinks 2026 will be a meaningfully better year than 2025

Isom seems to think the status quo is great, no?

With many American employees frustrated, I can’t imagine that this message will do much to make them feel better about the company’s direction.

If you ask me (well, or virtually anyone following the airline closely), American needs a turnaround with a new vision. One of the key aspects of that needs to be rallying employees and getting them excited, since there’s no denying that American employees just don’t have much faith in the company, and aren’t very motivated. Happy and motivated employees make for happy customers, and I don’t think that generally describes the current state of American.

The issue with Isom’s message is that he’s basically saying “everything is fine, 2025 was just a fluke, and things will magically get better in 2026.” But how, exactly? American’s Chief Customer Officer, Heather Garboden, has talked about how operational reliability is “table stakes” nowadays, and the focus needs to be on premium.

I agree, but I’ll take it a step further. I sort of think that premium is “table stakes” at this point. American has to play a huge amount of catch-up with Delta and United in order to be at all competitive. Free Wi-Fi is great. Investing in lounges is great. Investing in technology is great. But Delta and United are doing that as well, so how exactly are those things going to allow American to “reclaim” its “reputation as the world’s premium global airline?”

Isom says that the board is behind his vision, and that 2026 will be better. But I’m not sure what exactly will make the year better. American will increasingly be going head-to-head against United in Chicago, and that growth is expected to be unprofitable, at least in the near term.

I suppose American does have the new credit card deal with Citi, but is there any other good news that I’m missing, that will actually allow American to make up ground compared to Delta and United, which are also doing all the same things American is doing, but are further along?

The biggest failure with this vision is just that it does nothing to excite employees, and that’s an area where American would find huge upside, if it could get people motivated. The airline offers “industry-leading contracts,” but has little to show for it.

American is making premium investments, but so are competitors

Bottom line

American Airlines CEO Robert Isom has been under major pressure from work groups and investors, given the company’s lack of profits, plus operational issues. While unions have called on a management change, the board seems to be happy with Isom’s performance.

Given the pressure, Isom has issued a message directly to employees, promising that 2026 will be a better year. The issue is that he doesn’t actually lay out much of a vision for why that will be the case, other than things like free Wi-Fi, better lounges, etc.

American’s management team doesn’t seem to realize that they’d achieve the biggest upside if they acknowledged things were kind of broken, and could then get employees onboard with a new plan, so that they’d actually be motivated, rather than frustrated.

What do you make of Isom’s message to employees?

Conversations (31)
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  1. DesertGhost Guest

    You've been the CEO of how many airlines?

  2. Danchise Guest

    Mr. Isom is fine with continuing in Doug Parkers business plan. Does he not realize that he has demoralized his work force by:
    1) Removing all seat back entertainment.
    2)deciding to compete against Spirit and Allegiant instead of UA and DL.
    3) if you look at rankings in customer service American is only ranked above Frontier. They continue to lose twice as many wheelchairs, have more involuntary over sales, and crews end...

    Mr. Isom is fine with continuing in Doug Parkers business plan. Does he not realize that he has demoralized his work force by:
    1) Removing all seat back entertainment.
    2)deciding to compete against Spirit and Allegiant instead of UA and DL.
    3) if you look at rankings in customer service American is only ranked above Frontier. They continue to lose twice as many wheelchairs, have more involuntary over sales, and crews end up sleeping in terminals.
    Why cannot he understand that the airline needs new, refreshing blood that encourages them to do better and rewards them for doing so. I am sure Mr. Isom is very intelligent, but his personality seems very off putting to front line employees. Bottom line: he is boring.

  3. Kevin Guest

    Even AA crew knew better than to fly AA metal, recently had a FA say they were glad to hear I was flying JAL back home to the US.

  4. Rod Guest

    Perhaps Tim "Tom" "Bastian" "Mr. Poopy" Dunn will put his money where his mouth is and become a CEO. Let's see how successful he would be. HINT: Not very!

    1. Tim Dunn Diamond

      Anyone that could help AA should and hopefully would.

      As I have noted, I am not sure anyone can turn AA around after so many years of mismanagement and that may be exactly why the board is not doing anything to oust Bobby Ice.

  5. BeeDazzle Gold

    "American has to play a huge amount of catch-up with Delta and United in order to be at all competitive."

