Training Aircraft Are In Demand, Insights From A Training Aircraft Lessor with David Kolber, RESIDCO

In this week’s AFM Pilot Training Leadership Interview Series AFM’s Managing Director Maximillian Buerger speaks with David Kolber, Director of Aviation Marketing at RESIDCO a leading training aircraft lessor headquartered in the United States.

The conversation covers:

  • Introduction to RESIDCO and its training aircraft leasing offering
  • Latest announcements from RESIDCO
  • Key trends that RESIDCO is seeing in the pilot training industry and the demand for training aircraft
  • Any challenges that RESIDCO is seeing in the industry such the imbalance of the demand and supply dynamic for training aircraft and financial sustainability of the flight training industry
  • Where David see’s the pilot training industry and RESIDCO in 2-3 years

For more information:

You can find all of the AFM.aero Pilot Training Industry Interview Episodes here.

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Flight School Management Software, FlightLogger, Introduces Seamless Integration with Billing and Accounting Platform QuickBooks

FlightLogger is thrilled to announce their latest milestone: a groundbreaking integration with QuickBooks, streamlining the billing processes for flight schools. This integration represents a huge leap forward in simplifying administrative tasks, making billing more efficient and convenient than ever before.

Flight schools around the world rely on QuickBooks for their accounting needs. Recognizing the importance of streamlining billing operations, FlightLogger has seamlessly integrated with QuickBooks to create a symbiotic solution that minimizes administrative burdens for flight training organizations.

With the FlightLogger-QuickBooks integration, the ongoing process of invoicing training and other activities has been meticulously crafted to ensure unparalleled convenience. Once enabled in FlightLogger, the integration works seamlessly to automatically generate invoice drafts whenever a flight activity is logged. This groundbreaking feature not only accelerates the billing process but also ensures accuracy and efficiency in generating invoices.

The heart of this integration lies in cutting-edge AI technology. FlightLogger’s innovative AI system matches each logged activity with the corresponding billing items in a flight school’s QuickBooks account. This eminimizes the need for manual data entry, reducing the potential for errors and discrepancies. Flight school administrators can simply review and verify the generated invoices before transferring them into QuickBooks. In just a few clicks, the invoice is ready to be sent to students or customers, saving valuable time and effort.

“We understand the intricate challenges faced by flight schools in managing their billing processes,” said Kenneth Jeppesen, Founder and CEO at FlightLogger. “Our integration with QuickBooks aims to alleviate these challenges by providing a seamless, automated solution that empowers flight schools to focus on what they do best – delivering exceptional training experiences.”

The FlightLogger-QuickBooks integration is offered as an optional add-on to the FlightLogger software. Flight schools interested in harnessing the power of this innovative solution can reach out to FlightLogger for a personalized demonstration and pricing information.

Source: FlightLogger
Photo Credit: FlightLogger (shown as meta image)

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Textron Announces Latest Appointment for President & CEO of Textron eAviation

Textron Inc. announced that Kriya Shortt, senior vice president, Global Parts & Distribution, at Textron Aviation, has been named President & CEO of Textron eAviation effective August 31, 2023.

Shortt has 27 years of experience with Textron Aviation, holding leadership positions across its sales and marketing and customer service functions. Most recently, she served as senior vice president, Global Parts & Distribution, and president of Able Aerospace and McCauley Propeller Systems. She has also served as senior vice president, Customer Service, senior vice president, Sales, and vice president, International Sales. Shortt will report to Scott C. Donnelly, Textron chairman & CEO.

About Textron

Textron Inc. is a multi-industry company that leverages its global network of aircraft, defense, industrial and finance businesses to provide customers with innovative solutions and services. Textron is known around the world for its powerful brands such as Bell, Cessna, Beechcraft, Pipistrel, Jacobsen, Kautex, Lycoming, E-Z-GO, Arctic Cat, and Textron Systems.

Source: Textron
Photo Credit: Textron

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FLYING Media Group Acquires AirlineGeeks Digital Media Site

FLYING Media Group has acquired AirlineGeeks, a digital media site that offers news, reviews, and content about the airline industry. AirlineGeeks delivers the latest airline and aviation news around the globe in real time, offering a unique vantage point for the “AvGeek.” With more than 25 contributors, AirlineGeeks is trafficked by aviation enthusiasts, as well as airline industry executives and analysts.

