Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

United's Corporate Airline?????

  • Thread starter Thread starter nufft
  • Start date Start date
  • Watchers Watchers 1

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web

nufft

Aspiring 135 pilot
Joined
Nov 25, 2001
Posts
27
I seem to hear at some point that United Airlines was going to be starting up a corporate jet arm? Did this ever happen? If so, what are they called? Do they have a web site? If they exist, are they going to be affected by all the "goings on" there?

Any and all info will be greatly appreciated.

Nufft:cool:
 
Avolar

Avolar was United's plan to enter the fractional aircraft sector and was in the process of spooling it up when it was scrapped, most likely because of internal pressure from the mainline unions who could only see the large aircraft aquisition costs for these corporate jets, and not the potential for making money month after month and year after year for the life of every contract they sold. It was United's attempt to try to re-capture the lucrative business traveler by going where they are, and who continue to opt for alternative means of air travel if they are able.

The Big Lie in the airline industry is that all the customer cares about now is ticket price. The exploding nature of the fractional business and increase in corporate flight departments uttery refutes this notion. The concept of "time is money" is as real as "money is money", and the airline world wastes more passenger time than any other form of travel except walking from NY to LA. Security is another element that corporate boards who decide where to spend corporate money look at carefully. With other options available, and without some radical changes or offering service that matches their needs and expectations, the business traveler (who was the person who payed the bills at most airlines) isn't going to be wooed back. Oh, those people are spending money all right, just not at Delta, NW, et. al. if they can help it.

Thus, by repeating the Big Lie and surrendering that huge piece of pie to a segment of aviation that DID indeed change with the times and technology, the airlines, and the wages the rank and file working there can expect to receive in the future, will more and more be dictated by the expectations and needs of the flip-flop crowd.

What shook the fractional world was the fact that United could have offered potential fractional clients mainline perks, points, and awards (something that the purely-fractional companies could not) while at the same time applying economics of scale to costs such as bulk fuel rates, etc. that they could not match. There was a big, collective sigh of relief among them when United shot themselves in the foot and scrapped the plan.
 
Good points and... United's folly continues as they try to get back the 100 million, or so, they paid to Gulfstream and Dassault for the "firm" orders.

There is an article in today's Aviation International News about Gulfstream's request to have the UAL suit dropped since UAL has not complied with the contract, specifically the provisions requiring alternative dispute resolution. At issue is "more than 50 million dollars UAL paid..."
 
Re: Avolar

CatYaaak said:
What shook the fractional world was the fact that United could have offered potential fractional clients mainline perks, points, and awards (something that the purely-fractional companies could not) while at the same time applying economics of scale to costs such as bulk fuel rates, etc. that they could not match. There was a big, collective sigh of relief among them when United shot themselves in the foot and scrapped the plan.


I'm not sure about "a big, collective sigh of relief." Maybe a giggle or two.

From my layman's perspective, Avolar's business plan never added up. The public was told Avolar and United will be "two totally separate companies."

1. two totally separate companies...Except, they'd use United's bulk fuel discounts.

2. two totally separate companies...Except, they'd use United to ferry their crews around the country.

3. two totally separate companies...Except, they'd use United mainline pilots to fly any future BBJ/ACJ aircraft.

Yep, sounds separate to me...Not.

As far as the "airline perks" are concerned. The type of person buying frac shares couldn't care less about a free round trip ticket or a free weekend at Disney World.

Hmmmm... personal corp jet and catered food to Grand Cayman or free coach ticket to Orlando with peanuts and Coke? Tempting, but, no.

Could have been interesting... :rolleyes:
 
Re: Re: Avolar

NJA Capt said:
I'm not sure about "a big, collective sigh of relief." Maybe a giggle or two....

...As far as the "airline perks" are concerned. The type of person buying frac shares couldn't care less about a free round trip ticket or a free weekend at Disney World.

Hmmmm... personal corp jet and catered food to Grand Cayman or free coach ticket to Orlando with peanuts and Coke? Tempting, but, no.

