It looks as though my time at
Plane & Pilot is coming to an end, and that’s not for any reason other than business decisions sometimes defy logic and great brands get acquired by companies that seem to have missed why they’re great. It’s the modern age, and I hate it as much as you do.
When I came to
Plane & Pilot after 20 years at
Flying, before it was owned by the current company, it was after a series of rancorous disagreements over control of the brand. I couldn’t in good conscience let a couple of stiff suits who knew nothing about aviation and apparently even less about audiences call the shots.
So, when the chance to rebuild the brand at
Plane & Pilot came my way, I jumped at it. I had complete editorial control at the new place, and it needed a complete makeover, so I did what I do—I stopped listening to the guys who loved their spreadsheets way too much and created a brand from the ashes of the former magazine. My goal was to make the new Plane & Pilot everything that I wanted to read. There’d be no same old. Instead, I’d seek to address topics that no else dared to, I’d aspire to give voice to opposing opinions and to share stories that made you cringe or cry, or both.
I wanted the stuff to be fun and challenging, and to deal with big ideas and to stand in opposition to the orthodoxy that all too often controls aviation content, making the age-old and, in my view, cowardly mistake of catering to advertisers instead of readers. I’ve always written for readers, because what advertisers really want, anyway, is a great audience. And you are that. We’re not alone in having a great readers, but we are alone in the loyalty you show us. Our metrics are off the charts. You read what we print, both on paper and on the web. And it’s because offending people isn’t the threat. Boring people is.
And you sometimes have disagreed with me. I wouldn’t want it any other way. But you have always done so respectfully. And I’ve listened, mostly. You said you were sick of pandemic coverage. Got it. I was too. You loved our coverage of scary, emerging trends. For good reason, too. You got it.
And in the end, I’ll be honest, I was won over by your kindness, your thoughtfulness, your honesty and your faith in the fact that what we do, fly around in small airplanes going places groundbound mortals will never get to go, is the greatest personal journey of discovery any of us will ever take. May you continue with that journey as long as the tailwinds continue to propel us on our way. Which in my book, is forever. And, thank you.
Isabel Goyer
A commercial pilot, editor-in-Chief Isabel Goyer has been flying for more than 40 years, with hundreds of different aircraft in her logbook and thousands of hours. An award-winning aviation writer, photographer and editor, Ms. Goyer led teams at Sport Pilot, Air Progress and Flying before coming to Plane & Pilot in 2015.