AirlineGeeks is the 20th aviation-related brand that FLYING Media Group has purchased in the past two years in a strategy to expand the world’s leading aviation content platform and serve an audience that spans from light sport to space and vintage to frontier.

“As a young boy, I fell in love with aviation while watching airliners take off and land near my house in Tennessee,” said Craig Fuller, CEO of FLYING Media Group (FMG). “I would make my parents drive me to Atlanta’s Hartsfield Airport (KATL) to watch the commercial aircraft and stood in awe as they seemed to defy the laws of gravity. I am an AvGeek myself and can’t wait to build on the AirlineGeeks brand.”

FMG has been very active in acquiring brands that service the general aviation industry. While commercial aviation and GA are often thought of as distinct and separate markets, they have become more interdependent in recent years.

Commercial pilots often start their careers as GA pilots, and many of them retain their love for flying in small GA aircraft their entire lives. GA is also a test bed for new technologies and airframes that eventually make their way into commercial applications. With the emergence of air taxis and urban air mobility offerings that will blend commercial  with personal aviation, the two markets have never been more connected.

FMG is not just focused on the enthusiast side of the market but plans to use AirlineGeeks (airlinegeeks.com) as a foundation to build a premier business-to-business data, news, and market intelligence platform for the commercial aviation industry.

The global market size for the airline industry is more than $840 billion and is expected to grow by a compound annual rate of nearly 4 percent over the next decade.

“As people around the world become wealthier, they wish to travel,” said Fuller. “Commercial flight is unmatched in its ability to link the world and offer experiences that are only possible because of the efficiency of the global airline industry. Additionally, as supply chains continue to build resilience into their operations, global air cargo will experience exponential growth over the next few decades. This is what’s driving fast growth on an unprecedented scale.”

About FLYING Media Group

FLYING Media Group is the largest aviation media provider in the world, with content spanning 20 aviation-related brands, including FLYING, Plane & Pilot, KITPLANES, AVweb.com, AirlineGeeks, and Aircraft For Sale. With an audience of nearly 3 million monthly visitors and subscribers, the broad reach of the FMG platform is unmatched by any other aviation media source.

Source: FLYING Press Release

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Boeing Shares Information On How Pilot and Technician Outlook Report Is Developed And Used

Early in 2023 Boeing released its Pilot and Technician Outlook (PTO)– a 20-year forecast of global demand for new aviation personnel, including pilots, technicians and cabin crew. The PTO is developed, refined and published each year by Global Services’ Strategy team in partnership with various stakeholders and subject matter experts across the enterprise – but there’s much more to it than updating numbers every 12 months.

To better understand what goes in to creating the outlook, Boeing asked Tina Lewis, a senior manager in Global Services Strategy and one of the architects of the PTO, to explain how the report is generated, the importance of the data, and how it is used within Boeing and externally.

Tell us about the team that puts together the Pilot and Technician Outlook (PTO). 

The PTO is a joint effort between our Strategy team, the Global Services Training Solutions business, and subject matter experts in Commercial Airplanes and Global Services Sales and Marketing.

We also collaborate with former and current pilots as well as mechanics to harvest customer insights and expertise. Working together, we identify changing industry requirements, evolving market trends, and the competitive landscape. We also use external industry research, leveraging benchmarks and data analysis to build out robust forecast assumptions.

Why does Boeing produce this outlook and who uses the data?

For more than two decades, the PTO has been the aviation industry’s leading forecast in global commercial personnel demand – providing airlines, suppliers and the wider aviation community a resource to track the evolution of market trends over a 20-year period.

  • Within Boeing, the PTO is shared broadly to support market shaping. We also use the forecasts to aid in developing long-range business plans and influencing our growth strategy.
  • Externally, the PTO helps build confidence with industry stakeholders and constituents. We also share our data with government agencies including the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), regulators, and airline customers to help with their own growth strategies.

How does Boeing determine data and trends that are published in the forecast? 