Could have been interesting... :rolleyes:

I'm not sure what your examples of United and Avolar "not really being two seperate companies" has to do with anything, let alone disproves their business plan didn't add up. As I said before, Avolar's demise during it's infancy was due to the shortsightedness of labor at United. You must not know very much about your own company if you think United's entry into that market was being shrugged off or giggled at. You completely miss the point; they could have offered corporate frac customers the same product as any other frac company, and more.

As far as your comments on "airline perks" are concerned, I'm not sure where you went with your "trip to Orlando with peanuts" scenario. I wasn't talking about that either. Companies buy into frac shares in large part because they offer flexibility and options for present and future travel. It's useless to try and argue that they buy into them because of the accoutrements and prestige of owning their own jet, because if that were the case and they had the $$$, they would own their own jets. The same goes for security issues. Frac shares are a compromise falling between airline travel and bona fide corporate operations, and offer an easy doorway into flying on business-type aircraft. I mean let's face it....frac flying is better than "peanuts to Orlando", but it sure ain't owning your own Gulfstream either.

That being said, in many cases frac shares do offer more flexibility than owning outright, because what you are purchasing with your share is occupied time in a large fleet of aircraft at your disposal that you can mix, match, and double up to meet varied travel needs.. When I say "airline perks", I'm talking about more flexibility and options.

If I'm comparing two frac companies and Co. A offers simply a quarter-share in a Citation X, but Co B can offer me a share in a Citation X, plus incentives when employees fly on their mainline, then Co B. has a leg up. If, for my $25K/month management fee for the frac share, Co B grants VIP club rights to any employee using the mainline, or autuomatic upgrades to business/first class, they offer a better deal. If all tickets are discounted on mainline, or treated as full-fare (no penalties for changing dates, cancelling etc,), then that's a "perk". To those who make company policy and answer directly to shareholders, those types of options make a difference in terms of money, productivity, and employee happiness.

Now, if you are a TV star and are the only person traveling, that won't make a big difference because you will be on your frac aircraft anyway. But fractional companies won't sink or swim because of TV stars and golfers, but rather whether corporate America continues to buy into them. If you are on a corporate board, or business owner, and are deciding with which frac company you will enter into a contract worth a few mil over the next 3-5 years, and you know quite a few employees need shuttling around, those extras Co. B offers are a good selling points because they lessen the blow to those relegated to airline travel and help justify the expense. If you are buying a frac share in a smaller aircraft not suited for international travel, those "airline perks" might be the deciding factor between A and B, since it may not be worth it to you to use 2X your allotted hours to upgrade into a larger frac aircraft for that trip.

So stay smug while you can. Even though it's dead at United for now, I'm sure the idea will re-emerge somewhere in a different economic climate and the airlines get sick of scrounging for those paying the cheapest prices.
 
CatYaaak said:
Avolar's demise during it's infancy was due to the shortsightedness of labor at United....you think United's entry into that market was being shrugged off or giggled at.

Even though it's dead at United for now, I'm sure the idea will re-emerge somewhere in a different economic climate and the airlines get sick of scrounging for those paying the cheapest prices.

Avolar's demise had little to due with labor. It couldn't get investors (or enough owners). And while your explanation looks good on paper, it obviously was not true in the real world. It was not catching on before 9/11, which was only the final straw.
This only helps prove my case that airline perks don't mean much in the frac world.

I know more about my company than you give me credit for. I also know that American backed out of the frac world early on (with BJS, now part of Bombardier) and United barely got out of the blocks with Avolar. While NetJets has been around for 15 years and its' competitors for 5+ years. As far as frac owners not being able to by the "whole" airplane, """"BIG"""" misconception.


No one giggled, eh?
[Fractional patriarch Richard Santulli, holder of an advanced degree in mathematics and founder of Executive Jet’s NetJets program in 1986, scoffed at the validity of such research. Last summer he told AIN, “That’s bull. Who did they survey? Do you think the top management of Fortune 500 companies would choose [United’s program] over a company that has the reputation and experience of Executive Jet?”]

