Cause of the low margins?Operating capital.
Insurance costs
Maintenance costs
Effects of weather on revenue
Just to name a few.
You're competing with video games - why should I sweat thru my shirt and clothing while bouncing around shoulder to shoulder in a traffic pattern in a crappy beat up 152 when I can sit comfortably at home in my boxers flying an F-18 onto a carrier deck in my living room ?
https://www.amazon.com/Savvy-Flight...coding=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=0J6CAD7RWA4RCDWC6FSW
This is an excellent book that contains many types of marketing ideas and actual interviews with flight school owners about how those ideas worked.
Hey!
What are some common ways aviation schools get new students? (Part 141 and part 61)
Is marketing a real challenge?
What are some other difficulties?
One good start is to keep posting and contributing here, and if you earn a good reputation, you may find some prospective students calling you.How about getting new students?
While I like the book, many of the strategies are pretty dated. Lots of paper adverts and yellow pages.
That said, his service-oriented model for students would still be effective.
The first edition came out what, 20 years ago (?) and is quite dated regarding advertising however the customer-service advice is still good. He came out with a second edition last year (that link is to the second edition) where he includes all the updates you'd expect - web pages, social media, etc.
I now own both editions, and they offer really great advice for most of what the OP is asking about - how to attract and retain students, marketing, keeping people coming back after they pass their checkrides, etc.
I have directly applied many of the principles he discusses in my freelance, part-time CFI work and now have more requests for instruction than I have time for.
The biggest challenge? Making money!
How about getting new students?
Cause of the low margins?
Based on my experiences as a SP student, getting students is less of a problem than getting (and keeping!) CFIs. The airlines are hungry for pilots and luring CFIs away from the flight schools. I'm on number 4.
If the flight schools paid a salary with benefits, they would have no problem retaining qualified instructors beyond the first regional offer. They don't do that because the margins dont allow them to do so. It all comes down to money.
Yep.
If the schools paid that, they'd have to charge so much they'd have very few students. Thus would begin a downward spiral.
To make it all work, the schools would have to have other revenue streams with better margins. Aircraft sales and rentals, retail sales, etc. Organizing trips to interesting places, doing photography, drone training, a pilot's lounge with topless waitresses, whatever else they can think of.
Does part 141 schools focus on getting new students locally as well? Or is it more profitable getting new students through contracts fro foreign countries?Social media, word of mouth and once you have part 141 approval training contracts.
To some extent, being a CFI is a distraction from running a flight school. The temptation is too big to sit in the plane yourself with students when you should be out drumming up business working on your part 141 application or making sure you get the best deal on spare parts.
After staff, maintenance, aircraft leases, hangar lease, and gross receipts taxes to the airport, the margin for the actual school itself is pretty slim. The good thing is that CFIs are sort of transient and usually paid on a per hour taught basis. Leaseback planes can usually be found and the airport will give you tiedown space as long as you make them money (fuel flowage, user fees). This allows flight schools with a good marketer to grow rapidly. What many owners seem to forget among all the growth is that they still want to make money. If you lose money or barely break even, you are not going to 'make it up on volume'.
If flight schools were a good business, banks would loan you money to buy one.
Does part 141 schools focus on getting new students locally as well? Or is it more profitable getting new students through contracts fro foreign countries?
Also why so many flight schools do aircraft sales? Is it because they're going out of business or that they're upgrading their gear?
Many flight schools do exactly what you're referring to (except the topless waitresses part). Maybe not so much aircraft sales but they'll sell gas, do maintenance, aerial photography, flight training, charter flights, etc. That's life for an FBO operator at the typical small town airport. It often seems to me that the flight training part of the business is pretty much a break even proposition but if you can keep the airplanes flying and have access to cheap gas and maintenance it can work.
Personally, I think the guys down south where the weather is better for more of the year have things a bit easier than those of us up north. Between thunderstorms, snow, icing, wind, etc. there are a fair amount of days where the airplanes never fly. It sometimes makes it hard to get past the point where the airplanes are flying enough that they're actually making money.
What are the most profitable areas of an FBO and how flight training stack against them?