    This is part of the issue - AA is trying to make a premium play, but the vast majority of their announcements in 2025 to do that are just catching up with UA/DL, such as better BOB, improved coffee, premium champagne in J / lounges, etc. The announcements in 2025 were erasing some UA/DL service...

    "American has to play a huge amount of catch-up with Delta and United in order to be at all competitive."

    This is part of the issue - AA is trying to make a premium play, but the vast majority of their announcements in 2025 to do that are just catching up with UA/DL, such as better BOB, improved coffee, premium champagne in J / lounges, etc. The announcements in 2025 were erasing some UA/DL service competitive advantages, AA didn't introduce any new ones of their own.

    Another part is they still have too much focus on cost in some areas. Look at MCE - there is zero MCE besides bulkheads and/or exit rows in the new XLR and 789P cabins. It's crazy that they are doing that. UA manages to have similar configs in both types and has 2-3x the number of extra legroom economy seats.

    One other huge issue is the marketing team doesn't appear to present a cohesive brand image of premium. Every announcement feels different than the last in terms of verbiage, there is nothing to tie it all together. And when they have a true halo product coming for April with caviar in business class, what do they do? They bury the announcement 250+ words deep in a larger press release as a single word on a bullet. I don't care if it is only for a month "caviar in business class" is what you lead with and shout it from the rooftops because bloggers will absolutely eat that news up.

    I'm not trying to ignore the elephant in the room of employee morale and rallying the troops, I just feel others have talked about that quite a bit.

  6. James McBride Guest

    Years from now business schools will use the AA/USAir merger as how not to bring two companies together. Isom is the wimpiest and most unpopular leader American has had in company history. Ask any employee. Not until the executive level of USAir management is fired from AA will the airline be able to compete. Their vision of AA is -
    “Global Domestic Airlines”.

    They’ve no conceptual idea of how to manage a worldwide airline. NONE.

    ASK ANY EMPLOYEE.

  7. Michael Hassall Guest

    Headed towards a Ryan Air experience. Dynamic award pricing is ridiculous. Upgrades scarce and the Clubs overrun at all the hubs…

    Wife has a couple of hundred thousand miles and, once we find a couple of seats to spend them on, we will start going with the best timing/equipment/price rather than what is painted on the tail.

  8. AeroB13a Guest

    To the outsider, Isom, is a reactive rather than proactive leader. His leadership lacks clear strategic direction, resulting in him being completely out of touch with frontline realities.

    Isom’s is not delivering any of the desired results which will turn around the ailing ship. The operations reality and profitability likelihood are undoubtedly beyond his comprehension. 2026 is as likely as not about to prove his lack of ability to reverse the downwards trajectory.

    Sell your...

    To the outsider, Isom, is a reactive rather than proactive leader. His leadership lacks clear strategic direction, resulting in him being completely out of touch with frontline realities.

    Isom’s is not delivering any of the desired results which will turn around the ailing ship. The operations reality and profitability likelihood are undoubtedly beyond his comprehension. 2026 is as likely as not about to prove his lack of ability to reverse the downwards trajectory.

    Sell your AA shares ASAP.

    1. Tim Dunn Diamond

      there is still a lot of wealth wrapped up in AAL even though it is the only publicly traded US airline that has had no stockholder equity for years.

      AAL's market cap is 1/3 of LUV's, 1/4 of UAL's and 20% of DAL which still has the highest market cap in the industry.

      There are a lot of investors that still believe that there is some value in AAL.

      Of course it could all be wiped out if AAL filed another chapter 11.

    2. AeroB13a Guest

      Billions, upon billions of people believe in the supernatural, some even in unicorns, as for me Tim, I have never seen a pig fly …. :-)

    3. Tim Dunn Diamond

      I don't own any AAL stock - so I don't believe pigs can fly either.

  9. Mike Guest

    The board is the problem as well, clean house ASAP. I believe an activist investor is on the horizon.

  10. Joe Guest

    Premium travel is how DL and UA crushed their #s the last year or so.

    AA won’t see those same profits as the pilots’ contract allows them to take those seats up front. With a lack of sellable or upgradable space on AA, pax simply look elsewhere….

    1. Tim Dunn Diamond

      except UA isn't premium in any metric that the DOT measures.

      Tell us what data you are using that shows UA outperformed the industry.

      UA had worse on-time, more cancellations, more mishandled wheelchairs and more lost luggage.