When developing the PTO, we consider what is currently happening in the market in terms of regulatory changes, as well as the demand for future aircraft.

  • Fleet growth and natural attrition play a role in determining future demand for pilots, technicians and cabin crew.
  • For pilots, we also look at pilot movement to larger airplanes and from first officer to captain ranks. Technician demand also factors in airplane age and utilization, while cabin crew forecasting considers regulatory requirements and cabin configurations.

We also create more detailed training and simulator market forecasts for our internal stakeholders to aid resource and investment planning. This includes outlooks for services such as such as pilot provisioning — or what many see as “pilot for hire” — as well as forecast demand for new simulators, simulator data packages, hardware and support.

What data sources or metrics inform the outlook? 

The Commercial Market Outlook is the main data source for our outlook. But before we get to modeling, we use primary and secondary research to collect data that helps shape our assumptions.

  • Many of our colleagues pass along firsthand information from industry stakeholders based on conversations at events like EAA Airventure Oshkosh and the World Airline Training Symposium.
  • Our team also uses third-party publications and media for secondary insights into personnel challenges and shortages that validates much of the primary research.

What challenges or limitations do you encounter when forecasting?

One of our biggest challenges is the availability of data. Information for some regions is not easily accessible. This makes it difficult to perform the right checks and balances against our forecast. We forecast future demand and not the current supply of personnel. We’ve developed viewpoints on the supply side using readily available U.S. data and other information shared directly from our stakeholders. Yet for other regions, it can be much more difficult to acquire credible data sources to validate our assumptions.

Source: Boeing News Now (BNN)
Photo Credit: Boeing

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Simulator Manufacturer, Elite, Announces First Citation Mustang FAA AATD Level Simulator Sold to Kenya

Kenya, with its stunning coastline along the Indian Ocean and over 53 million inhabitants, has a thriving aviation industry. The aviation sector is a major contributor to Kenya’s economy as well as a key enabler in its future development as an economic leader in Africa. Just a few numbers: In 2019, Kenya registered its highest-ever number of air traffic passengers, with over 12 million annual passengers, of which 7 million were from outside the country. The most common airports are Jomo Kenyatta International Airport at Nairobi and Moi International Airport at Mombasa.

“This FAA AATD level Cessna Citation Mustang simulator, featuring Garmin G1000 instrumentation with three screens is the very first delivery for us“, says Mr René Huddlestone, sales director at ELITE Flight Simulation Solutions AG in Switzerland. “Our customer specifically requested Kenyan visual scenery and navigation data, which the engineers at ELITE conscientiously created.”

There was also state-of-the art technology added to this flight simulator: a 2.3 m diameter DOME visual system which provides a complete solution with a large fully encompassing field of view. With a 12-month on the simulator, the staff at EASA Kenya are now in a situation to fly complex flight maneuvers in a safe and cost-effective environment.

The end user is the East African School of Aviation (EASA) Kenya at Nairobi Wilson airport, which is used mainly by general aviation traffic. It is situated only two and a half miles by road south of the business district of Nairobi, the capital of Kenya. This airport is rich in aviation history and even served as Royal Air Force base at one point.

“Thanks to our local dealer ‘Geoscintex’ the sale process was very smooth and to the fullest satisfaction of all parties involved. The Mustang is the most nimble of the Citation Jets and is nestled in the ‘Very Light Jet’ category. The easy handling at low speed and its maneuverability makes it an excellent traveller, especially for those, who decided to own their very first jet. These are truly exciting times for Kenyan aviation, as more and more FTO’s and business jet operators discover the benefits of operating their own flight simulator,” adds Mr. René Huddlestone.

About ELITE

ELITE Simulation Solutions AG is a global provider of IFR training software, flight controls and flight training devices, with over 450 certified simulators sold worldwide since 1987. ELITE builds and supports EASA, FAA, CASA, ANAC and DGCA (among others) certified flight training devices and offers customer-specific developments to both private and government entities. Our hallmark is quality and our creed is excellent customer service. ELITE offices are located in Zürich, Switzerland and Orlando, Florida, USA.

Source: ELITE Press Release
Photo Credit: ELITE

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