I do digital marketing services, so occasionally I look into different niches to see what's going on in there. Since I wanted to become I pilot myself back when I was in high school and I knew the costs, naturally I presumed that a student(to a flight school) is really valuable. However, when I looked over a bunch of industry websites, it didn't seem that way.@ritch11 , maybe you could let us know why you're asking these questions and maybe we can give more direct answers. Are you thinking about opening an FBO? Are you already running one? Just curious? Looking to help someone else who's in the business? Your questions are so general that it almost seems like you're trying to get material for a college term paper (which is usually fine, but if that's the case just come out and say it).
I didn't mean "elder people" in an offensive way. Just that in digital space things change left and right, so for someone who isn't regularly paying attention to it all, it can seem unnecessary to dive into.If you want old peoples opinions, you have come to the right place. Lots of opinions, and you'll get all of them.
Yes most flight schools suck when it comes to digital marketing services. Those who dont suck are owned by IT professionals who run them as a hobby.
I do digital marketing services, so occasionally I look into different niches to see what's going on in there. Since I wanted to become I pilot myself back when I was in high school and I knew the costs, naturally I presumed that a student(to a flight school) is really valuable. However, when I looked over a bunch of industry websites, it didn't seem that way.
Most of the sites were old, the navigation was terrible, they had no analytics etc. Not to even mention marketing related stuff. That got me curious.
Why aren't they doing anything about it? Is it that they don't care? Many schools are owned by elder people, perhaps they're not aware? Or is it that getting more students isn't something that they're generally interested in? Of course, I could've messaged 3000 business owners with a spammy email. But there's a better use for their and my time. Why offer someone help if he doesn't need it. The bottom line was - what's their struggle and could I even help them?
I didn't mean "elder people" in an offensive way. Just that in digital space things change left and right, so for someone who isn't regularly paying attention to it all, it can seem unnecessary to dive into.
About owners being IT professionals, I don't think I can agree with that. You don't have to be an IT professional to do digital marketing as most businesses outsource that.
Look at Wayman aviation, they have a strategically built website to lure more students in, plus they're ranking in top of google for bunch of keywords such as flight school in Miami, aviation school in miami etc. and I know for sure that they've used an outside agency.
I was just wondering why there's so many flight schools that don't do this.
Most flight schools are run by horribly inept "businessmen" that know squat about concepts like marketing, and especially, customer service.If you want old peoples opinions, you have come to the right place. Lots of opinions, and you'll get all of them.
Yes most flight schools suck when it comes to digital marketing services. Those who dont suck are owned by IT professionals who run them as a hobby.
I do digital marketing services, so occasionally I look into different niches to see what's going on in there. Since I wanted to become I pilot myself back when I was in high school and I knew the costs, naturally I presumed that a student(to a flight school) is really valuable. However, when I looked over a bunch of industry websites, it didn't seem that way.
Most of the sites were old, the navigation was terrible, they had no analytics, etc. Not to even mention marketing related stuff. That got me curious.
Why aren't they doing anything about it? Is it that they don't care? Many schools are owned by elder people, perhaps they're not aware? Or is it that getting more students isn't something that they're generally interested in? Of course, I could've messaged 3000 business owners with a spammy email. But there's a better use for their and my time. Why offer someone help if he doesn't need it. The bottom line was - what's their struggle and could I even help them?
I didn't mean "elder people" in an offensive way. Just that in digital space things change left and right, so for someone who isn't regularly paying attention to it all, it can seem unnecessary to dive into.
About owners being IT professionals, I don't think I can agree with that. You don't have to be an IT professional to do digital marketing as most businesses outsource that. Look at Wayman aviation, they have a strategically built website to lure more students in, plus they're ranking in top of google for bunch of keywords such as flight school in Miami, aviation school in miami etc. and I know for sure that they've used an outside agency.
I was just wondering why there's so many flight schools that don't do this.
Sounds like Attitude Aviation in Livermore, CA.Yep.
If the schools paid that, they'd have to charge so much they'd have very few students. Thus would begin a downward spiral.
To make it all work, the schools would have to have other revenue streams with better margins. Aircraft sales and rentals, retail sales, etc. Organizing trips to interesting places, doing photography, drone training, a pilot's lounge with topless waitresses, whatever else they can think of.