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Transcription
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50 YEARS WITH SATAIR Laith Abbas · Jens Holbech · Anette Achiam · Martin Adnoff · Esmail Aghal · Rikke Kristiansen · Üstündag Harc · Tina Jane Andersen · Tina Lili Andersen · Martin Andreasen · Per Arnbo · Claus Bang · Mette Backhausen · Henrik Bakmann · Mikkel Bardram · Ejner Barnholdt · Nicolai James Besa · Christian Bjergfelt · Mikker Ann Bjerregaard · Henrik Bjørnø · David Blythner · Kitt Boldinger · Gert Bolvig · Grith Borg · Hans Borgen · Steen Bruhn · Michael Buchwald · Marco Caldana · Lisette Bjørn Cappai · Lene Carlos · Yumin Chen · Mikael Willum Christensen · Rosamaria Gutierrez Christensen · Tom Christensen · Claus Bugge Christiansen · Lykke Christiansen · Jens Hornung Christoffersen · Carsten Cruz · Irene Cruz · Ulla Dahlin · Döndü Deveci · Sidse Djurø · Torben Due · Dorte Sonne Ekner · Thomas Elkjær · Thomas Ellemo · Lotte Enevoldsen · Caroline Engelsborg · Erik Juel Eriksen · Claus Kjær Fischer · Jack Frandsen · riere · Allan Wiggins · Susan Fuglsang · Connie Gjevnø · Rikke Heilmann · Ingelis Gretlund · Claus Gaarskær · Anette Hagelsten · rdegaard · Sarah Graffner · Jakob Suhr Henriksen · Nicolai Hertz · Merethe Bøjtrup Hofflund · Helle Wriedt Hollænder · Flemming Holm · arina Jaenicke · Michael Møller Jakobsen · Helen James · Anne-Lise Bai Jensen · Henrik Jensen · Steen Karsbo · Arne Svenningsen · Külli Schjønning-Larsen · nnessen · Gitte Juhl-Hansen · Lars Juncker · Juergen Badura · Majbrit Jørgensen · Lars Kampf · Christina Michelsen · Nils Bruse Karlsen · Dorte Kassebeer · Kim Bai Jensen · Kristoffersen · Henning Søgaard Larsen · Lene Krag Larsen · Helle Skou Laursen · Ghita Marie le Fevre · Per Lindberg · Anders Lindqvist · Henrik Madsen · Lisa Dobbs · r · Jørgen Møller · Tina Naldahl · Charlotte Nielsen · Gitte Nielsen · Hans-Jørgen Nielsen · Lasse Nielsen · Lisbeth Nielsen · Niels Halberg Nielsen · Hans Pedersen · n · Lone Nørregaard · Maja Olsen · Martin Søgaard Olsen · Morten Olsen · Kenneth Hemmingsen Ophus · Amancio Reino Pampin · Jens Peder Pedersen · e Kildegaard Perlt · Hjørdis Petersen · Lone Petersen · Solveig Petersen · Ulla Poulsen · Mads Rahbek · Allan Rasmussen · Lars Sverre Rasmussen · Pål Rikter-Svendsen · Hanne Lynggaard Rosenkrands · Søren Sabroe · Thomas Bielefeldt Sander · Lis Schielstrup · Eva Schjøtt · Jeanett Schmidt · sslebrook · Camilla Schuricht · Mikael Serritzlew · Karina Siering · Henrik Skifte · Kamilla Duvander Jensen · John Stær · Flemming Stelling lla Stokholm Larsen · Agneta Strøbæk · Raymond Coleman · Mohammad Usman · Louise Hoby Sorrentino · Maria Lumbantobing · øren Viltsborg Thomsen · Nina Holdrup Søager · Anette Juel Sørensen · Lesley Etherington · Dennis Tanderup · Anders Thomassen · Thomsen · Philippe Tuyls · Choon Hoe Lim · Libby Hannelle · James Bower · Sarah Addley · Jane Amura · Sam Baldwin · Corrine Ball · · Chris Barrett · Wayne Barrett · Barbara Barron · Peter Barrow · Angela Beck · Paul Bethell · Gary Callaghan · Glenys Bruce · urton · Mick Butcher · Billy Brew · Keith Campan · Steve Cannell · Jody Carter · Alan Chadwick · Kevin Chandler · Abbie Chase · Cole · Charlotte Sunke · Lloyd Cooper · Dragos Cracium · Brian Crane · Mary Cremer · Stuart Curl · James David · Kevin Dean · ovan · Jason Dunford · Peter Durose · Kaspars Ekis · John Grimwood · Leon Sørensen · Mary Faulkner · Shelia Fordham · Carl Gay · Michelle Gay · David Goddard · Angela Goldberg · Helen Ellis · Per Voigt · Tom Hansen · Sally Harvey · · Shirley Henderson · Peter Hepplewhite · Tony Hickson · Steven Hill · Clair Hoare · Aimee Hodgson · Graeme Holland · athan Hunt · Donald Hydes · Bobby Jarrett · Christopher Jemson · Russell Jenks · George Jobson · Paul Jobson · · Jon Kentish · Chloe Kenyon · Cliff Lamb · Pam Lay · Sorcha Lee · Majbrit Karlsdotter · Shane Lock · Susan Lowes · onald · Emma McKenzie · John McLaughlin · Jonathan Medhurst · Hannah Mepham · Sue Miklosovits · Richard Molyneux · · Susanne Svej · Evelyn Lim · Jenny Lim · Kai Leng Lim · Nicholas Lo · Wai Poon Loh · l Van Der Mark · Simon Varney Shun Chiew Loo · Victorino Lores · Timothy Low · Kate Svinth · Peter Lundberg · Wheeler · Mohamad Amin Bin Masagoes Zainuddin · Mohamed Ali Bin Meesta · Julia Mockett · n· Abdullah Shatari Bin Mohamed Buhari · Jacky Neo · Eileen Ng · Kristy Ng · Anton Nöffke · Muhamad Nur Iman Bin Hashim · Timothy O’Hara · Esther Pang · Saril Bin Peai · Tommy Peh · Xiu Er Pek · Desmond Phua · Jean Quah · Mihammad Rizal Bin Samat · Gina Sim · Sin Toon Phua · Jerome Sng · Yeow Koon Soh · Alvin Tan · Charlene Tan · Dennis Tan · Kevin Tan · Khuan Thiam Tan · Kimberley Tan · Wolfgang Tatzer · Eng Kai Tay · Martin Teo · Wei Jie Toh · Mary Wi · Yin Leng Wong · Benny Yeo · Julie Yeo · Khian Leong Yeo · Meng Peow Yeo · Roxanne Yeo · Delen Yeong · Christina Yong · Joo Eng Tan · Gina Sim · Said Bin Amin · Nina Jenkins · Larri Brown · Tomekia Brown · Lisa Browne · Bruce Brzoska · Victor Castrillon · Joanne Davis · Brenda Drayne · Dick Edwards · Rick Edwards · Akilah Faulkner · Robert Finley · Tina Fitzpatrick · Detra Fullard · Larry Gordon · Tad Green · Tony Green · Eileen Griffin · Mike Gronniger · Brian Hvid · Stacy Ireland · Chris Jackson · Sandra Jenkins · Christopher Jones · Troy Jones · Gordon Keene · Bob Lanford · Kim McBurnett · Bruce Lowe · Mark Lutz · Cheryl Madero · Carol Lillian · Jean Moore · Don Nelles · Jeanette Olsen · Mark O’Shaughnessy · Leslie Parsons · Lan Pham · Danielle Pitts · Evva Pitts · Todd Pomeroy · Cortney Robinson · John Ridings · Jermaine Powell · Welkind Saint Jean · Richard Rutledge · Doris Sims · Debra Scopelletti · Renard Slaughter · Michelle Thonen · Brian Webster · Melvin Vargas · Rick Tonney · Leandro Wartelski · Donnell Word III · Desondra White · Helen Waldrep · Elliott Wells · Jim Wright · Al Wigert CONTENTS ILLUSTRATIONS USED IN THE BOOK: Satair’s archives, Airliners.net, arj21.org, Eurocopter, SPH - The Business Times, Amager Bladet, Reimar Juul, Bill Armstrong, Bill Hann, Boeing, Craig Murray, Ivan Rodriguez, Jan-Kåre Folstad, Linze Folkeringa, Juha Klemettinen, Juhani Sipilä, Manuel Marin, Mariusz Adamski, Mel Lawrence, Michael Hall, North West Pilot, Peter De Jong, Peter M. Garwood, Radek Oneksiak, Rhys Dudley, Sam Chui, SAS Group, Serge Bailleul, Shawn Miller, Simon Willson, Stil, Swissair, Ted Oliveira, Thomas Klein and Tim de Groot. 3 NOSE FOR BUSINESS 4 CHAPTER 1: SATAIR PREPARES FOR TAKE-OFF From 11 enthusiasts in a Copenhagen apartment to a dynamic international trading company reaching for the skies. 18 CHAPTER 2: A NEW ERA International influences and new markets – as the world changes, Satair gets ready to tackle the new millennium. 