Skip to content
MarketScale
‹ Back to IndustriesHealthcare

Airlines Are Taking First Class To Another Level: The Brands Airlines Use to Stand Out

The fate of first class has been up in the air for the past few years. Many airlines are turning their attention toward improving business class in lieu of competing for world class amenities. Those who have remained in the game have had to up their efforts at nearly every level. They are not just…

This story was produced through MarketScale. See how Healthcare teams put it to work with Executive Thought Leadership.

Share

The fate of first class has been up in the air for the past few years. Many airlines are turning their attention toward improving business class in lieu of competing for world class amenities. Those who have remained in the game have had to up their efforts at nearly every level. They are not just competing with the best their rivals have to offer. They must outperform themselves year over year. The brands airlines rely on to reach that goal span from Italian designers to Australian wineries to American mattress vendors.

Pods and seat cabins grow cushier by the year, but the amenity kits are where flyers are truly wowed. British Airways has tapped luxury designer Anya Hindmarch to for their airline-branded amenity bags, where first class fliers can find various moisturizers and balms from Ren that prioritize an all-natural hygiene experience.[1]

Etihad Airlines provides their female guests Swarovski crystal jewelry and a variety of toiletries from Switzerland’s La Prairie. A luxury seat is easy to get used to on a longer flight, but memorable gifts that go off the plane with fliers at their destination leave a lasting impression.

Another opportunity for airlines to set their brand apart is during mealtime. Fly Emirates has, as they often do, set a new watermark for the ever hotly-contested wine offerings. With their nearly $120 million 2015 investment in wine, they have tapped vintages from Bordeaux’s Chȃteau Mouton Rothschild, the Yarra Valley of Australia, and Dom Pérignon.[2]

British Airways has recently added the Bolney Wine Estate de Blanc (2013), making for an investment in luxury that keeps things domestic.[3] Though their hub is technically “dry,” Qatar Airways features well-rounded wine list with showings from Tattinger Prestige Rose, Krug Brut Grand Cuvee Champagne, and more.

While wines are a key point of competition for airlines, a new trend is redefining menus as a whole. Wellness and nutrition are growing in importance as passengers become more informed about the source and sustainability of their diets. The challenge is balancing this new push for health while keeping the fine-dining edge. For example, TAP Air Portugal utilized a group of Michelin-starred chefs to develop a menu of low-cal dishes inspired by Portugese cuisine.

Though Singapore Airlines has long been known for its service of having meals selected a day ahead of time to ensure freshness of ingredients, also known as “book and cook,” Qatar Airways just may have them beaten.[4] Their team of celebrity chefs with Nobu Matsuhisa, Ramzi Choueiri, Vineet Bahia, and Tom Aikens labored for months to develop a menu that was at its best at 30,000 feet.

The race for the finest in first class offerings is, if anything, speeding up. Airlines that are pushing their first class brand are making long-term investments in brands that are domestic to their hub countries and established as luxury. Even as new trends change expectations, these principles of the first class experience seem steady.

Healthcare: are you visible to AI?

Before they reach out, Healthcare buyers ask AI engines which vendors to trust. See how AI describes your company today, and where competitors show up instead.

Free workspace

You just read one expert. Imagine publishing your whole team.

This article was produced through MarketScale. Create a free workspace and turn your own team's expertise into articles, video, and social posts. No credit card, no demo required.

NPS +73 · 1,000+ creators · 38+ countries

What you get, free

Your own MarketScale Studio workspace
One video edit a month, on us
AI writing, editing, and publishing tools
In-platform coaching to learn the system

More Healthcare Insights

Healthcare AI governance, data quality, and interoperability top industry agenda in mid-2026

Healthcare AI governance, data quality, and interoperability top industry agenda in mid-2026

The article discusses the challenges faced by healthcare IT leaders in terms of AI governance, data quality, and interoperability by mid-2026. A significant effort is being made to address data readiness challenges and to enhance health data exchange through a $1.3 million federal initiative. These topics are at the forefront of the industry's agenda to improve healthcare infrastructure and outcomes.

  • 01AI governance gaps are challenging healthcare IT leaders.
  • 02Data readiness is a critical concern in healthcare.
  • 03Federal funding is supporting health data exchange initiatives.

Jul 2, 2026

Healthcare Supply Chain Has a Board-Level Governance Problem.

Healthcare Supply Chain Has a Board-Level Governance Problem.

Healthcare providers recognize supply chain as a top financial lever, yet boards review it less than quarterly, creating a structural governance gap. This misalignment is driving 71% of organizations to replace or upgrade major supply chain applications within 24 months, with demand shifting toward integrated platforms that deliver board-level reporting and measurable ROI.

  • 0183% of healthcare supply chain professionals report board-level review occurs less than quarterly despite 90% ranking supply chain as a top-three financial lever
  • 0271% of health systems plan to replace or upgrade major supply chain applications in the next 24 months, driven by fragmented architectures and weak integration rather than platform failure
  • 03Healthcare supply chain management market projected to grow from $3.94 billion in 2026 to $6.52 billion by 2031, driven by modernization replacing legacy systems under margin pressure

Jun 29, 2026

How Do You Work Around Hospital Operations?

How Do You Work Around Hospital Operations?

The article discusses the unique challenges of conducting restoration or renovation work in hospitals without disrupting their essential operations. This requires meticulous planning and execution to ensure that patient care and facility access remain uninterrupted. The primary goal of such projects is to maintain hospital functionality while completing the necessary work.

  • 01Hospitals must maintain operations during renovations.
  • 02Patient care and staff access are top priorities.
  • 03Projects require extensive planning to minimize disruption.

Jun 26, 2026

Explore More Healthcare Insights

Read more expert perspectives from across Healthcare.

Browse Healthcare Hub