
Delta Air Lines
"Maintenance cancellations: 5,212 per year → 71. Then 125 straight days with zero."
Delta turned aircraft maintenance from its biggest liability into a competitive advantage.
The challenge
In summer 2010, Delta Air Lines averaged 29.3 flight cancellations per day, and 5,212 maintenance projects were cancelled that year. Maintenance scheduling was broken — resources competed across too many open work orders simultaneously, and critical tasks were delayed until aircraft were already out of service.
The TOC solution
TOC's flow management principles (DBR) were applied to maintenance workshops, combined with CCPM for project scheduling. WIP was reduced, activities were better defined, and resources were allocated around the actual bottleneck. The approach ran alongside Delta's Lean and Six Sigma programs (TOC-LSS hybrid).
What happened
Within one year, flight cancellations dropped from 29.3/day to 11.2/day. By 2017, annual maintenance cancellations had fallen from 5,212 to just 71. By 2018, Delta achieved 125 consecutive days without a single maintenance-related cancellation — an extraordinary operational milestone for any major carrier. Matt Sparks from Delta presented this journey at the 2026 Goldratt Global Conference in Kyoto.