27 CHAPTER 3: SATAIR TODAY From Copenhagen to the Far East – Satair has become the world’s largest independent distributor of spares and components for the aviation industry. And the future is wide open. 38 SATAIR OVER THE YEARS Final copy date: April 2, 2008 Editorial committee: Louise Hoby Sorrentino, Camilla Schuricht, Steen Karsbo and Anette Hagelsten Research, text and editing: Henrik Kristensen and Michala Paulli, GCI Mannov Design and print: EYE-D Gramstrup ApS Cover: Satair’s employees, May 2008 Nose for busi ness On December 23, 1957, a group of capable businessmen keenly dedicated to the aviation industry founded a new organisation: Scandinavian Air Trading Co. A/S. They invested their personal savings in a good idea – laying the foundations of the international company we have become today. Denmark, UK, France, USA, the Middle East, Singapore and China – over the years we have become a genuinely global outfit, developing within our company structure a unique combination of know‑how, skills and presence. We know our business. We move when we identify an opportunity. And we’re not afraid of change. On the contrary. When the world around us changes, we adjust to suit the circumstances. We’re oppor‑ tunistic in the most positive sense of the word – quick to spot an opportunity and identify new, profitable business areas. New markets, new products, new service concepts – our strength lies in staying ahead of the pack. It was sound commercial thinking and a nose for business that got Satair off the ground 50 years ago – and these are still the company’s strong points today. The simplest idea, option or solution is often the best, and that’s something we recognise at Satair. We don’t do things we don’t understand – we act when it’s necessary – and we’re a company of doers. That’s the feeling we get on our way round the company. We’ve had our bumps on the way – but the road ahead’s looking good for Satair. We’ve done well in crisis situations because we’ve stood shoulder to shoulder, adapted to new circumstances – and identified business opportunities where others have seen obstacles. Satair has become a leading global distributor, thanks to our skilled workforce. More than 500 employees worldwide make up the backbone of the Satair family, and that’s something to be proud of. The success of our business depends on relations with customers, suppliers and partners, and every day our skilled and committed employees throughout the world step into the front line, cultivating the personal relations and contacts on which we base our entire business concept. Without them there would be no Satair. We are determined to be the first choice of our customers and suppliers when the search is on for a sound commercial transaction or an attractive deal. If there is one thing we’re expert at, it’s keeping our customers’ aircraft flying – and our own corporate feet firmly on the ground. It’s with more than just a little pride that we take the opportunity with this anniversary publication to congratulate everyone on this special birthday. We’ve done it together, and we look forward to making a start to the next 50 years so that we can lift Satair to new heights. John Staer Executive Board 2008: John Staer, CEO Morten Olsen, COO Michael Hoejgaard, CFO -5 1957-1958 Satair prepares for take‑off From 11 enthusiasts in a Copen‑ hagen apartment to a dynamic international trading company reaching for the skies. It’s Monday evening. 11 people are gathered in a small apartment at Fiolstraede 24 in the centre of Copenhagen. They’re planning the work schedule for the coming week. DC‑3 spares for the USA, Lycoming engine parts from the US destined for Egypt. It’s 1960. The fledgling company – Scandinavian Air Trading Co. A/S – has just hired its first real employee: a secretary who’ll spend her time handling mail and answering the telephone during the day. The 10 company founders handle all other work. On a voluntary basis ... in the evenings ... because they know they’re on to a good idea. The adventure begins three years earlier – in 1957 – in the technical sales depart‑ ment at Scandinavian Airlines (SAS). In those days the department carried out aircraft maintenance work for various airlines, including other companies from the Middle East and southern Europe which did not have their own facilities for serv‑ icing a fleet of aircraft. But as SAS grew, its focus on servicing aircraft for others gradually diminished, and in the mid 1950s SAS began to wind down its external maintenance service in order to concentrate completely on its own aircraft. Parts with potential A small group of enthusiasts in and around SAS realise the situation offers a business opportunity. Those airlines which had previously had their aircraft serviced by SAS now needed to have the work done elsewhere. There was a need for spares – and spares had to be tracked down, purchased and resold. Satair started life on December 23, 1957. And there was enough equipment on the market. It was shortly after World War II – and there were numerous stores of spare parts for aircraft and all kinds of other equipment scattered throughout Europe. A company takes to the air In December 1957 Blicher Jensen, an SAS engineer, and nine other colleagues from the aviation industry seize the opportunity to go into business. The group includes five employees from SAS’ technical sales department, and together they set up a new company: Scandinavian Air Trading Co. A/S (SAT). Pooling their personal resources and borrowings, they manage to put up share capital of DKK 50,000 distributed more or less equally among the 11 shareholders. The first shares are issued on December 23, 1957, and the foundations are laid for the global company known today as Satair. There’s a push to register the new company before the Christmas holidays because it is already in the process of buying a consignment of Pratt & Whitney R‑985 engine parts in England. The purchase is negotiated – and the parts arrive in Copenhagen early in the new year. Pratt & Whitney R-985 engine. SAT’s first shareholders Buyer Bergthor Brock Manufacturer Jens Frederik Rasmussen Civil Engineer Helge W. Hansen Mrs. Birgit Krogh (withdrew after a few months) Manufacturer H.C. Henriksen Mrs. Gudrun Blicher Jensen Capt. Janssen Mrs. Rigmor Soerensen Mrs. Gunvor Christensen Photographer H. Aue Mrs. Poulsen In 1956 personnel from SAS’ technical depart‑ ment visited Ethiopia in connection with a DC-3 and C-47 deal with the Ethiopian Air Force. -7 1958-1960 In its early years the new company is based at the home address of its chairman, Helge W. Hansen, in Virum, north of Copenhagen. And from the outset it’s full steam ahead. The little group of corporate hopefuls is driven by a pioneering spirit in its early days. Its members tend their respective day jobs and duties – and spend their evenings and weekends build‑ ing up their new trading company. All aspects of buying and selling are handled by the 10 shareholders themselves – Helge W. Hansen’s wife does the books. Expanding distributor DC-3 The DC‑3 was one of the most widely used aircraft in the post‑war years. Several of the company’s founders still work for SAS, and the company doesn’t want to compete with SAS’ maintenance work on the large DC‑3, DC‑4, DC‑6 and DC‑6B aircraft. So SAT concentrates primarily on engine components and propellers for smaller aircraft. Initially, the growing trading company acts chiefly as a