Depends a bit on who you want to attract.
Many of the smaller bizjets and turboprops have to make a fuel stop right around that part of the country when going coast to coast. Most will go into Fargo, but fuel at the Jet center tends to be $1.50 more than at surrounding airports. So if you want to get some of that business, make sure that you :
- have a competitive fuel price, accept fuel cards like Colt, UVair etc. consider matching the card price with your own stock.
- have an adequate fuel truck and trained staff to refuel bizjets. Be prepared to show your staffs training credentials.
- manage your presence on fuel price websites and allways have current guaranteed prices
- provide exceptional service to those folks, have a golf-cart with a canopy available, have your lineman greet them at the plane in a friendly and professional manner
- if you get a pre-notification by someone coming through, make sure every staff member knows who is coming and what they have requested.
- keep a supply of ice-bags on hand. Work out a deal with a sandwich place in town to deliver a tray on short notice.
- consider getting a courtesy car, establish policies that favor it remaining in one piece (copy of drivers license, have borrowers sign an agreement)
- advertise your services on airnav and foreflight. I noticed your company currently only has a 'courtesy ad' on airnav, that way anyone who pulls up JMS has no way of knowing whether you provide rental cars, courtesy car etc. Manage the comments section, right now all the comments on airnav are complimentary, but if you get a negative comment, represent your businesses side in a professional manner. Try to run the place in a way that you dont get negative comments in the first place, get cell numbers for the pilots on sign in, have your staff report any customers who are unhappy about anything so you can follow-up before the pilot builds up enough steam to put angry postings on the review sites.
- dont rip people off just because they fly a jet. Offer a reasonable price on deicing services, lav service, call-out fees etc. Just because they rolled onto your ramp doesn't mean that they are your hostage and have to pay whatever you dream up.
If you want to attract us small fry:
- have a competitive price on 100LL, advertise it on airnav, 100ll.com, foreflight
- dont ignore us because you think you can only sell us 20gallons.
- make the airport a no grouchyness zone
- offer the option of 'storm stack' for transient pilots even if they dont pay for overnight hangaring. Have them sign that they agree to you moving their plane if a boomer is heading towards the airport and offer to stack their planes into a hangar, space permitting. Dont charge for that service as it costs you next to nothing to provide it, but it'll get people singing your praises if you do.
- never ever move someones aircraft if they didn't mark off that option on the sign in sheet. Some aircraft owners are really neurotic about their aircraft, you could grope their wife and they wouldn't care, but you hook a tug to their aircraft and they scream bloody murder.
I know it is a small place and you can't provide 24/7 on-site service. Set up your phone system in a way that you can forward calls to your cell number or that of a trusted employee from an auto-attendant. Consider waiving you call-out fee with a minimum fuel purchase. Occasionally, folks will have to make unplanned fuel stops due to higher than anticipated headwinds. They will buy a fair amount of fuel and a happy customer who 'didn't even have to pay a call out fee' when he landed at midnight will tell lots of others about it. If you or your lineman come out for a call-out, light up the FBO building and offer the pax to hang out in the FBO while you take care of the plane.
Oh, and it is Jamestown, ND. Have a couple of Parkas available in the FBO so people not familiar with the climate dont freeze to death on the way from the airport to the Pizza Ranch
.