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Time To Change Strategies

0 Comments | This entry was posted on Nov 30 2009
Historically strategies were created based on assumptions made about how the markets respond and to what. The aim of a strategy was to create market differential, awareness and value that the market would respond to.
 
These methods relied heavily on “old media” as the means to create messages, branding and attention from targeted markets.The aim of the strategies were directed at beating competition and capturing the market attention and ultimately a transaction.

The strategic process included market research to understand the markets behavior, what competition was doing and the subsequent data would help organizations to think through what it should do differently.

Markets have dramatically changed and thus old strategic thinking and related methods are no longer relevant to the market.

What Has Changed?

In an Article titled Transparency is the new marketing Clay Shirky writes “When organizations think about strategy, it’s often in the context of their own objectives. But when the surrounding reality changes—as it is doing in the media landscape—both strategy and goals need to adjust. The disgruntled can now organize, publish, and protest on their own, without using any professional media outlet. Until recently organizations of all stripes were better able to get their messages into the media than any motley groups of individuals. That is no longer true, because two critical organizational advantages—the ability to coordinate group effort and to coordinate group access to the means of publishing—are now ubiquitous, global, and free.”

“Clients of an organization, whether they are citizens or customers, now have ready access to these tools. For all the supposed decisiveness of managed organizations, by relying on legal and PR departments to respond, most companies now react more slowly than their customers. In the new world we’ve entered, you can only stonewall things on your side of the wall, yet most media is no longer on that side of the wall.”

Strategy is Now Driven From the Other Side of the Wall

Creating a road map of how your organization will succeed is now a process driven by the conversations from the market. Previously strategy did include an assessment of the market but limited by the perspective and terms of how one defines “the market“. The definition of market has changed in that consumers and business are now engaged in defining the market more than ever before. The definition and sentiment of a market are being framed by real time conversations about anything, everything, anyone and everyone.

satisfied and angry customersMarket sentiment used to be contained within the walls of a corporation. Complaints were reviewed as were compliments. Compliments were added to the marketing mix while complaints were buried until results reflected the need for change.

Today both complaints and praises are in real time and out in the open for everyone to see. Anything placed on the web enters the digital library and the more content that references your business the more visible it is the Google. The higher the visibility the easier it is to be found by others.

Before making a purchase or taking a job what do people do? 95% go the web to gather references and intelligence. Said references and intelligence are no longer driven by your media rather they are driven by media created by your market.

If you understand the power of a network then you know that three satisfied customers may tell three friends and those three friend may tell twenty seven then you know the power of the coice of the customer has just been accelerated by the web. The same is true about angry customers. One angry customer can reach 3,000 people at the click of a mouse. Those three thousand can reach over 100,000 given the power of networks.

The web works based on a rate of change and a rate of interest. Which gets you the highest rate? Satisfied or angry customers? Do the math.

Strategy is critical for any business but if you are following old strategic methods then you will fail critically. Today failure is instantaneously spread at the click of a mouse. The markets of conversations spread faster than most organizations can react. Building a strategy from the outside in is vital to your future success. When markets change so must your strategy. Much has to change starting with your thinking. Get it?

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Stuck In The Wrong Frame of Mind?

0 Comments | This entry was posted on Nov 24 2009

Knowledge GapSometimes we wonder why people don’t understand what we are saying. Lots of time people wonder what are we saying. In these instances there is a gap in understanding who is communicating what and why.

Understanding comes from knowledge. When we talk to people who have specific knowledge about something that we don’t have sometimes it is difficult to put the conversation into context. Most of us try to put new knowledge into context with old knowledge we have. It doesn’t work.

The Mind Frame of Private Aviation

Ever had someone view a problem differently than those who have the problem? When you are not close to a problem sometimes your perspective sees things that those close to it can’t.  The reason is that paradigms, beliefs based on experience, become barriers to seeing things differently and, more importantly, paradigms inhibit innovation.

The news from private aviation and aviation in general is depressing. Airlines losing money, private aviation is upside down and inside out. If you haven’t noticed, many are believing things are as bad as they seem and communicating “bad news” to each other. Bad news begets bad news which reinforces beliefs that just propagate more bad news. On the other hand some ignore “bad news” and choose to believe it is only temporary and that good times will be back soon.  Then the harsh reality hits and the only reaction is “cut cost” so we can survive.  Sound familiar?