distributor for US suppliers, and in 1958 it begins a profitable partnership with Lycoming, the American aircraft manufacturer. A relationship that has lasted up to the present, and which means that SAT is entrusted with the sale and distribution of spares for Lycoming’s aircraft engines. The little company’s business goes well. Sales in 1958 totalled DKK 141,033, the follow‑ ing year they reached DKK 860,131. Trade is brisk across Europe’s borders – in 1959, for example, the company buys two DC‑3 aircraft from SAS and sells them on to the French air force. And in the same period a shipment of Pratt & Whitney R‑985 engines offered for sale by the Dutch air force changes hands when SAT steps in to buy it – and resells it to a French company. SAT continues to expand. In 1960 it needs a real office and employees. The company moves from the Virum home of its chairman into a private, borrowed apartment in Fiol‑ straede, Copenhagen, where it welcomes its first employee – Tove Jeppesen, a secretary. In May of that year Knud Soerensen is appointed General Manager and will head SAT until 1987 and from 1992 to 1994. Now things are really looking up. The following year – 1961 – the bustling company is again in the market for premises, moving this time to a 40‑m² rented office in Hangar A at Copenhagen Airport. The DC‑4 carries 86 passengers and has a range of 6,800 km. When Sterling Airways became airborne SAT’s early years coincided with the first years of the jet age, when ordinary families began flying off on charter holidays. When legendary Danish travel boss, Pastor Eilif Kroager, founded his Tjaereborg travel company in 1962, the new upwardly mobile air‑ craft broker was ready to lend a hand. Oskar Thomsen, who has been a SAT shareholder since 1958, says: ” One day Pastor Kroager strolls into the technical sales department, wanting to buy a couple of aircraft. He chats with Blicher Jensen and eventually asks: “How many passengers can a DC‑3 carry?” Blicher Jensen phones me in the engineering department and asks me to come over. I can tell the pastor that the SAS version of the DC‑3 carries 21 passengers but that it can be modified to carry 28. “Oh, that’s not nearly enough,” the pastor says, “it’ll need to take at least 100!” I tell him that what he needs in that case is a DC‑6B. “Do you have any of them for sale?” We have to admit that we don’t. On the way out the good pastor asks me to let him know when we can help him out with a couple of DC‑6Bs. Six months later I learn that Swissair has two DC‑6Bs for sale. Even in those early days we were on good terms with Swissair – so we were able to arrange for the pastor to buy the two Swiss aircraft. And that was the start of Sterling Airways! ” A B A: One of Swissair’s DC‑6Bs before it was sold to Sterling Airways. B: Same aircraft after the sale to Sterling Airways. -9 1960-1965 Close to the customer When it moves into premises at Copenhagen Airport, SAT is also getting much closer to its customers and partners. Flying is no longer a mode of travel reserved for the affluent, and in the early 1960s charter flights to holiday destinations in southern Europe are becoming very popular. Hog‑roast parties, swimming pools and long white beaches tempted people to visit exotic places like Spanish Mallorca, Costa Brava and Costa del Sol. Many of the flights were aboard popular DC aircraft, and the new travel companies needed assistance in buying, maintaining and servicing the many aircraft that carried sun‑worshipping holiday‑ makers to warmer climes. How to succeed in the aerospace business The bulk of the company’s business now comprises purchase and sale of parts for DC‑3, DC‑4, DC‑6 and Convair aircraft combined with parts from Lycoming for which SAT has obtained the distribution rights. The industrious SAT traders have their hands full and have been conscious from the outset of the importance of striking quickly when a good business opportunity arises. DC-6 The DC‑6B could seat up to 102 passen‑ gers and became one of the first aircraft to be used to send hundreds of tourists on charter holidays to popular destinations. • In 1960 SAT buys from the Czechoslovakian airline, CSA, its stock of DC‑3 spares including 25 Pratt & Whitney engines. The whole consignment is resold to the US. • In 1961 the company again does a deal with CSA. This time for a DC‑3 aircraft. • In 1962 Iranair sells its stock of DC‑4 spares to SAT. • A DC‑4 from Portugal is sold to the Icelandic Coast Guard. • In 1963 the company buys Swissair’s entire stock of DC‑6B spares. • SAT buys a C‑47 in Jordan in 1963 and sells it to the US. When an airline divests itself of a particular type of aircraft, it no longer requires its stock of spares – and that’s when SAT stands ready to do a deal. The trader acquires the stock at a reasonable price, splits it up and sells the parts on to other airlines. Even in the 1960s SAT was regularly dealing with companies in Europe, the Middle East, Africa and the USA. In September 1961 Finn Ytting joins the company as assistant to Knud Soerensen, and a couple of months later Arne Joergensen arrives as warehouse manager. SAT now has four people on its pay‑ roll. Other additions are Svend Jespersen (1963) and Per Lindberg (1968) who become part of the group of pioneers who drive Satair forward as a dynamic, international player. By the end of the year the company has 24 employees. Within the past few years Finn Ytting and Per Lindberg have each celebrated 40 years with the company. 1965-1970 Wanted: Extra legroom In 1966 sales top DKK 10m, SAT is negotiating an increasing number of distributorships, the company is bursting at the seams again – and needs extra legroom in Copenhagen. SAT is now distributor for French Morane‑Saulnier, for Beechcraft and for Wilpac – and later for Goodyear tyres and Exide batteries. The new distributorships involve many new part num‑ bers – and more warehouse space is at the top of the company’s wishlist. In 1966 SAT signs a 75‑year lease for a four‑acre site just west of the airport. The address is Amager Landevej 147 – where Satair now has its head office. At the same time Sterling Airways takes over SAT’s former airport premises. A couple of years later – in 1970 – SAT invests in the adjacent site, Amager Landevej 149‑151, securing the essential space for many years’ expansion. Good neighbours In the 1960s maintenance becomes an increasingly important part of the business. The work is done in collaboration with a neighbouring company, Scanaviation, which specialises in the repair and maintenance of aircraft and aircraft components. This is where Jens Frederik Ras‑ mussen and H.C. Henriksen – shareholders in SAT right from the beginning – are employed. Over the years, SAT has established many good contacts abroad. These are now cultivated to obtain maintenance and repair contracts – for example, in Germany and the Netherlands. SAT supplies the spare parts, while Scanaviation performs the actual repair work. New premises on the way A new 1,300‑m² warehouse is ready in March 1967, and a 300‑m² suite of offices two