Archive for September, 2007

Microjets carry big potential

September 30, 2007

The very light jets’ cheaper prices could help spread air taxis to more Colorado rural airports, but the sites might need to improve their facilities and services.

By Kelly Yamanouchi
The Denver Post

 A new breed of small jets under development could bring suit-and-tie executives to small rural airports in Colorado and across the nation.

Airport and industry managers say some of those general-aviation airports will need to add space for aircraft, offer services such as rental cars and create a more upscale atmosphere to attract the new “very light jet” market in future years. Estimates for the size of the very light jet market vary, and it’s unclear how much airports or airport businesses would need to invest to target them-though some of the costs could qualify for government funding.

The category of very light jets to continue reading this article please click here: http://www.denverpost.com/business/ci_7035842

Business jet orders to reach new high

September 25, 2007

By Kevin Done in London

Financial Times

Updated: 9:40 p.m. PT Sept 23, 2007

Demand for business jets is at a record level and the credit squeeze has so far had little impact on new orders from the world’s executive and wealthy individual high-flyers. Waiting lists for many models stretch to 2010 and beyond.

“Industry growth has moved into unparalleled territory,” Rob Wilson, president for business and general aviation at Honeywell Aerospace, one of the world’s leading aerospace systems suppliers, said Sunday.

According to the Honeywell annual business aviation outlook, published Sunday, 2007 will mark the fourth successive year of growth since the trough of 2003, with annual business jet deliveries set to exceed 1,000 this year for the first time, up from 861 last year. Deliveries are forecast to rise to more than 1,300 in 2008.

Mr Wilson said this was a record year for the industry. “Order intake across most business jet categories remains very strong, with little discernible effect from recent stock market fluctuations. With [order] backlogs exceeding two-and-a-half years’ worth of deliveries, 2008 will likely be another banner year for the industry.”

The Honeywell study, one of the most authoritative guides to the fortunes of the business jet industry, had already taken into account the forecast of slower rates of economic growth in the US and the expected impact of the recent turmoil in financial markets, said Mr Wilson.

While executive jet purchase expectations have declined a little in North America, traditionally the heartland of the industry, fleet plans have “expanded significantly” in all other regions of the world, according to the report.

The arguments in favour of private aviation, such as increased executive productivity, time-saving and the avoidance of congested hub airports, have been gaining support elsewhere in the world.

“International buyers now account for about 50 per cent of the new aircraft deliveries projected over the next five years,” says the report.

The Honeywell report forecasts sales of about 14,000 business jets in the 10 years from 2007 to 2017, which are worth about $233bn, and which support the delivery plans of the leading makers, Bombardier of Canada; Gulfstream, Cessna and Hawker Beechcraft of the US; and France’s Dassault.

The business traveler’s guide to jet setting

September 24, 2007

I was recently asked why I would post articles that mention other companies. Here are a few reasons.

1. Everyone has heard of NetJets by having a article that mentions them isnt exactly breaking news.

2. If you do a google search for jet charter broker you will find thousands of brokers so I dont worry much if someone is “shopping” if they use someone else for thier shopping. We like to work with clients that book.

3. If every person who visited this website booked a trip we would be doing thousands of trips a day. I think this blog provides interesting information and we are happy to share.

-Ben 

Private jets take the hassle, headache out of company trips

By Lauren Kerensky

Forbes

Updated: 3:06 p.m. PT Sept 23, 2007

Convenience, comfort and time — they’re precious commodities for business travelers. And yet the commercial flights high flying executives rely on are usually devoid of all three.

You don’t have to travel frequently to know that flight delays are at an all-time high. Throw in the pain of security lines, overbooked flights and limited schedules, and it’s no wonder that the Federal Aviation Administration expects general aviation hours, or private flying, to increase 59 percent by 2020.

As part of the fastest growing segment of the aviation industry, business aviation — private jet charter in particular — has undergone a major overhaul in the past decade, becoming the saving grace of business travelers.

Initially, travelers wanting to charter a private jet could do so fairly easily if they were located in a high-traffic region, such as the New York City area.

