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Rob Seaman Creating Client-Focused FBOs

Customers and clients are two very different things

Written by Rob Seaman   
It’s tough to run an FBO in Canada. Customers can be fickle, market influences can change at a moment’s notice, seasonality may influence demand, and sometimes folks just aren’t travelling like they used to. Merely getting a customer to try your operation is one big challenge; turning that customer into a client is another. But despite the challenges, some 300 facilities in this country offer some form of FBO service and vie for a share of the market.

The general and business aviation market is enjoying growth and development almost akin to the levels last seen in the mid-90s. But the market is different now than it was then, and the methods of getting and building business have changed too. Ask operators how they are attracting business today and what is different from a few years ago, and you will get many different answers. Some will relate to regional influences, and these become highly personal and unique to the site. That aside, there are some basic issues that affect just about all FBOs and that almost all operators agree on.

The business of running an FBO has matured and evolved even from three years ago. The ways to make money, the things that are or are not charged for, and the overall operational considerations are more complex than before. These changes influence how the businesses are operated how successful they can be financially.

The biggest challenge to running a Canadian FBO comes from the sheer size of this country and the relatively small client base. We depend to a great extent on non-resident users of our services. In some cases geography makes it a bit easier to be successful - being the first point of entry or last on the way out for transocean or transborder traffic provides something of captive client base, like that old highway sign saying “Last service station for 50 miles.” So when international business travel is up, FBO locations adjacent to the border or near the coast tend to see more business. FBOs in these areas tend to have higher-volume fuel sales but also face a more fluid and less predictable sales base. They must staff to handle the potential traffic – whether it materializes or not. Full service at these FBOs must be available as and when needed, and clients are seldom willing to wait for a call-out.

The weather in this country also drives the need for FBOs to provide hangar space for both resident and transient operators, unlike those blessed to operate in warmer climates. So the service demand goes much further than ramp and FBO lounge and pilot facilities. Today it means not only building and maintaining hangars, but also finding and managing the financial resources to ensure that their operations meet the needs and codes of many taskmasters. Time was when simply building the hangar, putting on a reasonable door, running a bit of heat, having a good roof and renting the space was enough. But since Skyservice in Toronto rolled out the first white hangar (floors, ceilings and walls all fresh and smart in white) in the early ’90s, the bar for support amenities has been rising. Clients have come to expect white-glove service, even in the hangar, and this can be the difference between getting or not getting long-term business.

Keeping these facilities clean and neat takes people and financial resources. And environmental concerns can be very daunting today – not to mention liabilities and long-term assurances for total compliance at local, regional, provincial and even federal levels. Recent changes in fire codes at some airports have resulted in the demand for sophisticated, deluge fire suppression systems – again a cost to be borne by the FBO.

With the vast number and variety of aircraft in use today, even a modest FBO hangar must offer multiple tow-bars, multiple tugs capable of providing correct draw-bar ratios for everything from a BBJ to 172, O2 and various power carts, lav carts and customer support vehicles – again all at a cost and all requiring maintenance and upkeep. And increasingly now, FBOs will face new and evolving security procedures and protocols – along with the need to manage and maintain these for tenants, transients, staff and, of course, the various authority levels from local airport to national government bodies. The FBO will have to front the cost, and downstream the users and clients will pay somewhere, somehow.

Not so many years ago, the big make-or-break issue in FBO success was fuel cost. In the late ’80s and early ’90s, it was not uncommon to see line crew openly trying to steal business from a competitor – and a few cents a litre could make all the difference between getting a sale or not. Tricks of the time included getting there first with a refueler, tracing tail numbers and sending an invitation, following an aircraft as it taxied in and numerous other direct and indirect methods. Some FBOs refused to play the price war and compensated by developing nice facilities with amenities that mirrored their larger, more successful US counterparts. The shift to emphasize service proved itself over time as international business travellers enjoyed a new level of support, focused more on them and their needs and less on simply being a basic fuel and tech stop. Even small sites found that offering a few amenities could make all the difference. At some airports, the operator with the nicest building, some amenities and a staff stressing customer service found that even with a higher price for fuel, it was getting the lion’s share of the local market and soundly beating its competitors...