Any info on Boutique air?

Rental PC-12s and Caravans? Never heard of such a thing. Unless we are talking charter brokering.

He means Leases. There are only a few of these available outside of private or corporate owners. So the same airplanes are available for lease,
 
Yes many of these revolving door 135 EAS operators do not own their aircraft, so aircraft come off lease at say pacific wings and then go to Seaport then boutique.

Further, there's really only a couple of these leasing outfits. There isn't exactly "downward price pressure" on these leases. I saw a proposal once that was $12K/mo for a Caravan that was a fixed monthly and separate from an engine reserves payment.
 
Seapot was paying 20k a month for one of its Caravans. I saw the lease and I regularly saw the bill payments. The stupid was strong there.
 
Further, there's really only a couple of these leasing outfits. There isn't exactly "downward price pressure" on these leases. I saw a proposal once that was $12K/mo for a Caravan that was a fixed monthly and separate from an engine reserves payment.
I don't have numbers for the one (of our 5) machines we lease, and if I did they would be confidential, but from what I recall when we did discuss numbers that seems kind of steep. Was this like a recent model EX?
 
Further, there's really only a couple of these leasing outfits. There isn't exactly "downward price pressure" on these leases. I saw a proposal once that was $12K/mo for a Caravan that was a fixed monthly and separate from an engine reserves payment.
How did you end up learning that info?
 
How did you end up learning that info?

As a consultant, I looked into the feasibility of replacing a King Air service with Caravans as part of a M&A deal to acquire a floundering operation. My client eventually elected not to do it. The operation since folded.


Want to see more than you ever want to know about the business side of aviation? Become a CPA with an aviation focus. I'm not one, but those people know everything about everything.
 
I'd like to bring this conversation back to life and hear from someone who's worked there recently. How's the training and do you get much say in your placement?
 
EAS is an ugly thing. It's the lure of easy money for those who really don't know the aviation scene.

The only way EAS works is if there is some kind of significant geographical barrier between the passengers and the next step in their journey. Cape Air is a great example...because, water. Living 90 minutes up the Interstate from where "SuperMegaAirlines" flies out of, not so much.

You need to be living in the butt end of nowhere these days to not have access in two hours driving time to some kind of air transportation, and probably "major league" at that. If you do, that's fine, but that doesn't mean you and the three other people who live out there are enough to support air service, even with EAS subsidies. I don't mean to sound cruel, but that's the way it is.

As someone pointed out, the guaranteed profit margin is slim, the airport managements are always looking to replace you with jets (because everyone wants jets, whether they can support them or not), and there is always someone out there who thinks they can do it cheaper. And honestly, the airplanes are too expensive for the routes. The cities involved with EAS almost always develop a hate/hate relationship with the incumbent carrier, leading them to root for ANYONE else to pick up the contract at the next cycle. And the cities have an inordinate amount of say who gets the contract, or better yet, who doesn't.

You need turbines, and that means money. That soaks up all your money. That means you're hiring ground staff at minimum wage, because that's all you can afford. The good news is minimum wage ground staff gives minimum customer service, which does wonders for repeat business.

I worked EAS back in the days before the earth cooled. At an out of the way town, that was 2.5 hours from someplace a major flew, we got, on average, 3 passengers a departure. We made another stop en-route to "ReallyBigHubsburg", and we rarely had more than 7 people get off and airplane built for 19.

"Well, derp, Richman, why didn't you use a smaller airplane?" Because the EAS contracts specify the type equipment, and pressurization was one of the requirements. This route could have been EASILY serviced with a 99 or even a Twin Otter. If you have one engine burp, or you take bird strike....poof goes your profit.

Is there money in EAS? Yup, but it ain't from running airplanes. It's in monopoly fuel providers, aircraft leasing companies, de-ice fluid suppliers, sign makers, officer furniture rental outfits, human resources/payroll management services and expensive "management consultants/brand management firms".

Basically everything BUT running airplanes.

Funny story. So I was looking to make some extra scratch during my tenure at an EAS outfit. Airport was out in the plains. The cost of living was actually very modest and the carrier actually paid above average, but there wasn't much going on. So I go to the airport manager and see if they need someone to cut the grass.

Turns out, "airport lawnmower" is a HIGHLY coveted job. County job, full benes and paid about twice what I was making. He told me that not only was the job highly coveted, but you had to be "juiced in" to get it (meaning you had to know someone in the county). And it wasn't just this place...EVERY airport I've ever been based out of has been like that.

Richman
 
Is there money in EAS? Yup, but it ain't from running airplanes. It's in monopoly fuel providers, aircraft leasing companies, de-ice fluid suppliers, sign makers, officer furniture rental outfits, human resources/payroll management services and expensive "management consultants/brand management firms".

Basically everything BUT running airplanes.

I'm told the reason Great Lakes hasn't completely folded under is that the guy that owns the airline also owns as much of his supply chain as he possibly can. The airline is just the money intake for everything else.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Pro
 
I looked over some of the requirements for boutique air yesterday with the life and several of their bases we are interested in moving to and I meet men's. I would like to know more about training and quality of life in the Dallas-Fort Worth, LAX, Phoenix, or even Atlanta bases. What the likelihood is of a new hiring getting placed in either of those.

Any other information will be good to know as well.

They are rumored to be opening a BWI base soon.
 
I have been meaning to get this off my chest about Bro-tique. They had a funny incident in MSS. They outbid Cape Air on their EAS route from MSS-ALB. So they guaranteed the committee overlooking the selection of airlines that if picked as winners they will offer flights to BWI from ALB for $89. Well long story short, the company now says that they will have to charge somewhere in the range of $100+ one way. Have fun riding in a more "luxurious airplane that flies higher and faster" with 2 to 3 times the price Cape Air was offering.

Now I had my captain buddy who is based in MSS and was at the final hearing when the committee let the respective companies bring up their points. Boutique air paid people from the local town to say ridiculous, untrue things about Cape Air. There are quotes in the newspaper that has them reading from a script. MSS was a very efficient run airport by Cape Air, but lets see how many people pay for a cooler looking "executive" seated airplane.

http://www.watertowndailytimes.com/...estinations-20161209&?gallerydate=2016-12-04Z


Stop the presses! Article says Cape Air 402s have lavatories?!? :aghast:
 
Stop the presses! Article says Cape Air 402s have lavatories?!? :aghast:
A lot of Lears have Lavs, whether or not anyone would ever use them is up for debate. I worked at a place that had an ass%@$# captain that would drop a deuce in it just so he could tell the FO to clean it.
 
Back
Top