      In many metrics, AA and UA are right next to each other in DOT operational rankings.
      It is simply false that UA does significantly better than AA - let alone DL.

      and UA has the same pilot deadheading policy as AA.

    2. Tim Dunn Diamond

      triggered by the facts that UA is not exactly what you and the UA fan nuts don't really want to hear?

    3. Girtbar Guest

      Calling someone “fan nuts” Tim, that’s rich….

    4. ORDnHKG Guest

      Imagine when F is full, also there are only 3 rows of MCE upfront + 2 exit rows on a 737, so EXP and PRO have to end up in the back half of their flights, how would they feel about it vs on UA since there are so many rows of E+. Elites are not happy on AA, and they can't sell any MCE seats

    5. rebel Diamond

      UA has led in on time, completion, IO recovery by far since the holidays, NPS soaring, NYC passengers by 12%, aircraft, aircraft deliveries for years to come, int’l destinations/ASMs, premium seats, PRASM-CASM. It’s just a matter of time.

    6. Tim Dunn Diamond

      since the holidays - but not in all of 2025?

      You LOVE to microcut any statistic you can think of to tout UA's supremacy - which only exists in your mind.

      UA has the same business model as DL; there is nothing that DL is doing that UA could not have done.
      UA just underperforms in everything it does.

      UA is just a marketing machine that doesn't deliver.
      You said it yourself.
      UA is just a hollow marketing machine.

  11. Tim Dunn Diamond

    You are right that AA needs someone with charisma that can communicate to and energize employees.

    AA has made so many strategic mistakes that it is entirely possible that no one, including anyone on the board, knows what to do to really turn the company around other than to incrementally build on what competitors have done.

    Let's also be clear that DL and UA are not in the same camp in just about any metric....

    You are right that AA needs someone with charisma that can communicate to and energize employees.

    AA has made so many strategic mistakes that it is entirely possible that no one, including anyone on the board, knows what to do to really turn the company around other than to incrementally build on what competitors have done.

    Let's also be clear that DL and UA are not in the same camp in just about any metric. Operationally, UA trails DL in just about any operational metric which the DOT measures. Financially, UA makes just 2/3 of of what DL makes despite paying UA employees less than any of the big 4.

    UA is squarely between AA and DL financially and closer to AA in many operational metrics.

    It also is notable that Elliott went after Southwest even though AA arguably had much more to work with than WN - and that should tell you volumes.
    LUV stock is up 80% over the past year and about 30% just since the first of the year. AAL stock is down 13% over the past year and 8% since Jan 1.

    It is entirely possible that AA might not be salvageable.

    1. Gene Guest

      OMG, give it a freakin' rest. In the measure that matters most, UA has the best stock performance.

    2. Tim Dunn Diamond

      no, UAL stock has not outperformed DAL stock.

    3. Gene Guest

      Not true. What are you looking at, the last 7.39 years of return or something equally insane, cherry picking some metric that only you care about because it supports your delusions?

    4. Tim Dunn Diamond

      7.39 years but not the last year or month?

      UAL stock got a nice post-covid bump because the company was so badly managed for so long that it had to go up with even mediocre management.

      UAL's market cap is still just 80% of DAL's - which is actually down from its 5 year high.

      UAL is going backward financially relative to DAL.

      You, as usual, never can quite get the facts right

  12. Gene Guest

    The best line has to be this one -- "We will reclaim American’s reputation as the world’s premium global airline." Um, no.

    1. AeroB13a Guest

      Too true Gene, AA is very close to being a bottom feeder in the world aviation pond. No amount of wishful thinking by Isom is going to have any impact upon the reality of the AA demise.

  13. VS Guest

    I guess Isom should start asking 5 things they did every day, like the DOGE guy did. That worked out pretty well.

    1. VS Guest

      ... asking the employees 5 things ...

    2. Mantis Diamond

      1. Browsed on my phone
      2. Berated a customer for pressing call button
      3. Singlehandedly ensured the safety of 200 people through my diligent efforts. Ha, jk, browsed ony phone some more.
      4. Threatened to get a customer on the no fly list
      5. Flirted with a pilot.

      A very productive day!

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Girtbar Guest

Calling someone “fan nuts” Tim, that’s rich….

1
Gene Guest

Not true. What are you looking at, the last 7.39 years of return or something equally insane, cherry picking some metric that only you care about because it supports your delusions?

1
Joe Guest

Oh just shut up.

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