But if a customer based in Columbus, Ohio needed to get to Detroit and a jet wasn’t readily available, the situation got messy. Operators would sub-broker until perhaps a third broker could get his hands on a plane. All three brokers, of course, would charge for their services. The jet also would likely have to be repositioned in order to get to the customer in Columbus — racking up another fee.

“There wasn’t a consistent product in charter,” says George-Ann Rosenberg, a spokesperson for Bombardier Skyjet, a private aviations solutions provider. “It was just very scattered, mostly mom-and-pop type operations.”

About 10 years ago, companies including Skyjet, resolved to fix the problems. They became one-stop shops, aggregating pre-screened charter operators that had been rated by the aviation authorities, and developed online booking systems. And then Sept. 11 happened.

“People just got really nervous about flying commercially,” says Gary Mansour, founder and CEO of Avion Private Jet Club, a members-only private charter service. “The airlines lost their first-class market and everyone migrated, if they could afford it, to private aviation. If they couldn’t, they sat there and just waited for something else to come along.”

The wait was worth it, with the private jet industry now offering business travelers options that are increasing daily, providing them with the convenience, comfort and time they need. A trip that might have taken two days commercially can now be executed in a few hours via a private jet charter. As a result, Wynona Dyer, president of private jet brokerage Altour Air, estimates that 75 percent of her clientèle charter private jets for business purposes.

The entry point for most is an ad-hoc or on-demand charter, which lets people hop on a jet when and where they want. For the constant traveler, there’s also the jet card, which sells chunks of air time in advance. Unlike on-demand charters, jet cards and charter membership programs allow customers to pay for guaranteed availability and a predictable hourly rate.

And for business travelers who are rarely on the ground, there is fractional jet ownership, in which customers buy a share of an aircraft. To improve on this service, NetJets, a fractional ownership provider, has eliminated the repositioning fee for its domestic and international destinations.

Of course the rising use of private jet charters by business travelers isn’t limited to the United States. London-based Hunt and Palmer has offices around the world to shuttle global executives.

Sandy Boyer, a corporate sales executive for Hunt and Palmer, says banks use the executive aircrafts to hit European financial centers, sending analysts to road shows that can include seven cities in three days. Oil and gas companies also frequently charter to access remote destinations in Africa and South America. The Far East is booming too, Boyer says, with virtually all of the customers chartering private jets there traveling for business.

Just as private jet chartering has evolved, so have its amenities. Avion Private Jet Club, for example, uses a per-seat program on its pre-scheduled flights between Los Angeles and New York in which members pay a flat rate. They may have to share the plane, but the aircraft is a spacious corporate jet with a flight attendant, catered food by Wolfgang Puck and private complimentary sedan service. With those kinds of perks what’s an extra body or two?

And while use of private jets was once considered an extravagant executive perk, that stigma has begun to dissipate.

“It isn’t just a luxury anymore,” Rosenberg says. “It’s really a ‘boy does that make sense’ kind of thing.”

Friendly Skies

September 24, 2007
If you have ever flown on a BBJ or own one you will enjoy this article – Ben

You think your little corporate jet’s impressive? Step aboard a private Boeing 767 or new Airbus 380 designed just for you. Fly right!

By Daniel McGinn

Newsweek

Oct. 1, 2007 issue – For business travelers, the last few months have been the summer from hell—a time of endless flight delays, tarmac gridlock and overstuffed planes. But as so many frequent fliers have come to dread their next trip, the fortunate fliers who patronize Gore Design Completions can’t wait for the next one. Gore builds customized interiors for the large jetliners that heads of state, corporate chiefs and billionaires have begun turning into private flying apartments. It’s a rarefied business, but lately it’s soaring. In the past three years, Gore has grown from 50 employees to 320. Revenue was just $23 million last year, but is expected to surpass $100 million in 2008. Today Gore’s hangar is filled with five half-completed jets—and it’s fully booked with work until nearly 2010. “We’re about maxed out,” says cofounder Jerry Gore. Aviation has always been a boom-and-bust business, but lately things have been looking up. In October Airbus will deliver its first A380, a gargantuan double-decker plane capable of ferrying 555 passengers nonstop from Los Angeles to Sydney. Later this fall Boeing will begin test flights of its new 787, a revolutionary jet made of carbon-fiber composites that Boeing promises will fly passengers longer distances more comfortably while using far less fuel than existing planes. Airlines are lining up to order both new jets.

