JetNet Demonstrates New Products, Functionality
At EBACE this week, it will prime showgoers on its latest developments, as well as present its annual State of the European Business Jet Market briefing.

U.S. business aviation industry data provider JetNet is unveiling several new products and service enhancements as part of its exhibit this week at EBACE (Booth W127).


Among them is the JetNet application programming interface (API), a flexible application program that allows its clients to build their own solutions powered by JetNet’s data. Users will be able to explore and design proprietary programs able to connect with and manage the data delivered via the company’s RESTful API, including CRM (customer relationship management), market analysis tools, transaction trends, aircraft inventory programs, and fleet management activities, among others.


“JetNet API is our way of giving users even more opportunity to put the full power of JetNet’s extensive data to work for them in their current applications,” said company president Tony Esposito, adding that, through the use of the program, “our clients will be more efficient, and be able to find their answers more quickly.”


A new portfolio manager feature gives clients the ability to organize, review, and analyze aircraft fleets on a wide variety of factors, including age of fleet, models, value, maintenance analytics, flight activity, owners, and history. Meanwhile, JetNet's marketplace and Aerodex Elite products allow operators to organize and analyze individual aircraft, fleet, or company historical flight activity by arrivals or departures for selected airports worldwide. A detailed report can be generated detailing the top origin and destination airports, countries and continents, fuel/tech stops, top operators by business type, and top aircraft by serial number with seat capacity.


The company's new aircraft prospector tool, part of JetNet’s Evolution Marketplace leverages the company’s historical transaction database to target companies most likely to purchase a given make or model of aircraft, enabling users to save hours of research by correlating the length of ownership data against the span of ownership for the current owner. It also identifies operators who have sold an aircraft and not replaced it, as well as those with expiring leases or fractional shares. An additional function allows users to identify aircraft maintained under EASA Part 145 by searching and identifying them along with the contact information of the people who operate, maintain, finance, lease, service, and crew them.


Lastly, subscribers to the company’s Evolution Marketplace and marketplace manager can improve their aircraft pricing and comparison accuracy with the JetNet Values add-on, which provides actual reported selling prices on aircraft transactions. The company has further enhanced the tool with eValues, which was developed in collaboration with Asset Insight, adding mark-to-market and projected residual values for a wide range of business aircraft, along with the current market value and 60-month estimated residual value figures.