JetBlue Senior Executive Marty St. George Is Leaving the Airline – Skift

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Marty St. George, chief commericial officer of JetBlue Airways, who helped lead the team that created the airline’s popular Mint business class earlier this decade, is leaving his position, two sources confirmed to Skift.

St. George is among the longest tenured senior executives at JetBlue. He joined the airline in 2006 as head of planning, deciding where the airline would fly and when. He earned greater responsibility over time, at one point serving as the airline’s senior vice president for marketing.

St. George began leading the airline’s commericial functions in 2014, and was named an executive vice president one year later, overseeing all of the airline’s revenue-generating departments, according his Linkedin profile.

Reached Tuesday night, St. George declined to comment, asking a reporter to contact JetBlue’s corporate communications department. A representative for the airline did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

The sources did not say what St. George will do next, or who will replace him.

JetBlue’s executive ranks have had considerable turnover in the past four years, ever since Robin Hayes took over as CEO from Dave Barger. Within the past two-and-a-half years, Hayes has named a new president, a new chief financial officer, and a new general counsel. Hayes also created some new positions, including chief product officer.

Some of the new senior executives, such as President Joanna Geraghty, rose through the ranks, while others, including CFO Steve Priest, came from outside.

While Mint has been a major success — the airline keeps rolling it out in new markets and will bring a version of it to Europe in a couple of years — JetBlue has had some financial stumbles recently, underperforming its peers on some financial metrics.

One problem is that, after a series of industry mergers, it is far smaller than the competition. It is the sixth-largest U.S. airline, considerably smaller than United, American, Southwest and Delta, and a bit smaller than Alaska Airlines. Airlines are often a scale business, and JetBlue doesn’t have it.

In a report on Friday, analyst Hunter Keay of Wolfe Research said JetBlue could someday be a takeover target, naming United as a possible acquirer. Perhaps, Keay said, United would first buy small stake and then make a move for the company.

Photo Credit: JetBlue Chief Commericial Officer Marty St. George is out, according to sources. St. George joined the airline in 2006. Chelsea Brodsky / JetBlue Airways

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