 

Full Article Here: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20920164/site/newsweek/page/0/

Thank You.

September 20, 2007

At ElleJet we meet some special people. I want to thank Mr. G. for the trip he booked with us. It is always a pleasure working with you. – Ben

Copy of his e-mail to me:

From:
Sent: Thursday, September 20, 2007 10:37 AM
To: ‘Ben Schusterman’
Subject:
 Dear Ben, Thank you for taking care of everything. My parents loved the trip and especially that you were able to get a mid for less than the price of a light jet. Everything went like clockwork. You know I will call you next time around.

For Busy Executives, Private Jets Are Best Way to Fly

September 20, 2007

In one week last October, SK Group chairman Chey Tae-won traveled to Beijing, Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City aboard a rented 14-seat Gulfstream G-IV jet. By using the private aircraft, Chey was able to fly on his own schedule. Private jets can also save time at customs and immigration since those procedures are handled on the aircraft. They are even more useful when commercial airlines offer no direct flights to a destination. Some business jets are equipped with conference rooms and cutting-edge communications systems allowing executives to work as they travel. 

Full Article Click Here: http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200709/200709200010.html

DayJet

September 19, 2007

There is so much talk about DayJet and a lot of discussion about whether they will be able to pull this business model off. I would love to hear some feedback. As private jet travelers would you use this service? Either way its a great article. – Ben

Redefining Air Travel

DayJet to launch ‘per-seat, on-demand’ service for Florida passengers

In a new wrinkle for business travelers weary of scheduling snarls and long security lines, aviation start-up DayJet Corp. is gearing up to launch its “Per-Seat, On-Demand” jet service throughout Florida this month.

Before taking the concept nationwide, DayJet (www.dayjet.com) will offer service among “dayports” in Boca Raton, Tallahassee, Gainesville, Lakeland and Pensacola. The hook is corporate jet travel at near the price of full-price coach fares.

For the rest of the article click here: http://www.palmbeachdailynews.com/biz/content/business/biz0916_AIROPTIONS.html

Google’s Co-Founders Park Private Jet At NASA Airfield

September 19, 2007

Personally I have no problem with this they have earned it – Ben.  

Google’s co-founders are paying NASA $1.3 million to park their personal Boeing 767-200 jet next door to Google’s corporate headquarters at Moffett Field.



One day after Google (GOOG).org, Google’s philanthropic arm, issued a Request for Proposals seeking ideas for some of the $10 million it plans to invest in sustainable transportation solutions, Google’s co-founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page made headlines for the $1.3 million they’re paying annually to NASA to park their personal Boeing 767-200 jet next door to Google’s corporate headquarters at Moffett Field.

For the rest of the article click here: http://www.informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=201806250

Indian Millionaires choose Private Jet Travel

September 19, 2007

NEW DELHI: If luxury is about indulging, sans the boundaries, then owning a private jet or yacht is the ultimate in luxury travel for the Indian millionaires. Luxury travel has arrived in India and is moving very fast— from speedboats to luxury yachts, from small four-seater aircraft to bigger brands.

Indian corporate houses—Reliance Industries , Videocon, UB Group, Raymond, GMR, Bharat Hotels, Taj Air, Oberoi et alare all buying private jets such as Falcons, Cessnas, Bombardiers, Beech Kings and Gulfstreams in large numbers.

For the rest of the article click here: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/Luxury_travel_new_craze_among_millionaires_in_India/articleshow/2378968.cms

Lufthansa Private Jets

September 19, 2007

In the spirit of its longtime motto “There’s no better way to fly”, a new business unit of Lufthansa, is offering flyers across Southeast Asia a fleet of the most modern private jets which can be booked individually at short notice to more than 1,000 destinations in Europe and the Russian Federation.
 
The service, Lufthansa Private Jet, is an alternative way for Thai business executives and discerning travelers to fly between European cities. For a very attractive all-inclusive price, fliers can experience the convenience of business jet travel as defined by one of the leading airlines in the world with an impeccable history of safety and service.

For the rest of the article click here http://www.etravelblackboardasia.com/article.asp?id=48671&nav=2