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On the Record
with
GEORGE OLIVER, PRESIDENT, GE ENGINE SERVICES
Services have
long been a driver of growth at GE Aircraft Engines, and that aspect
of the business is thriving under new GE Engine Services president
George Oliver.
Revenues at
Engine Services are expected to grow to $5.5 billion to $6 billion
from $5 billion last year, producing fully 50% of the turnover at
GEAE. "We're being conservative, but we'll get double digit
growth. It depends on the economy," Oliver told
Show News.
The backlog
of service contracts with airlines to look after their engines was
$18 billion at the end of last year, and Oliver expects to see it
increase by 20% this year.
"What we
have done well is that after getting a good footprint on our engines
globally, in the last year or so we have become proficient on those
made by our competitors," Oliver explains. This strategy began
when GE found that airlines wanted their mixed fleets looked after
in a one-stop shop, but it has since taken on a life of its own.
GE's Selma plant
in Brazil, for example, has now become a recognized center of excellence
for repair and overhaul of Pratt & Whitney JT8D engines. "It
has become extremely successful," said Oliver. "It is
operating in a tough market that is on a downturn, but our volumes
have gone up."
Engine Services
also has expertise on Rolls-Royce RB211s and PW JT9s in Wales, and
the PW4000 in its joint venture with Malaysia Airlines. "We're
driving our technology in a broad way to better serve the customers,
and we're getting incremental growth-mainly on Pratt engines,"
he notes.
But Services
doesn't stop there.
"The way
we drive our continued growth and the continued strength of our
business is around three areas-technical and operational excellence
and really pushing to exceed our customers' expectations,"
says Oliver. What that really means is:
- A focus
on technology with the introduction of a number of new products
such as the CFM56-3 core upgrade recently launched with a $300
million order by Southwest Airlines. Kits are available to upgrade
CFM56s and CF6s in various ways, and the CF34 for regional jets
will be next in line for an infusion of technology.
- Long-term
service and maintenance contracts are being strengthened and
extended longer term, allowing technology improvements to drive
down the cost of ownership to the airline.
"We are
using our technical strength and our financial strength to reinvest
in products that better serve the airlines, and our Six Sigma processes
to drive improvements in our own performance that we call striving
for operational excellence."
Oliver notes
that Engine Services scored significant gains in the last year in
operational excellence, using Six Sigma and digitization to improve
many aspects of its interaction with customers, from deliveries
of everything from parts to invoices.
Among the
advances in other products:
- On Wing
Support: "This is a diamond in the rough," says Oliver,
but one that is scoring higher customer satisfaction than any
other business. GE's "Swat" teams support any customer,
24 hours a day, anywhere in the world, and the effect has been
twofold: in many cases they minimize the cost GE would incur
in warranties, yet as a marketing tool they are adding new business.
"So we can respond, get high grades from the customer on
a service, manage well within our warranty budget, and then
we get significant incremental opportunities as we serve those
customers," said Oliver. "It has become a quick, low-cost
solution to what they might have had to do with those engines
on the spot."
- MCPH-maintenance
cost-per-hour contracts. These contracts have become totally
flexible so the customer builds what he wants from a menu that
includes engines, components, accessories, inventory, and leased
engines.
- Engine
leasing. "A big growth business," Oliver says. "The
inventory is constantly changing, but we have the biggest engine
leasing business in the industry." And among the 300 or
so GE-leased engines are a healthy number of Pratt and Rolls
products.
- Inventory
management. Engine Services has broken out the materials service
business as a separate unit to oversee that function throughout
and remove any glitches. "There's a lot of activity going
on here, a lot of airlines have signed up for inventory management,"
Oliver says.
- Remote
diagnostics. GE Engine Services now monitors about 3,000 engines.
"There is tremendous value to be had by seeing potential
maintenance issues ahead of time, being able to schedule them
and minimize the cost," Oliver explains. "We've got
a huge technology development going on now around diagnostics,
and this area will have significant growth going forward."
By John Morris
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