months later. The warehouse quickly fills with components for DC‑3, DC‑4, DC‑6 and Convair 240/340/440 aircraft. Exchange programme There’s no shortage of inventiveness on Amager Landevej. During this period SAT also sets up an exchange programme for parts for DC‑3, DC‑4 and DC‑6 aircraft – customers can simply hand in their own unserviceable component and get an overhauled part home with them. This is the case, for example, with DC‑6 engines. SAT has the unserviceable engine repaired by Braathens in Norway so that it is ready to be given in exchange to the next customer. This innovative business model means a better, faster turnaround for the customer – and a significant increase in business for SAT. The American connection From the very beginning SAT has had good connections in the USA. In the early 1960s a close relationship is developed with California Propeller, a company specialising in propeller maintenance – a partnership that lasts for more than 40 years, with SAT acting as California Propeller’s representative in Europe. Convair 440 In the 1960s SAT also buys and sells com‑ ponents for the characteristic Convair 240, 340 and 440 aircraft, easily recognisable by their distinctive tail. These aircraft car‑ ried 44 passengers. Production of Convair passenger aircraft ceased in 1965. 1 0- 1 1 1970-1975 Shelves stacked with 68,000 part numbers are quite a problem to manage but in the 1970s technological help is on its way. In 1974 SAT buys its first computer. It is a state‑of‑the‑art machine from the UK – an ICL 2903 – with Danish software, and represents a massive investment for the company. The technological wonder will take over the huge job of man‑ aging the constantly growing number of different aircraft parts. But before it can do that, someone has to key the existing 68,000 parts into the system. It’s a job that takes about six months – working days and evenings. Inventory control An F27 aircraft from the ALL NIPPON fleet. Although SAT acts increasingly as a dealer and distributor, in 1973 the company nev‑ ertheless buys up the Japanese airline, ALL NIPPON’s, entire stock of F27 spares. This is an enormous quantity of 100 tons repre‑ senting 8,000 parts. Four giant containers are shipped by Trans‑Siberian Railway and arrive in Copenhagen in 1974. As the com‑ ponents are unpacked, it is quickly evident that warehouse space will run out – so the company temporarily rents an inflatable building for the many spare parts. The computer has become essential. In the 1950s and early 1960s employees, customers and partners all knew each other. Agreements were verbal, and everyone knew which part was stored where. But with 40 employees, a growing portfolio approaching 100,000 part numbers, and sales topping DKK 31m there is an urgent need for an efficient computer system to ease the task of inventory control. In 1974 even a top‑of‑the‑range computer’s memory is fairly limited – and that becomes obvious. With only 24 kilobytes of storage space, keyboard work has to halt several times a day to make backups and clean up data in order to progress with the next lot. All data is stored on large magnetic tapes. Fortunately the system can be expanded – which it is in 1978, when SAT upgrades to the larger model, the ICL 2904. Dealer and distributor At the threshold of the 1970s the distribution side of the business is gradually beginning to gain more significance than buying and selling spares. The drawback in buying up complete inventories of spares is all the parts the market doesn’t ask for. These simply lie on the shelf, taking up space. It makes more logical sense with the other parts – the ones that sell – to purchase them specifically and distribute them to a targeted market. In 1972 and 1973 spare parts for older generations of aircraft nearing retirement – such as the DC‑3, DC‑4 and DC‑6 – occupy a lot of space on warehouse shelves. The new and upcoming aircraft are the DC‑8 and DC‑9, Boeing 707 and 720, and Fokker F27. Satair’s new computer system was fully integrated and up‑to‑date – for the 1970s. The ICL 2903 controlled the inventory, showing the status of each component at any given time. And it interfaced with the accounts depart‑ ment – for example, printing out customer invoices. Anne-Lise Bai Jensen was a member of the office staff when the new computer systems were introduced – and is still employed at head office in Kastrup in 2008. 1975-1980 In 1972 the new offices at Amager Landevej were opened. Across the Atlantic The distribution business is growing. American manufacturers in particular discover that it can be difficult matching payments and logistics across the Atlantic – and this is where SAT conveniently comes into the picture, as the link to airlines in Europe. Reflecting its grow‑ ing role as a distributor for American corporations, the Danish company applies in 1976 for admission to the American trade organisation, Aviation Distributors and Manufacturers Association (ADMA). The application proves to be a thorny issue because some members of the organisation are just a little sceptical at the thought of making room for a European company in what is otherwise an exclusively US/Canadian body. But after a week’s negotia‑ tion and personal campaigning, SAT – as the first company outside the US and Canada – is given the green light to join ADMA. Membership, which the company continues to enjoy, means that SAT will have contact with a very wide circle of suppliers. Growth and expansion The airline industry expands – and SAT grows along with it. In 1975 the company has 41 employees and sales of approx. DKK 40m. By 1979 the workforce has grown to 59 employ‑ ees and sales have reached approx. DKK 50m. During the 1970s it again becomes necessary to expand facilities at the company’s Amager Landevej address to provide room for more growth. In 1972 SAT builds new of‑ fice facilities, which are opened with flourish and fanfare, and in 1977 it is the turn of the warehouse to add more space to its capacity. In 1978 another office block is added, and in 1979 Management decides to build a brand‑new warehouse and office building on the neighbouring site, Amager Landevej 151. SAT publishes catalogue In a new move in 1977, SAT begins publishing catalogues for its customers to describe its stock items, spares and tools from various manufacturers for whom SAT acted as distributor in the late 1970s. From SAT to Satair From the mid 1970s the company begins increasingly to use the name Satair. Vari‑ ous people – including some customers – don’t think the name SAT has a distinctive ring to it. Something has to be done. The ending “air” is added to signal that the company works in the airline business. In conjunction with a reorganisation of the company in 1978 the name is changed to Scandinavian Air Trading Invest A/S, and a sister company is formed. While the original company chiefly occupies itself with the company premises, the new company, entitled Satair – Scandinavian Air Trading Co. A/S, becomes the primary operating company. In a new development, employees have the opportunity to buy shares in the company. 