Help for jet owners and air charter operators.

The refreshing part of reading the New Yorker is knowing that so many jet and fractional owners are reading it too.

Of that group, it is important to note that private aviation readers can be divided into two groups: Those that made their own money vs. those that were born into it or just had good timing off the bus from Amherst into Goldman Sachs.

The ones that built their own usually have one thing in common - they knew how to get something far below its actual value. This would be the opposite of buying a business jet - which, until now, has been an exercise in paying far more for something than its actual value.

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Popularity: 14%

January 18th, 2010 at 10:27 am | Comments & Trackbacks (0) | Permalink


The tough part about the childhood game of musical chairs is knowing that some fellow party goer gets the axe every time the music stops. Worse, it could be you if you aren’t fast enough in terms of lunging for that chair. While it would have been a stretch to say this about fractional ownership (or new positions in an Eclipse!) years ago, the fact is that we did.
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Popularity: 15%

December 20th, 2009 at 1:41 pm | Comments & Trackbacks (0) | Permalink


Admittedly this is one of the toughest times on record for the industry, be it operator, manager, or owner. When we launched the Fractional Forum in 2003, we had already laid much of the groundwork for the Jet Owner Group. The idea was to fill the void: Give the person in back truly objective and honest information on how the industry worked.

The key to navigating uncertain times is to understand what you already know. The private air charter industry exists at the pleasure of those who are generous enough to buy an aircraft for the local, regional, or national charter operation of their choice. Being smart about investing in that aircraft typically means understanding all the dynamics that erode the fixed, variable, and true depreciation costs.”

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Popularity: 19%

August 30th, 2009 at 6:26 pm | Comments & Trackbacks (0) | Permalink


Don’t you hate losing your keys? It is one of the most time honored modern struggles. You are late, you need them, and you can’t find them. If it is not your keys it is some PDA or phone thing you’ve grown attached to. Or, if you are really absent minded, like me, it is your wallet, … and keys.

A recent informal poll of air carriers in the hardest hit economic zones offered a resounding revelation that made us think about keys. Sales. Finding new customers is a bit like looking for your keys. When you need them, they are hard to find. Then we got a slug of these responses while doing the informal poll: “Things are slow.. we can’t / won’t advertise now…”
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Popularity: 23%

April 23rd, 2009 at 8:59 am | Comments & Trackbacks (0) | Permalink


When you commute to work you think: Subway, maybe car, or bus.

Fortunately, some of us get to do it in a G-IV. The problem is that going to a loan application meeting in your G IV can cause the banker angst, especially when you didn’t bring your balance sheet with you. Then there is the uncomfortable question: How do you guys afford the G-IV?

That event marked the day the music died for many private aviation folk, no matter how much No Plane No Gain they had been exposed to.

But, there’s good news.
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Popularity: 24%

February 20th, 2009 at 1:58 pm | Comments & Trackbacks (0) | Permalink


The core of Taosim is about balance. I’m not certain of that, but it certainly sounds important and authoritative.

Richard Aboulafia is also important, and depending on the day of the week, he’s even an authority too. When he sent out his December 08 newsletter he touched on one of the most important Yin and Yang elements of aviation evolution and history.

The ROMANTICS vs. The ANALYSTS

While he castigated Vern for the Eclipse debacle and the herd of drunken followers, he was quick to point out how important this seemingly dysfunctional animal is. Were it not for the string of failures that romantics generate (for the occasional victory, like the Learjet, the 747, etc.) there would be little risk taking and innovation in aviation. In other words, the crushing blow to private aviation, air taxi, micro jets, etc. is all part of the larger evolutionary picture.

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Popularity: 30%

January 6th, 2009 at 8:35 am | Comments & Trackbacks (0) | Permalink


We all hate hangovers. There is nothing pleasant about waking up from bad dreamless sleep to the intense regret that you begin to associate with sobriety.

But, in general and private aviation, metaphorically, we like TO DRINK. And we do it A LOT.

And that’s ok, so long as the booze keeps flowing, but the spigot is being shut off and lots of people aren’t as pretty as they once were. That little air taxi co.? Yeah, … not so cute in daylight. The manufacturer? Let’s not discuss the unspeakable acts they performed to get customers.

Dayjet’s recent collapse and Eclipse’s soon to follow path highlights just how far hubris and delusion can take you, your investor’s money and others into that big crater when you go on a bender.

Our cute little industry suffers from truly catastrophic failures. Richard pontificates on these tragedies years before they happen, which leads us to write posts like “The Joy of Being Right but Ignored.”
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Popularity: 34%

November 28th, 2008 at 4:58 pm | Comments & Trackbacks (1) | Permalink


While writing stuff about aviation is fun, I’ve noticed that a lot of my babble is critical, or has some negative twist to it. But since we live in an industry that runs so high on passion, dreams and people that actually like what they do for a living, writing about it is fun - even for a crabby critic.

But critics have a role, and most recently, when reading one of my wife’s sociology papers, it dawned on me: Society (and by extension aviation) suffers from a substantial dichotomy between what we say (and do) privately vs. what we say and do publicly. That is how projects like Dayjet and Eclipse go so far off the rails, so quickly, and with so much money.

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Popularity: 33%

September 24th, 2008 at 6:14 am | Comments & Trackbacks (0) | Permalink


Sifting through my inbox lately leads to a lot of despair. Fuel & Jet-A malaise, the economy, the climate, the dwindling US Dollar, the tragedies never stop. News and media folks (myself included I suppose) are more drawn to dark stuff. Frankly, it sells better. Because of this trend, there is a whole new generation of millennials who were born into an era where the news is always bad and everything is shocking so that at the end of the day, nothing is really that shocking.

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Popularity: 27%

June 13th, 2008 at 10:50 am | Comments & Trackbacks (0) | Permalink