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On the Record with
STUART ORAN, PRESIDENT & CEO, UAL CORP.'S
UNITED BIZJET HOLDINGS
United Pledges Top-Notch Frax Services
United Bizjet Holdings has made major waves this year, not just
with its heavyweight entry into the business of fractional ownership
programs with $4 billion of bizjet orders, but because it is owned
by UAL Corp., parent of United Airlines.
The Chicago-based company (which will announce its official name
in the near future) has placed orders and options on 185 Falcons
and Gulfstreams, and plans to buy smaller aircraft too, aiming
to have a fleet of as many as 250 by 2005. It may also launch
a corporate shuttle program using larger jets.
The UAL Corp. move into fractionals, says NBAA president Jack
Olcott, is "the ultimate validation of our role in the national
transportation system." It is, he told Show News,
"a tremendous validation of business aviation."
"We are going to establish a luxury brand," says UBJ
president and CEO Stuart Oran, offering "the highest possible
level of product quality and service." UBJ will offer the
most luxurious and business-friendly service in the fractional
field, he says. Oran is a former senior VP for international affairs
with UAL; he is now focused on the North American market.
The new fractional provider is talking intensively to potential
customers, although serious order-taking won't commence until
later this autumn, Oran says. UBJ operations will start in April
2002, with four to seven aircraft.
Pilot hiring, looking ahead to a cadre of about 1,000 when the
UBJ fleet is at full strength, will get underway in earnest in
the near future. UBJ figures to have about 100 pilots on the payroll
when it starts service next spring.
UBJ's initial 100-Falcon order comprised a mix of 30 Falcon 2000s
and 2000EXs, and 10 Falcon 900EXs firm, with options on 10 additional
900EXs and 50 more 2000EXs. The parties are discussing an additional
order for 25 firm and 25 option Falcon 50EXs, and firming of some
Falcon options, although this might now depend on the recovery
of airline fortunes after the terrorist attacks on America.
UBJ has also ordered seven Gulfstream IV-SPs and five Gulfstream
Vs, with options for nine GIV-SPs and 14 GV-SPs. The total value
of the UBJ order and options is approximately $1.25 billion, Gulfstream
says.
Oran says he expects to be buying smaller aircraft from at least
one more manufacturer, and that travel on the Boeing BBJ or Airbus
Corporate Jetliner may eventually be offered on a UBJ corporate
shuttle basis.
He declines to say whether he was rebuffed in early efforts to
acquire Bombardier aircraft for the UBJ fleet. Bombardier has
only recently reversed a policy of not selling to operators that
compete with its own Flexjet fractional program.
All UBJ aircraft will be equipped with TCAS and enhanced GPWS,
and their interiors furnished with top-of-the-line amenities and
the best available communications and work-facilitating technology,
Oran says.
UBJ aircraft completions will be done by the manufacturers.
UBJ will have no special arrangements with United Airlines for
maintenance and other services. "We are not going to be doing
any of the maintenance in-house. It is more effective to have
service done by OEMs and line maintenance done by FBOs,"
he told Show News. "UBJ is a UAL Corp. investment and, although
a sister company to United Airlines, is a completely separate
entity."
UBJ, he says, has been busily hiring "heavy hitters"
for its new fractional team. Besides Oran, staff include Tom Davis,
executive VP and COO; Don Strench, senior VP and CFO; Bob Beleson,
marketing chief; Noell Michaels, senior VP for sales; and Steve
Fushelberger, marketing communications VP.
As to whether UBJ will be able to crack a market that already
has half a dozen established players, and where observers are
predicting an inevitable downturn, Oran promises to be competitive
"in everything." And the fact that UBJ is a totally
new, unknown name? "So was Lexus," he says.
-Rich Piellisch
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