1 2- 1 3 Back in the 1970s In the new office premises inaugurated in 1972 staff sit in open plan office landscapes. Computers haven’t yet appeared on desks. This won’t happen for another couple of years. Instead, offices still have large filing cabinets containing thousands and thousands of data cards. The warehouse is stocked with everything from flaps and propellers to fuel hoses, filters and rivets. Knud Soerensen General Manager of Satair, 1960-88 and 1992-94 Although it was not until May 1960 that Knud Soerensen became General Manager of the newly formed company, he was one of the original group in the Fiolstraede apartment back in the 1950s – and one of the main driving forces behind the development of Satair as we know it today. Like so many of the other founders, Knud Soerensen was still working for SAS when the seeds were sown to set up Satair, and at the very outset it was in fact Knud Soerensen’s wife, Rigmor, who was registered as a company shareholder. Knud Soerensen was a businessman and a skilled merchant. He trained in retail grocery in Aarhus in northern Jutland, and during World War II he worked further north in Skagen, where he was active in the Danish Resistance as a member of the “Joekke” Group. After the war, Knud Soerensen joined SAS as a sales rep in Technical Sales. In the decade he worked at SAS he accumulated a wealth of international expertise on the aviation industry and an in depth insight into the market for purchase and sale of aircraft and spares. This know-how, combined with his wonderful talent for trade, formed the basis of Knud Soerensen’s many years of dedicated work at Satair. Under his skilled leadership, Satair grew from being a small, dynamic trading company into an international and reputable organisa‑ tion with entities in many countries and customers all over the world. In Satair’s 50 year history only three people have led the company. Knud Soerensen was its first General Manager from 1960 to 1988. From 1988 Claus Schreiber was the man in charge – until Knud Soerensen resumed the reins in 1992 for a short period. In 1994 John Staer was appointed CEO. Knud Soerensen Soerensen took charge of ”When something, things just clicked into place. There were no problems. He had a way with people and could please everybody. isn’t something you give ”Discount – it’s something you get. ” Knud Soerensen, General Manager of Satair, 1960-88 and 1992-94. ” Oskar Thomsen, Knud Soerensen’s former SAS colleague and a co‑founder of Satair. 14-1 5 1980-1986 The fire The fire was front‑page news in Denmark. The headlines: Major fire at Kastrup. Aircraft parts worth DKK 30m lost in blaze. A Satair Beechcraft 1900 was used for a time for Red Cross flights within Afghanistan. Disaster strikes just before Christmas. In the early, dark hours of December 22, 1981, fire breaks out in the old 1967 warehouse. It spreads rapidly, out of control, and quickly envelopes the entire building. The fire causes several explosions, and nearby residents have to be evacuated from their beds into the winter night. Firefighters battle to subdue the flames, and after an intense two‑hour struggle the fire is finally brought under control. But the damage is done. As the sun rises on December 22, a tragic sight awaits shocked employees. The entire warehouse is totally destroyed. The entire contents of the warehouse are also destroyed – at an estimated loss of DKK 30m. Fortunately, no one is injured. As the office section had been salvaged, it and the computer system are up and running again within a couple of days. As luck would have it, construction of the new warehouse and office building on the neighbouring site is virtually complete so it can be brought into use while the old warehouse is being rebuilt. The many components lost in the blaze have to be replaced. It takes a huge effort and investment to refill the warehouse as quickly as possible. The cause of the fire is never identified – but there is some speculation that it could have been a lit Christmas candle that had been forgotten. Satair flies to the rescue When an aircraft has an error which hault further flight operation, the aircraft is kept on ground until the faulty component has been replaced. It’s a situation known as AOG – Aircraft on Ground. AOG stoppages are massively expensive in lost flying time – and are an airline’s worst nightmare. Especially when it’s a long way to the nearest supply of spares. Satair thinks creatively and commercially of ways to help its customers – and in 1980 buys its own company aircraft, a light twin‑engined Beechcraft Baron with seating for six passengers. With its own aircraft, Satair can now much more easily service customers at smaller European airports. New times, new business From 1985 Satair is again thinking big, thinking new. And over the next few years Man‑ agement makes a number of organisational changes to coincide with an expansion of the company’s business activities. Satair A/S changes its name to Satair Holding A/S, and a new Satair A/S is formed to handle all trading activities. A second new company is established under the name Satfly A/S to invest in and lease out aircraft. The Group also acquires Avi‑Advisors A/S, a company specialising in assessing air accidents and aircraft claims on behalf of insurers. From Kastrup to Bangladesh Buying and selling used aircraft bring Knud Soerensen and his Satair colleagues to all corners of the earth. The biggest single aircraft deal hitherto negotiated by the company is with Biman Bangladesh Airlines. In 1990 Satair buys three Fokker F27‑600 aircraft and a complete stock of associated spares – a deal worth the eye‑watering sum of USD 6m. The aircraft are transferred to Cologne, Germany, where they are resold for USD 7m. Finn Ytting, who was on the Bangladesh trip, relates: “Three of us went to Bangladesh to inspect everything. All the spares were included in the deal so everything had to be packed and loaded aboard the aircraft. We had also hired four pilots to fly the three F27s to Europe. Inside the Biman warehouse, where all the spares were kept, the store manager was crying his eyes out. I remember he sported a big beard. He was sobbing because these were all the spares that he’d worked with ... now they were disappearing ... and he’d been so pleased with them. I’ll never forget that. I can still see him sitting in his office, tears running down his cheeks – as all his spares disappeared out the door ...” Whole aircraft on the shelf In the 1980s Satair broadens its busi‑ ness activities to include the trading and leasing of aircraft. In many cases, the company purchases second‑hand air‑ craft cheaply, refurbishes them and either sells them or leases them out. In 1990 Satfly A/S and Avi‑Advisors A/S are merged to form Sataircraft A/S, which will now handle Satair’s leasing, purchase and sale of aircraft. In 1982 Satair bought its first consignment of Fokker F28 parts. Growth continues into the early 1980s. • In the 1979/80 fiscal year the company has 59 employees and sales of just