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Transportation and Logistics


Aim high



How Roger Woolsey reinvented Million Air’s image and steered the company in a new direction

By Erik Cassano


Smart Business Houston | February 2009

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Roger Woolsey says you might own your product or service, but your customer owns your reputation. In other words, your company is what your customers think it is. In 2002, when Woolsey acquired Million Air Interlink Inc., what customers saw depended on the location. Woolsey, now the president and CEO of the charter air service company, was transitioning from franchisee to fran-chisor. As he gained a wide-angle view of Million Air, one thing became apparent above everything else — Million Air didn’t have a defined culture, so the Million Air name meant different things to different people, depending on which of the company’s 27 airport-based operations you found yourself at.

“If you had to take a snapshot of what Million Air was in 2002, we were in 27 cities, we had 27 management styles, 27 [profit and loss] statements, 27 cultures, 27 independent ways of hiring, and we really had to reinvent the whole system,” Woolsey says Not only did the system have to change, the very definition of Million Air had to be identified and communicated to airport staffers around the country, and the Million Air pilots who cover the distances in between. Though the company is well established with a 25-year history and $700 million in 2007 revenue, it was virtually like starting from scratch with a brand-new vision.

The solution for Woolsey and his leadership team was formed in five steps — define exactly what Million Air’s image should be, design a plan to promote that image, train employees to promote the image, live it daily, then use the new image to grow the company.

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