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Wednesday, February 19, 2025

The sky is the limit for LIAT 2020 CEO Hafsah Abdulsalam

by

Fayola K J Fraser
122 days ago
20241020
Hafsah Abdulsalam

Hafsah Abdulsalam

A new air­line with a fa­mil­iar name, LI­AT 2020 is a lo­cal­ly in­cor­po­rat­ed com­pa­ny owned by the Gov­ern­ment of An­tigua and Bar­bu­da and Air Peace Caribbean.

Not to be con­fused with LI­AT 1974, LI­AT 2020 takes to the skies un­der the lead­er­ship of Chief Ex­ec­u­tive Of­fi­cer Haf­sah Ab­dul­salam, a well-sea­soned ex­pert in the avi­a­tion in­dus­try ded­i­cat­ed to dis­tin­guish­ing LI­AT 2020 as a stand­out air­line in the re­gion and cre­at­ing ease for in­tra- and in­ter-re­gion­al trav­el. Ab­dul­salam, a British res­i­dent of Niger­ian her­itage now re­sid­ing in An­tigua and Bar­bu­da, has al­ways dreamed of a life of trav­el. Schooled both in Nige­ria and the Unit­ed King­dom up to the MBA lev­el, she be­gan her ca­reer in the avi­a­tion in­dus­try as a call cen­tre su­per­vi­sor in the cus­tomer ser­vice de­part­ment of Vir­gin At­lantic.

Fol­low­ing the com­ple­tion of her Bach­e­lor’s de­gree in Ge­og­ra­phy and Plan­ning, she saw an ad­ver­tise­ment for a job at the call cen­tre, and al­though she in­tend­ed to pur­sue ge­og­ra­phy, she de­cid­ed to give Vir­gin At­lantic a try.

“Grow­ing up, we trav­elled a lot,” she says, “and I knew I want­ed to be in a job that took me places, so when I was of­fered the job at Vir­gin, I took it. I didn’t nec­es­sar­i­ly have lofty ideals of a ca­reer in the in­dus­try at that time.”

Ab­dul­salam would nev­er re­turn to ge­og­ra­phy, in­stead pur­su­ing a ca­reer tra­jec­to­ry where she has “seen all the dif­fer­ent lay­ers and flavours in avi­a­tion, from cus­tomer ser­vice to air­line sales to com­mer­cial sys­tems, or­gan­i­sa­tion, and train­ing.”

Fol­low­ing her years at Vir­gin At­lantic, she went on­to a job in lux­u­ry trav­el man­age­ment at TUI—per­haps a fore­shad­ow­ing of her even­tu­al res­i­dence in the re­gion—where she sold the Caribbean as a lux­u­ry des­ti­na­tion.

She was then head­hunt­ed by AJW Group, an in­de­pen­dent com­po­nent parts, re­pair, and sup­ply chain so­lu­tions provider for com­mer­cial and busi­ness avi­a­tion. There, she delved in­to the back­end of avi­a­tion, un­der the core man­date to en­sure air­lines had air­craft safe­ly and con­sis­tent­ly fly­ing.

By 2020, Ab­dul­salam had risen in the ranks through­out her ten years as the Group Sales and Com­mer­cial Di­rec­tor, man­ag­ing the ac­counts of some of the most well-known air­lines in the world, such as Delta and Air Cana­da.

“In 2020, COVID forced me to stop. I could hear my­self think,” Ab­dul­salam said. She had been ru­mi­nat­ing on her next move and fi­nal­ly had the op­por­tu­ni­ty dur­ing the less fren­zied time of COVID to gain clar­i­ty on the next step. She left AJW Group and set up her own con­sult­ing firm that fo­cused on sup­port­ing the de­vel­op­ment of African air­lines.

“As a Niger­ian,” she says, “I have al­ways had a soft spot for African air­lines, and in my trav­els I picked up on the need for the fa­cil­i­ta­tion of their im­prove­ment of op­er­a­tional de­liv­ery.”