over DKK 71m. • In fiscal 1985/86 it has 94 employees and sales of nearly DKK 282m. • But during the second half of the decade growth slows somewhat, partly on account of a weak US dollar. The 1980s conclude with 135 employees and sales of just over DKK 348m. 16-1 7 A: Satair already has customers throughout the world in the 1980s, and at the major airshows the company goes to great lengths to emphasise the fact that it comes from Denmark. The red‑and‑white national colours at the Satair stand in Hannover in 1982 speak their proud message. B: The Far East economy is develop‑ ing healthily throughout the 1980s – which means more customers for Satair. Among them Malaysian Airlines and the Indonesian Air Force. In China the economy is starting to boom, and Satair is among the exhibitors at the Beijing Airshow in 1987. Twin Otter One of the aircraft Satair begins servicing in the 1980s is the de Havilland Canada Twin Otter. The aircraft’s landing gear is extremely stable and can be delivered with wheels, floats or skis for landing on water or flat ice and snow. Airshows – the industry’s travelling showroom C: Paris 1993. As Satair becomes more international, with subsidiaries world‑ wide, it softens its Danish pedigree. D: Hamburg Airshow in 2008. The national red‑and‑white colours remain Satair’s corporate colours to this day. The airline industry has grown enormously since Satair began business in 1957. The number of airlines and other potential customers increases steadily, and it’s important to raise your profile and get people to notice you. Because there are many companies competing over the juiciest deals. The major airshows have gradually become the industry’s meeting place and showroom, and in 1982 Satair takes part in its first front‑line show in Hannover. It will prove to be the first of many years’ enthusiastic participation in airshows all over the world. A Hannover 1982 B Beijing 1987 C Paris 1993 1986-1990 Closer to the world In 1986 Satair takes a giant leap to support its many strong links with the USA: the expanding company opens its first office in North America. The US subsidiary locates in Connecticut – but within three years has moved to Atlanta, Georgia. In 1991 Tom Whitehead, Satair’s American sales manager, in an interview with a Danish newspaper, says of the move: “In our business you have to be fast, reliable and able to deliver the goods. We discov‑ ered quite simply that there were other much more appropriate places to locate a company like ours. When an aircraft is grounded because it’s short of a spare part, from our present location near Hartsfield, Atlanta, we can normally deliver the component within about five hours. We think we have an optimum location for living up to our own objectives.” Two years after opening in the USA, Satair – in 1988 – takes its next great step. This time all the way to the Far East. A new company, Satair Far East – today, Satair Pte. Ltd. – takes its place in the local market, opening its doors in Singapore. In 1990 the office moves to the Loyang District, near the airport, and builds a 1,000‑m² warehouse facility. With its own warehouse and 11 employees in Singapore, Satair can now service its Far East customers almost on a local basis. In 1988 Satair opens a subsidiary in Singapore. D Hamburg 2008 747 jumbojet Boeing’s largest aircraft – the 747, also known as the Jumbojet – has for many years been the world’s largest passenger aircraft. The first 747s took to the skies in the early 1970s and are recognised by their characteristic “hump”. Satair began sup‑ plying parts for the Jumbojet in the 1980s. 18-1 9 1990-1994 A n ew era International influences and new markets – as the world changes, Satair gets ready to tackle the new millennium. Aircraft on the shelves At the end of 1990 Satair owned 11 aircraft: 4 Fokker F27-600 4 de Havilland C6 Twin Otter 1 Beechcraft 1900 2 Beechcraft Baron The first major crisis The new decade gets off to a violent start. On August 2, 1990, the Iraqi army invades Kuwait. The world community cannot sanction the invasion, and led by the USA it mounts an international force to fight the Iraqi army. This is the start of the First Gulf War – also called Operation Desert Storm. At first, Satair thinks it unlikely that the war will influence its business – but reality will soon put a different complexion on the situation. The Gulf War hits both the industry and Satair hard. The state of international uncertain‑ ty that follows in the wake of the war causes air traffic to stagnate. The aviation industry as a whole reacts by putting its purchases on hold, drawing instead upon its own stocks of parts. The state of caution lasts several years, and the consequences are grave. Satair sales drop 6% in fiscal 1991/92, and for the first time in its history Satair must cut its workforce on account of external factors. The company sheds 23 jobs – a massive 17% of its total staff. Sataircraft – distribution and purchase/sale of aircraft During the period 1989-90 Satair concentrates all its activities on the leasing and purchase/ sale of aircraft through its subsidiary Sataircraft. Many of the aircraft bought by Sataircraft are sold to such African countries as Kenya, Congo and Gabon; others go to Nepal. Trans‑ actions mostly involve the de Havilland Twin Otter, while other aircraft are primarily leased on long‑term contracts to Business Flight Scandinavia and other customers. But buying, selling and leasing aircraft is not the profitable business it once was, so during the period 1991‑93 all aircraft are sold again – including Satair’s own company aircraft. In 1990 Satair wins a contract to supply aircraft parts to the Polish manu‑ facturer PZL Mielec – who will be building 20 of the Piper M‑20 Mewa. Sataircraft is sold – and stripped of its assets Satair is in crisis. The Gulf War has seriously knocked sales – and buy‑ ing, selling and leasing aircraft through Sataircraft A/S is no longer a very profitable business. In fiscal 1991/92 Satair – for the first time in its history – has to report a deficit. It has lost about DKK 9m for the year. In early 1992 a Danish businessman presents himself as a buyer for Sataircraft (which no longer owns any aircraft). He offers DKK 10m for the subsidiary, and the offer is seen as a welcome opportunity to improve the Group’s liquidity. Satair snaps up to the chance. It becomes clear that the purchaser of Sataircraft has a hidden agenda with his new acquisition. He quickly strips the company of its assets and lets it go bankrupt – without paying the company’s debt of DKK 13m to the Danish tax authorities. The purchaser then vanishes and moves abroad. Case comes to court The sale of Sataircraft becomes a calamity for Satair, and many years are to pass before the casebook can finally be closed. As the case unfolds, there seems to be some initial doubt as to whether the Sataircraft buyer has in fact done anything wrong. This is by no means the first time companies have been purchased, asset‑stripped and declared bankrupt. But although these kinds of transactions have cost