Business HistoryBusiness History

The Secret of Southwest's Success: Free Whisky, Hot Pants and Low, Low Fares

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Business History

It’s the history of business. How did Hitler’s favorite car become synonymous with hippies? What got Thomas Edison tangled up with the electric chair? 
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It's hard to make money running an airline - but Southwest was profitable every year for nearly five decades. How did it manage it? Business History hosts Jacob Goldstein and Robert Smith explore how a carrier with just four airplanes shuttling across Texas revolutionized flying by offering free whisky, cheap late-night tickets and free-for-all seating allocation. 

Southwest developed a winning formula that forced its competitors to change how they did business - but then the Southwest model fell apart. Find out why.  


Key books: Hard Landing by Thomas Petzinger Jr; Nuts by Kevin and Jackie Frieberg

Other sources: The Theory of Economic Regulation by George Stigler; Fortune Magazine: The Rapid Descent of Southwest Airlines; Southwest Airlines: When Herb Met Rollin.

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Business History

It’s the history of business. How did Hitler’s favorite car become synonymous with hippies? What got 
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