As a con­sul­tant, she then be­gan work­ing on a project where she de­vel­oped a busi­ness plan and led the ne­go­ti­a­tions for the joint ven­ture be­tween the Gov­ern­ment of An­tigua & Bar­bu­da and Air Peace Caribbean—which would even­tu­al­ly be­come LI­AT 2020. When the ne­go­ti­a­tions were com­plete, the share­hold­ers asked Ab­dul­salam to stay on and run the air­line as the CEO.

“It was a dif­fi­cult de­ci­sion,” she shares, “as I al­ready made the move to start up my own busi­ness and was then be­ing called on a lead­er­ship role for a com­pa­ny.” Af­ter much thought, she de­cid­ed to take on the role and left her com­pa­ny in the ca­pa­ble hands of her busi­ness part­ner.

Now an hon­orary Caribbean res­i­dent, she has rel­ished in the chal­lenge of find­ing her foot­ing in a world that bears many sim­i­lar­i­ties but al­so dif­fer­ences to the one she is ac­cus­tomed to. “I’ve al­ways had to deal with na­tion­al­i­ties across the world and worked all my life in mul­ti­cul­tur­al spaces.”

As she is both Niger­ian and British, she has found var­i­ous ways of align­ing with the Caribbean cul­ture and work en­vi­ron­ment. She rel­ish­es the “less fre­net­ic work life” that she can en­joy, spend­ing her week­ends in na­ture, read­ing, and re­lax­ing. Al­though she sheep­ish­ly ad­mit­ted that she has not yet ful­ly grasped the op­por­tu­ni­ty to see as many of An­tigua’s 365 beach­es as she would like, she still “loves what An­tigua has to of­fer, how green it is.” It keeps her ground­ed, she said.

Ab­dul­salam’s ad­mirable work eth­ic has been her steady com­pass in nav­i­gat­ing the male-dom­i­nat­ed space of the avi­a­tion in­dus­try. Sim­ply say­ing that she just “gets the job done,” she has al­ways made a point to fo­cus on qual­i­ty and ef­fi­cien­cy in de­liv­er­ing her projects, un­der­stand­ing all facets of the sub­ject mat­ter that she deals with so she can both speak and ex­e­cute with con­fi­dence. “I don’t like peo­ple telling me off,” she laughs, “so I make sure I do the job to the best of my abil­i­ty.”

Her ad­vice to women in sim­i­lar­ly male-dom­i­nat­ed pro­fes­sion­al spaces is to set clear goals and work to­wards those goals in a struc­tured man­ner, armed with re­silience and not shy­ing away from hard work, which even­tu­al­ly gar­ners re­spect. Even as a lead­ing woman in the avi­a­tion in­dus­try, she em­pathis­es with the peren­ni­al fe­male strug­gle of bal­anc­ing fam­i­ly life and ca­reers.

“Al­though peo­ple say it’s easy and you can do it, hav­ing two chil­dren of my own, I had to make sac­ri­fices and dif­fi­cult de­ci­sions,” she says.

But she en­cour­ages women and moth­ers not to be crit­i­cal of them­selves while look­ing at oth­er women who may spend more time with their chil­dren, but in­stead fo­cus on giv­ing them­selves grace.

She al­so en­cour­ages men to sup­port their part­ners and cred­its the sup­port of her hus­band, whom she de­scribes as “my biggest cheer­leader, al­ways chal­leng­ing me to reach my goals.”

He is a ma­jor dri­ver in her ca­reer’s suc­cess. The sky is the lim­it for Haf­sah Ab­dul­salam. With the in­au­gur­al flight of LI­AT 2020 in Au­gust 2024, she has be­gun to find her foot­ing in bring­ing our re­gion clos­er to­geth­er.

De­scrib­ing LI­AT 2020 not as an evo­lu­tion or tran­si­tion from LI­AT 1974 but as an en­tire­ly new en­ti­ty, she said this air­line “will be an en­tire­ly dif­fer­ent cul­ture,” with her vi­sion­ary and trans­for­ma­tion­al lead­er­ship. A self-pro­claimed “qui­et and shy per­son,” she stands firm­ly plant­ed at the helm of the avi­a­tion in­dus­try, blaz­ing the trail for greater ex­plo­ration of the Caribbean. 


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