the Danish tax authorities billions of kroner over the years, no case has ever been taken to court in Denmark. In early 1994 the tax minister of the day decides to bring Satair to court to investigate whether Satair has acted fraudulently in connection with the sale of Sataircraft. The court action will drag on for the next three years. In the first instance, Satair is found by the High Court of Denmark to have acted negligently in its sale of Sataircraft. According to the court, Satair should have foreseen that the purchaser of Sataircraft did not have a genuine motive. Satair appeals the ruling to the Supreme Court – but at the same time immediately pays off the tax debt of DKK 13m plus interest and legal costs. The Supreme Court upholds the ruling in 1997. No consequence for the business The asset‑stripper case is exclusively a matter between Satair and the Danish tax authorities, and the case has no direct consequence for Satair’s business. But because the case establishes a principle and is the first of 1,600 similar cases that follow im‑ mediately afterwards, it receives a good deal of attention in the Danish media. In the end, however, Satair receives media praise for its professional handling of the matter. The case was widely covered in the Danish media. 2 0- 2 1 1994-1997 New man at the top In the early 1990s Satair appoints a new management team: CEO John Staer (left) and Chairman N.E. Nielsen. On October 1, 1994, John Staer is appointed Satair’s new CEO. He takes over from Knud Soerensen, who temporarily returned to the post when Claus Schreiber left the company in 1992. John Staer faces two major tasks. First of all, to navigate Satair safely through the asset‑stripping case to minimise the negative effect on the company. Secondly, the time has come to attract new shareholders to replace the first generation – and one of the courses of action in this respect is for Satair to go public. The new CEO comes to Satair from a position as Chief Financial Officer with Ambu International A/S, a manu‑ facturer of equipment for the health sector. At Ambu, John Staer’s responsibilities have included overseeing that company’s international subsidiaries. He also brings with him crucial experience from converting Ambu from a family‑owned company to a successful listed company. The plan is that he should do the same with Satair. From the very beginning Satair’s corporate make‑up has reflected the fact that its shareholders are a group of families. In the early 1990s, however, the company changes course, and the appointment of a new CEO signals a major modernisation process designed to streamline Satair. A process that will also bring early changes in its board of directors. Shortly after John Staer’s appointment, the board gets a new chairman. A leading Danish attorney and experienced corporate chairman, N.E. Nielsen, joins the Satair board – an indication of new times ahead. Satair distributes not only aircraft parts but also – in the 1990s – parts for helicopter manufacturers. For example, Eurocopter. New business horizons Led by John Staer and N.E. Nielsen, Satair finally turns its back on its original business model of buying and selling consignments of aircraft parts; it has become an increasingly difficult sector to operate in. New certification requirements in the aviation industry are designed to ensure that only original parts, meeting all standards, are used in aircraft production – and there is also a growing demand for all aircraft parts to be completely traceable. There must be no doubt about the origin of individual components. Under the new policy, it is a much better business to focus on becoming a regular distributor – and that is the course on which Satair management embarks up through the 1990s. But metre upon endless metre of warehouse storage shelves are still piled high with old spare parts and components for which there is no longer a demand – so Satair holds a gigantic warehouse sale. It manages to sell 70% of its stock – and reduces the remainder to about 30,000 part numbers. Brisk sales in the Far East In the 1990s activities in Singapore are doing very well. The business expands rapidly, and in March 1994 Satair sets up another Far East subsidiary. This time in Malaysia. The new company, Satair Malaysia SDN BHD, is a joint venture with a local company, Seri Aero Jaya SDN BHD, with whom Satair has cooperated for many years. Customers prefer dealing with local companies, and a local office is welcome. A year later – in May 1995 – a China sales office is opened in Beijing. It is a subdivision of Satair Asia in Singapore. In connection with the opening of the Beijing office John Staer gives a Danish media interview. In it he says: “China is an attractive market of which we’re expecting a great deal in the years ahead. Many affluent provinces are setting up their own airlines and have the funds to pay for them – so we believe our China office has a healthy future.” Markets in the 1990s In fiscal 1995/96 Satair has sales of DKK 424m. The Far East is showing signs of being a good market – but the company’s biggest market is Ger‑ many, followed by the UK. The USA holds third place. Another of Satair’s old‑established and stable markets is the air forces of several countries within and outside of NATO. That sector represents 10% of company sales during the period 1995‑96. But it is the major airlines that account for the bulk of Satair sales – as much as 51%. The office in Beijing is laid out in a way that welcomes every member of the Satair family. 2 2- 2 3 1997-2000 OEM build‑up In the mid 1990s Satair management realises that one area of business has been neglected for too long: sale of products such as rivets and fasteners directly to aircraft manufacturers – of both fixed‑wing and rotary‑wing aircraft – and their suppliers. These customers are known under the heading of Original Equipment Manufacturer or simply OEM. The OEM market is potentially substantial and one that Satair has not yet cultivated to the full. That situation is due to change. Satair launches on a programme of buying up existing compa‑ nies and deliberately picks out markets in which a major player like Airbus has its produc‑ tion. Satair starts by acquiring the French company Tecnimatic Aéronautique SA in 1998 – which is the start of Satair France SA. The purchase consolidates Satair relations with Airbus in France, to whom Tecnimatic Aéronautique SA is a supplier. Satair Hardware UK Ltd., Shoreham. Alliance with C.J. Fox & Sons Ltd., UK Until this point Satair had never really had a foothold in the British market, which tradition‑ ally supports a thriving aviation industry. This changes in 2001, when Satair merges its OEM division with the old‑established English company – and former competitor – C.J. Fox & Sons Ltd. The two companies jointly establish a new OEM subsidiary under the name Satair Hardware Group Ltd. It will handle the distribution of hardware – bolts, rivets, nuts and tools – to customers. Satair’s holding in Satair France is also transferred to Satair Hardware Group