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#1
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In article . net,
"Tom Conner" wrote: "Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message oups.com... I read somewhere that NetJets lost $143M in 2005. I always felt that offering fractional ownership of a plane for business purposes was not a sustainable business model. Corporate private flying is primarily ego driven (must have plane - makes me look important), not business driven. For most companies it is an unnecessary expense, so they will eventually drop it. The next aviation business failure appears to be the idea that very light jets can be used as business transportation between small airports. Maybe, maybe not. The next few years will tell. In some cases, perhaps. But in most cases, business is done face to face. Corporate/private aviation is the only way to assure privacy and timely contact. Airlines and their schedules are too unreliable. Corporate executives that have the authority to make deals happen are too valuable, highly compensated and their time is too valuable to have them sitting around an airline gate where they can be recognized, waiting for a plane that may or may not arrive and depart on time. I worked for NetJets 12 years ago as a dispatcher. I saw where jets went and who was onboard. I knew who was going, but not who they were meeting. It was only after a deal was reported in the WSJ that I learned who the target in a merger/acquisition was. |
#2
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I worked for NetJets 12 years ago as a dispatcher. I saw where jets went
and who was onboard. I knew who was going, but not who they were meeting. It was only after a deal was reported in the WSJ that I learned who the target in a merger/acquisition was. Dispatchers didn't talk to each other? Jose -- The monkey turns the crank and thinks he's making the music. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#3
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I worked for NetJets 12 years ago as a dispatcher. I saw where jets went
and who was onboard. I knew who was going, but not who they were meeting. It was only after a deal was reported in the WSJ that I learned who the target in a merger/acquisition was. Dispatchers didn't talk to each other? ? |
#4
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Dispatchers didn't talk to each other?
? If you know who's going where from your airport, and the (NetJet) dispatchers from the other airports know who's going where from their respective airports, much could be inferred by putting the info together. Jose -- The monkey turns the crank and thinks he's making the music. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#5
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In article ,
Jose wrote: Dispatchers didn't talk to each other? ? If you know who's going where from your airport, and the (NetJet) dispatchers from the other airports know who's going where from their respective airports, much could be inferred by putting the info together. That's not the way the system is set up. All NetJet pilots in North America talk to NetJet dispatchers in the North American operations center. Nowadays, the dispatchers are grouped by aircraft type/fleet (Citation X's, Falcon 2000's, Citation Excel's, etc.). Back when I did it, NetJets had less than 100 aircraft (Citation IIS's, Citation III's, Hawker 1000's). The day and night shifts were each staffed by three dispatchers and a supervisor. Graveyard shift had only one dispatcher. We all had access to any aircraft's information. The crew used to contact operations via telephone for a release and trip/pax information prior to departure and again upon landing with flight numbers . Now they communicate via Blackberry's. There are separate operations centers for Europe and the Middle East. |
#6
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We all had access to any aircraft's information.
A gold mine. Nobody put two and two together? Jose -- The monkey turns the crank and thinks he's making the music. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
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