United's CEO cheated death a month into the job and is now leading the company in a battle to become America's best airline
United Airlines Oscar Munoz
United Airlines Oscar Munoz

(Oscar Munoz, the CEO of United Airlines, has turned around the airline by working to regain the trust of his employees one by one. But first he had to overcome a series of inherited obstacles, and a massive heart attack.United Airlines)

Two weeks after he found himself running an airline in crisis, and two weeks before he would end up lying unconscious in a hospital bed, Oscar Munoz already had a lot on his mind.

He had to clean up the mess his predecessor's bribery scandal had left. Negotiations with the flight attendants' union had broken down. And five years after a merger with Continental, United still felt like two airlines.

But on this day he was thinking about his unhappy workers, and he could not stop thinking about coffee cups. They were gone from the office kitchens. Staffers — and even executives — were so incensed by the tiny cost-cutting move that they put it on a list of the top 10 mistakes they said the company had made in the past five years.

The case of the cups would become something of a symbol of all that had gone wrong at United since its merger with Continental in 2010, and it was up to Munoz to restore the trust of employees and customers.

But before all that he had to cheat death.

A United in crisis

The United that Munoz took over was anything but united.

A merger between Continental and United in 2010 created what was then the world’s largest airline. But by 2015 the company was still not integrated. It behaved like two airlines operating under one name. Former Continental crews called themselves “Ex-Cons” and were allowed to fly on Continental’s routes and planes only, while United's crews stuck to their premerger planes and routes.

The merger had led to contentious labor negotiations. To combine the two airlines, United had to strike new deals with unions representing both the pilots and the flight attendants.

And under former CEO Jeff Smisek, the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA wasn’t even sure they’d reach a deal with United. After roughly three years of negotiating, the organization’s international president, Sara Nelson, said they’d only worked through 15-20% of their issues (resolving less contentious ones like how to deal with a hostage situation). The two sides were far apart on key issues, such as pay.

United Continental Airlines
United Continental Airlines

(United and Continental Airlines jets premerger.REUTERS/John Gress)

"There was absolutely no serious attempt to reach an agreement. No serious attempt to try to bring the groups together," Nelson told Business Insider.

Smisek’s team was playing hardball amid high fuel prices and a culture of cost-cutting.