AIN-Jan 2002

My basis for comparison is this:

99% of fractional pax HAVE flown on an airliner, where 99% of airline pax have NEVER flown frac.

100% of our (fractional) pilots talk to each passenger onboard, where 99.99% of airline pilots never talk to ANY passenger.

Who is in a better position to judge what passengers want?
Hint: It's not about money. Airline tickets are 1000 times cheaper than frac shares.
 
Last edited:
NJA Capt said:
Avolar's demise had little to due with labor. It couldn't get investors (or enough owners). And while your explanation looks good on paper, it obviously was not true in the real world. It was not catching on before 9/11, which was only the final straw.
This only helps prove my case that airline perks don't mean much in the frac world.

I know more about my company than you give me credit for. I also know that American backed out of the frac world early on (with BJS, now part of Bombardier) and United barely got out of the blocks with Avolar. While NetJets has been around for 15 years and its' competitors for 5+ years. As far as frac owners not being able to by the "whole" airplane, """"BIG"""" misconception.


No one giggled, eh?
[Fractional patriarch Richard Santulli, holder of an advanced degree in mathematics and founder of Executive Jet’s NetJets program in 1986, scoffed at the validity of such research. Last summer he told AIN, “That’s bull. Who did they survey? Do you think the top management of Fortune 500 companies would choose [United’s program] over a company that has the reputation and experience of Executive Jet?”]

AIN-Jan 2002


If you'd like to compare smuggness. Judging by your profile you are a commuter RJ pilot, who never flew frac (big 3), where I have worked for 5 years. And you claim to know more about my business than me?

My basis for comparison is this:

99% of fractional pax HAVE flown on an airliner, where 99% of airline pax have NEVER flown frac.

100% of our (fractional) pilots talk to each passenger onboard, where 99.99% of airline pilots never talk to ANY passenger.

Who is in a better position to judge what passengers want?
Hint: It's not about money. Airline tickets are 1000 times cheaper than frac shares.

First, you probably shouldn't try and judge someone's knowledge based on your supposition of an internet profile. Second, you sound like you really take this all very personally. It's just business, you know. Third, you keep trying to turn this into a frac. vs. airline debate, which it never was. Apparently this confuses you, perhaps because Avolar the frac company was to be owned by United the airline. If buying a frac share in an Avolar aircraft meant that the customer was forced onto an airliner and forced to eat peanuts, you might actually have had a point.

Now, you'd like to believe that somehow competition forced Avolar out of existance rather than internal pressures (labor who was being squeezed for $$, and pilots being furloughed and aligned against it because there was no guarantee of a flying job at Avolar for them), and it's good to see someone so rah-rah about their own company. Santulli, (ever the salesman) skews the issue in his PR quote because the vast majority of " top management of Fortune 500 companies" don't opt for airlines OR fracs.....they opt for operating their own corporate flight departments.

A handful of Fortune 500 co.'s have dissolved their own in favor of fracs, but most who've purchased frac shares have done so simply for use as supplemental uplift to their own departments because of improved logistics, cost-planning, and by being able to depreciate the value of the share, it's more cost effective than charter if such uplift is needed more than about 100 hours per year. Most frac customers remain first-time neophyte "owners" of aircraft, or those who's annual needs are between about 100 - 350 flight hours. Above this, frac doesn't make much sense economically and most corporate boards are well aware of this. And again, this doesn't address security, privacy of itineraries, and knowing who is flying your airplane. On those issues, fractionals take second place to running your own show, and for many Fortune 500 companies, those issues are paramount.

I know your customers pretty well, because until recent airline experience I spent 12 years in corporate aviation, watched the fracs grow from infancy, flown the same-type passengers, run the numbers to compare, as an Av Dept Manager and Chief Pilot listened to frac salesmen, ridden on their airplanes, and conducted audits on their operations for two different corporate boards. That last should be an indicator to you that even if you think you "know them", they don't know you better than their own personnel, but are seen as a better alternative than chartering, which is fraught with unknowns and fewer tax advantages.