A Shrinking Market Doesn’t Expand

Have you seen the latest report from NetJets?  Not good, major cuts and reductions. This seems to be the flavor of the day and subsequently we will see many more doing the same. Why? Because the old market you’ve been serving is indeed shrinking and not likely to come back. So when a market shrinks you have basically two choices. Shrink with it or expand your market.

To expand a market you need two things. Innovation that improves your offering and a market that will consume your offering. Now when it comes to air travel there is an obvious market of consumption that is being fed by commercial airlines. Yet the experience created by that market is at an all time low.   The idea of commercial airline innovation is representative of what Southwest has done. Yet Southwest cannot effectively serve the entire market and the experience is still dreadful.

Improve & Innovate Private Aviation

As I watch and read the events unfolding in private aviation the solution seems obvious to me. Then again, I am outside the industry but that could be a good thing. As a strategist I see several things that must change in order for the private aviation industry to not only survive but thrive. These are:

  1. Expand your reach. Most travelers have never experienced and are unaware of the value and benefit of private aviation. This means you must communicate but do so in the terms markets can understand. You must also become relational. In other words - drop the elitist attitudes.
  2. Leverage technology. Technology is exploding daily. The technology is social in that it enables you to reach markets like never before. But the technology is only as good as your knowledge of how to use it effectively and efficiently.
  3. Collaborate Rather Than Compete: If you all are chasing the same old market and that market is shrinking, then to expand, you must collaborate. Competing for a smaller pie means you all get less. Collaborate and expand your collective market by using knowledge about new models, methods and markets ripe for an alternative to commercial travel. This will require new thinking and that will require new knowledge. Learn together.
  4. Innovate or Die:Let’s face it. Your model doesn’t work. Your capital is shrinking and you’re facing a slow but obvious decline. Innovation comes from thinking outside your existing system and working together to create new markets, new models and increased revenue for all. Innovation doesn’t come from silo mentality. It comes from collaboration and ideation. What is that? It comes from “collaborating with crowds.”
  5. Don’t Wait For Tomorrow: A sense of urgency is needed and the current market ought to give you enough urgency to do 1 -4 above immediately. Tomorrow isn’t likely to bring you the markets you want, rather, they are waiting for you. The markets are waiting for you to change, move and communicate like never before.

If you are ready, say so. If you are not, well then, stand aside and let those that are change their minds and thus change your industry.

View more presentations from Jay Deragon.
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Legs Vs. Seats, How To Fill Both

5 Comments | This entry was posted on Nov 13 2009

Private aviation uses the term “legs” to indicate lanes of travel from point A to B. In order to optimize the productivity of an aircraft the destination flight needs to be booked as well as the return flight. However, most return flights from B to A go empty and the originator of the charter has to pay for unused “legs and seats”.

Seems to me that such a scenario represents sub-optimization of the aircraft. Sub-optimization is a waste of an asset and increases the cost of using the asset; thus, limiting the market of users of the asset. Make sense?

Now if we examined new methods aimed at optimizing use of private aviation the answer lies in filing both legs, or expanding legs, and seats with business travelers wanting to go from different points within a “leg” to another point.  The model is exactly how commercial aviation maximizes sales of seats within legs they have determined as “used frequently” by the general public.

Applying New Methods To Private Aviation

Private aviation has a much larger reach in terms of probable destinations for business travelers.  The private aviation industry serves a larger scope of available destinations than does commercial aviation. The problem is that each operator runs their “legs and seats” in a silo of distribution and market awareness. Most operators serve regular customers and wait for the phone to ring to initiate a flight. In other words, operators usually wait until the market comes to them rather than going to a larger market of probable travelers needing to get to and from a destination.

Each private aviation operator runs a sub-optimized system and, given today’s economic climate, they are all feeling the reduction of old utilization models and have assets sitting around waiting to be used. The collective waste of all these sub-optimized systems represents billions of dollars annually and many operators will not survive.

What If?

What if there was a new system aimed at optimization of all available equipment, planes, legs and seats? What if  each operator’s individual system was effectively and efficiently communicated to the general market of business travelers? In other words, if an open source grid of  legs and seats were made available to anyone and everyone, and said grid was effectively communicated to the general public of business travelers, what would happen? The likely results would be the the ability to lower the cost of private aviation, which would expand the market to the general public of business travelers. Subsequently, operators would have the opportunity to optimize legs, seats and related assets. The general business traveler would be given the opportunity  for a much more efficient and accommodating experience than commercial travel and while saving time and money. While the cost may be slightly higher than using fixed routes on commercial aircraft, the time saving and experiential factor would easily justify the increase cost.

