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Going Direct: Stepping Up

** Some pilots who step up, step up to jets,
like this Cessna Citation Mustang.**
Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • The "stepping up" concept explains how pilots often develop brand loyalty, starting with a manufacturer's training aircraft and progressing to larger, more advanced models within the same brand.
  • Manufacturers, especially pioneers like Cessna, benefit from providing entry-level aircraft and flight training networks to cultivate this long-term customer loyalty and market leadership.
  • The article criticizes proposals for National Airspace System "user fees" as a deceptive attempt to shift costs from airlines to general aviation, arguing airlines would pocket any savings.
  • It advocates for the existing fuel tax as an equitable funding mechanism, supplemented by general budget contributions, acknowledging aviation's broad societal benefits beyond direct users.
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(October 2011) Those of us who have been around airplanes for any length of time understand the concept of stepping up, whereby a nonpilot becomes a pilot, learns to fly in a certain brand of airplane and then remains loyal to that brand while gaining experience and moving up through the model lineup to bigger, faster and more expensive airplanes.

Let me be quick to point out that this concept is no more a theory than is density altitude. It’s an explanation of how things work. When you learn to fly in a Cessna, a Piper or a Cirrus, you tend to want to stick with that brand if there is an airplane available for you to move up into. I was talking with Cirrus sales representative Adam Hahn the other day about that company’s Cirrus Vision, its under-development single-engine jet. I mentioned to Adam that I’d spoken to a couple of Cirrus owners who would write a check today if they could get a jet. Adam looked completely unsurprised. He said, essentially, that nearly every customer who buys an SR22 also wants a Cirrus Vision jet. It’s the perfect step-up model. Except that it isn’t yet available.

Isabel Goyer

A commercial pilot, 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.

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