I've also watched the frac pilots Pay for Training (they still had that when you joined your company 5 years ago, didnt they?), unionize, and then ironically work for wages so low they earned "scab status" in the opinons of non-unionized corporate pilots flying similar aircraft. I've met great frac pilots out there, but on the other hand, I've heard some bad-mouthing their customers as soon as they drive away. No doubt customer service is much better than found at an airline..but all that's saying is that you are doing your job as it was promised and what the customer expects.

As for individual "owners", aside from those companies discussed earlier, I'm not under any misconception about them being able to afford buying and operating their own aircraft. I know what that costs per year for different aircraft, whether frac share or outright. Selling shares allow individuals who could not otherwise afford corporate jet ownership the illusion of doing so as long as thier travel needs remain limited. That's the whole point. Gulfstream figures that an idividual has to be personally worth $400 million to afford to own and operate their own G-lV. Hmm, let me know when Imus or Sampras get to that level.

Fracs have been successful because the real work is done by the salemen selling contracts. They are the best in the business. But it doesn't take "an advanced degree in mathematics" to know that a given frac share's "occupied hours" (a term entirely of their own making) does not equate to actual flight hours as the rest of the aviation world knows them (the hours that determine DOC's, aicraft & engine life-limits, etc). Industry-average stage lengths X the .2 extra hours for every flight charged for taxi means a 200 "occupied hour" frac share translates into perhaps 170 flight hours. The other 30 hrs the customer pays for, but really don't exist for use from Point A to B. 30 X $3,500, for example. Aircraft shares are sold based on retail price of each aircraft, but the large frac companies get deeply discounted prices per unit because of the large order numbers.

For these reasons and others, selling a frac share is money in the bank as soon as the dotted line is signed, and a frac aircraft makes money whether it flies or sits on the ramp. Buffett knows this, and the people planning Avolar did also. Labor at United, living in their airline cocoons, didn't. Don't get me wrong, fracs fill a niche and provide a service far superior to the airlines for a price, and they are here to stay not unlike timeshare condos. What you are missing is that for good salesmen (who are guns for hire, and the heart of the frac business) the airline connection can easily be turned into an additional selling point.

Case in point; the so-called "occupied hour" is flight hours plus 6 minutes of taxi time at each end of the leg. A good salesman tells a customer "we will ONLY charge you 6 minutes of taxi time, no matter how long it takes!" Of course, no time is charged against the aircraft's airfame or engines for mx purposes during taxi, only actual flight. DOC's are figured on flight time, not flight time plus taxi time. A newbie customer doesn't know this, and so that 12 minutes per leg that helps eat up his share's yearly allotment he believes to be a great deal when he sits for 30 minutes on a taxiway. It's all about perception.
 
CatYaaak said:
Third, you keep trying to turn this into a frac. vs. airline debate, which it never was.

Actually, I’m not.

I do, however, stand corrected about your background and insight of the fracs. Though it does appear by your essay (length), that you took this a little more personal than I.

… you'd like to believe that somehow competition forced Avolar out of existence rather than internal pressures.

No, Sir. I never said, nor implied Avolar failed because of competition. I said, as a matter of public record, that Avolar failed because it could not find investors. Sure, labor would have been an issue. But Avolar didn’t get far enough for it to become an issue.

I've also watched the frac pilots Pay for Training (they still had that when you joined your company 5 years ago, didn’t they?)

If you care to call getting a typed as FO and getting my money back (as promised) PFT, Yes. None of the "true" PFT outfits, that I know of ever gave the money back or type you for the trouble.

What you are missing is that for good salesmen the airline connection can easily be turned into an additional selling point.

Thus the basis for my idea. It looked good on paper, but Wall Street and 5th Ave didn’t buy into Avolar’s idea.

It's all about perception.

Agreed
 

Latest resources

Back
Top