Sound crazy? Not really when you consider the power and reach of social technology which could easily communicate available legs and seats to a very large audience.  The technology to create an entire private aviation social grid is readily available and the use of social technology would provide the reach to the general business traveler.

Can you tell I want to go back to using private aviation vs. commercial? I am trying to stir thinking out of the box and collaboration for the benefit of all. Leadership and innovation would be needed to capture market opportunity. Does this make any sense?

What say you?




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Why Can’t Private Aviation Innovate?

14 Comments | This entry was posted on Nov 12 2009

I have been blessed and cursed at the same time. As a management consultant the use of my time is the critical elements that fuels my personal economy. Early in my career I decided that having a private plane was a valuable tool in saving me time and allowing me to be more productive.

I started out using a single engine Cessna then quickly moved up to an MU2 for speed and distance. Then I went to a Lear 25 and the last aircraft I had was a Lear 35. Over a period of roughly ten years I became accustomed to the luxury and utility of having my own aircraft to take me where  and when I wanted to go. To say the least the experience spoiled me and after selling my business I could no longer afford or justify having a plane for personal or professional use.

Back To Commercial

After taking some time off from the business world I decided to get back in the game. Being back in the game ultimately means travel is inevitable. They say “once a consultant always a consultant and so I find myself back into consulting but focused on helping organizations use  social technology for business purposes.

Over the last five years I have had to travel frequently and unfortunately it has been on commercial airlines. To say that the experience is a big time waste and anti-social is to put it mildly. Commercial air travel is at its lowest point of experience and efficiency.  I am sure everyone can and will relate.  So I ask and desire to go back to private aviation but seek ways to do so without the traditional excessive cost of ownership.

Private Aviation Needs To Change

The private aviation industry, like all industries, gets stuck believing in old business models and subsequently fails to see alternative models. Business models change as markets shift. If you haven’t noticed all markets are shifting not only because of the old economy but because of a new economy.

The new economy is about communication, deep and wide. The new economy is being transformed from the fundamental way we are revolutionizing communications. Communication is the foundation of society, of our culture, of our humanity, of our own individual identity, and of all economic systems.  Communication, and its ally computers, is a special case in economic history. Not because it happens to be the fashionable leading business sector of our day, but because its cultural, technological, and conceptual impacts reverberate at the root of every business including private aviation.

Private aviation is no longer in the business of just flying rather it is in the business of communications using every kind of media available. Think about it. The industry uses terms like “legs, charter, FBO’s” and a host of other nomenclature that most people don’t understand.  Given the current economic pressures on private aviation operations one must ask “how, what, when, where, why and whom are they communicating to?”.  It seems that most are communicating to the same limited and depressed market of existing private aviation users.  How is that working for you? In other words everyone is chasing a smaller piece of an old pie rather than working together to increase the size of a new pie and making it available to more people.  Get it?

Wouldn’t it make sense to expand the market of private aviation users? To do so operators would have to work together to find ways to lower the overall cost of private aviation. What if all those empty legs and available seats were made available to the general public? Could you communicate and fill the planes at a per seat cost rather than a “total plane cost”? If you did would the public opt in for a seat?

You could and the public would respond and quickly become spoiled by the experience. However, to optimize the use of planes you’d have to cooperate with every operator and help each other optimize the entire system. That may be hard to do unless the industry begins to think differently and agrees to collaborate. Who is willing to try? If you don’t you’ll end up fighting for what you currently have which is less.

Somebody please help me get back to private aviation. Got any empty seats?

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BITTEN BY THE AVIATION BUG

1 Comment | This entry was posted on Oct 17 2009

Having been born and bred in Australia, I never imagined that I would ever be living my life in Tennessee. But two years ago I made the journey to the United States from Queensland, Australia with the task of starting a new life ahead of me. It was a daunting task, but one I saw as a challenge, and I jumped at it.

