This session reviewed the most consequential shifts in U.S. business and general aviation during 2025 and translated them into clear marketing implications for 2026. The discussion converged on three dominant industry forces—
- Safety perception
- Governance constraints
- AI/automation
With a fourth emerging theme: Sustainability and the collapse of the electric aviation hype cycle in favor of pragmatic migration paths. While safety statistics remained stable, heightened visibility and media amplification reshaped public perception. Governance disruptions (ATC staffing, TSA pullbacks, regional airport impacts) reinforced the strategic value of business aviation and regional mobility. On the marketing side, the team confirmed that email has overtaken video as the highest-ROI channel, not as a cold prospecting gimmick but as the backbone of holding patterns, sales enablement, and credibility-building. LinkedIn remains critical—especially through opinionated executive voices—while video has shifted from a standalone tactic to a supporting ingredient. The takeaway for 2026 is disciplined integration: fewer shiny objects, more systems thinking, sharper positioning, and sustained focus on credibility assets like case studies, testimonials, and buyer-decision content.
0:00–1:30 — Session framing Purpose of the workshop: key aviation and marketing learnings from 2025 and strategic recommendations for 2026.
1:30–3:30 — The “rule of three” industry forces Introduction of the three dominant 2025 forces: safety, governance, AI/automation.
3:30–5:15 — Safety: reality vs perception Accident rates unchanged, but increased video and media exposure amplify fear and shape buyer psychology. 5:15–7:30 — Governance & regional aviation impacts ATC instability, TSA withdrawal from regional airports, and why this benefits business aviation and regional air mobility.
7:30–9:00 — AI & automation: from hype to utility Shift from “should we use AI?” to “how do we use it effectively?” across underwriting, operations, and marketing.
9:00–13:30 — Electric aviation reality check Electric and eVTOL enthusiasm collapses under economic, infrastructure, and regulatory realities; migration strategies win.
13:30–15:30 — Aircraft market conditions Used GA and business aircraft selling rapidly; branding now outweighs listing polish for many brokers.
15:30–17:30 — Marketing channel reset 2025 validation of LinkedIn and video, but recognition of saturation and declining differentiation.
17:30–21:30 — Email rises to #1 for 2026 Email’s strength across the full sales cycle: prospecting (carefully), holding patterns, sales support, referrals.
21:30–25:30 — AI-enabled email leverage AI dramatically reduces list scrubbing, segmentation, and personalization friction—raising ROI.
25:30–31:00 — LinkedIn strategy that actually works Founder/executive posts, contrarian but professional viewpoints, and why company pages underperform alone.
31:00–34:30 — How to be contrarian without self-sabotage Pick concepts as villains, not people; stay credible, adult, and strategically provocative.
34:30–38:30 — Case studies & testimonials as deal-closers Why customer voices, video testimonials, and buyer-decision content matter most late in the sales cycle.
38:30–47:30 — Team reflections on 2025 Operational learnings: video quality, AI tooling, niche-specific messaging, and integrated channel systems.
47:30–53:30 — Cost vs ROI reality check Media buys and trade shows decline in efficiency; email and LinkedIn dominate low-cost, high-return channels.
53:30–56:00 — Trade show “hacks” & closing outlook Alternative trade show strategies, cost containment, and expectations for a fast-changing, non-boring 2026.
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