I’ve always believed passion is one of the most important things a person can possess, and for me, I have an inner urge to explore and release my creativity. However, I am always eager to add to the list of things I am passionate about. I did add to that list a year and a half ago when I began working for Corporate Flight Management. I had no experience in aviation at all (private jets and corporate jets – these were just aircraft wealthy businessmen and rockstars rode around in, from what I knew). But, having been bitten by the aviation bug and learning firsthand about this industry, I now know the business for what it really is, and I am happily immersed in an industry that I can call fun and exciting. I am constantly being educated about the business of private aircraft charter and management by highly skilled professionals whom I respect and admire. I feel so fortunate to be working beside them on a daily basis.

I was bitten so hard that I am now learning to fly and will soon be a pilot! Amazingly, I am able to explore this beautiful country and release my creativity by having the opportunity to blog about my travel adventures and my experiences as a student of flight. If you have any interest in travel, flying, or just want to know about the fun side of aviation as well as some unique and luxurious travel destinations, then I’m your girl.

In my travel blogs, I will strive to write about the unique, luxurious, and adventuresome destinations I visit in our corporate aircraft, providing stories detailing my experiences at these locations, so you can learn firsthand what they have to offer. These are sometimes going to be destinations that are not easy to get to when flying commercial. The business of general aviation is not about flying rock stars to resorts in private jets but is one in which flying in private aircraft allows the traveler to get to out-of-the-way destinations without having to spend 12 hours and two commercial flights getting there. Your vacation can start when you step onto the aircraft! Whether you are a Cirrus owner, a jet owner, a charter customer, a flight student, or someone who just wants to know, I will share with you the unique places I have experienced, my flight training stories, and maybe some cool tips along the way.

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My First New Flight

2 Comments | This entry was posted on Oct 05 2009

American Airlines' Boeing 707

I can’t remember the first time I flew in an aircraft.  I joke with people and tell them I may have been born in the back of an aircraft.  My mother doesn’t agree with that and I will defer to her since she was there and remembers that event well.  I grew up hanging out at the airport in the summer when school was out.  As a kid I don’t remember turning anyone down when they asked that great question: you wanna go flying?  My first airline flight was in 1967 on American Airlines.  The flight was from Nashville to Los Angeles on a shiny Boeing 707 to go see cousins and Disneyland.  And in those days, riding on an airline was a big event.  People dressed up like they were going to church.  I remember the stewardess (that was their title in those days) pinning pilot wings on my Sunday shirt.  What a “wow” experience for a seven year old!

My father started flying airplanes before I was born and has the same passion today for flying that he did 55 years ago.  He has imparted many things to me but the one thing that sticks most is a passion for people and this business.  I hope when I have been at it for 50 plus years I can still have the passion that he has.  After 28 years in the business of private aircraft services my passion picks up momentum every year.  From the joy of watching someone take their first solo flight to the celebration when a businessman takes delivery of the new corporate jet – it’s all just “plane” cool.

Our industry has made the world smaller, connecting commerce and cultures in a way no other industry could.  Over the last three decades, innovations in aircraft manufacturing and delivery of services have revolutionized the way people travel and the innovations are really only beginning to take hold.  I believe that we were created to be in touch and in community with each other rather than to go it alone.  Today’s global economy and the advent of electronic communications and social media have not diminished that basic human need – in many ways, those things have increased it.  We can email, facebook, twitter and link in all day; but, at the end of that day, we still want to be face-to-face with those we care about and do business with.  And now, in four hours or less, we can be anywhere in the US.  In less than 24 hours, we can now be anywhere in the world face-to-face with friends, family or business associates.  I can relate hundreds, if not thousands, of stories where that ease of travel has made a profound difference in people’s lives on all levels personal and business, because nothing can replace human contact; the need for it is ingrained into our DNA.

In spite of being in a recession, it has never been more of an exciting time to be in the business of aviation. There is no other business that I know of where you can meet and get to know as many interesting and successful people, work with so many dedicated and passionate people, have so much fun and get paid to do it.  My wife has said, “all you do every day is hang out at the airport and talk about airplanes.”  That about sums it up!

The purpose of this blog is to share the knowledge that I and the great people I work with have gained in an effort to educate and bring value to you about the world of private aircraft travel.  Besides sharing what we know, we also want to learn what we don’t know by listening to the market of conversations.  Additionally we’ve been working on an innovative approach to lowering the cost of private jet travel.  By leveraging the power of social media we believe we can lower the cost by optimizing the use of our aircraft.  Stay tuned and we’ll be demonstrating this to you, the customer.  So, as they say from the flight deck, sit back, relax and enjoy the flight.

Since this is my first time at the “yoke” of social media I need to ask, how is my flying?

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