Ltd. Satair’s holding is 56%, giving the company undisputed access to the British market – where Airbus builds its aircraft wings. There are thousands of rivets in a wing – and Satair Hardware Group Ltd. is very happy to supply them. Quick visit to Switzerland In 1999 Satair acquires a Swiss company, Control Products AG, a specialist distributor of electrical products. After a year, and according to plan, Control Products AG suspends operations and moves all its activities to Copenhagen. Satair goes public Ever since John Staer was appointed CEO in 1994, taking Satair public on the Copenhagen Stock Exchange has been on the agenda. The stock‑market flotation occurs on June 3, 1997, with 31% of Satair shares being offered for sale. The shares are sold by existing shareholders, and Satair receives no funds from the float. Going public proves immensely successful, and all shares are sold on the first day. At the time of the float, John Staer an‑ nounces that Satair is ready to expand and that growth will consist mainly of acquisitions. Double in Five As the old millennium fades to a close, Satair is once more on firm ground and makes great strides in the late 1990s. In fiscal 1996/97 turnover rises by DKK 87m to DKK 511m, and in March 2000 the company raises its profits forecast for the year. The Far East economy, which had undergone a crisis in the late 1990s, is back on track. At the same time, air‑pas‑ senger traffic is picking up nicely in Europe. All in line with Satair’s own strategy: “Double in Five”, launched in 1999. The strategic objective is to double sales within five years. This will mean an average annual growth rate of 15% – based on a bigger customer portfolio, a bigger product portfolio, more agreements with manufacturers, and more acquisitions. And to round off the positive scene, Satair is looking to develop new sales and distribution concepts – making it even more attractive for customers and suppliers to do business with the energetic company. Creativity and new business Innovative thinking is a Satair specialty. Large companies like Airbus and Lufthansa are finding it more and more difficult to deal with an undergrowth of small suppliers – who are often unable to deliver the service and conclude the deals the major buyers are looking for. At Satair this situation has all the hallmarks of a new area of business. Although still sticking primarily to a handful of permanent distribution agreements for particular components, Satair is inspired by the situation to think innovatively – and comes up with IPP®, Integrated Purchasing Program, the first of its kind in the world. IPP is a single procurement channel drawing together a network of many small suppliers whose products are of particular interest to Airbus. By offering to manage this channel, Satair can guarantee that customers get the service and products they need – even from small suppliers. The industry welcomes IPP. It’s the right solution at the right time – when general trends are otherwise moving in the direction of rationalisation and optimisation of logistics and purchases. One‑Stop‑Shop is an emerging concept – and the industry likes it. Germany and Australia In late 2000 Satair – via its OEM division – ac‑ quires a German company, AeroPro, which acts as agent for American manufacturers of aircraft parts. The acquisition is intended to strengthen Satair’s hand in relations with German manufacturers of aircraft and heli‑ copters. Earlier in the new year Satair also sets up a “warehouse hotel” in Australia – in conjunction with a number of customers in that country. 24-2 5 2001-2008 On premises with the customer Satair develops a Direct Line Feed concept primarily to its OEM customers. DLF per‑ mits Satair to station an employee on the customer’s premises. The purpose is to en‑ sure that the manufacturer never runs out of parts distributed by Satair. Satair’s Nick Stephenson is pictured here as On‑Site Representative with Aircelle in the UK. 9/11 – Satair has learned its lesson The Gulf War and the period that followed took Satair by surprise – but when terrorists attack the World Trade Center and The Pentagon on September 11, 2001, Satair has learned a lesson. The whole company is on crisis alert from Day One. As it happens, Satair’s management team is assembled in Copenhagen on that fateful Tuesday and immediately sets up a crisis‑management team. Satair management expects that the effect of 9/11 will hit the Aftermarket hardest, to a lesser extent the OEM market – but the opposite is to turn out to be the case. Not only do people fly less after 9/11 but fewer new aircraft are ordered and built. Aircraft manufacturers downsize and cut their workforces. The whole sector is under pressure. Although faced with a crisis situation, Satair rejects any policy of mass redundancies. Management assesses that reducing the workforce would be detrimental to the company in the long term and is determined to get by with the staff the company currently employs. It is generally expected that market conditions will slowly revert to normal – and they do more or less after a year or so. But the terror attack whips the rug from under the “Double in Five” strategy – ambitions must be adjusted to bring them into line with market conditions, and the same applies to expectations for sales and earnings in the years ahead. Satair does, however, very well to emerge from the crisis without incurring a deficit. Just‑in‑time service with Boeing In April 2006 Satair becomes part of Boeing’s Integrated Materials Management (IMM) initiative. With IMM, Boeing – in collaboration with Satair and a group of other partners – is able to manage stocks of parts that airlines hold for aircraft maintenance. When an airline joins the programme, Boeing, Satair and other IMM partners can deliver the required spares exactly when the airline needs them. It minimises the airline’s need for an extensive stock of parts – and reduces AOG costs. All in all, big savings. In 2003 Satair acquires two companies, Lentern Aircraft Ltd. and Lentern International Inc., formerly competitors to Satair Hardware in the UK. Lentern is an old‑established company, founded during World War II. After the purchase, Lentern production facilities are transferred to a new address in Southend. The ribbon is cut at the new address on March 16, 2004. Lentern is merged with Satair Hardware UK, securing a much stronger position in the market. SARS‑free cabin ventilation Early in the new millennium cabin ventilation aboard aircraft achieves notoriety on the international agenda. In 2002 there is an outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) in China, and it spreads quickly to many parts of the world. The virus is spread by people travelling to and from an infected area, and there is widespread anxiety that there may be a risk of infection with SARS and similar airborne diseases via ventilation systems aboard aircraft. If the cabin air supply is correctly filtered, bacteria and vira are removed – and with them the risk of infection. In the post‑2002 period large numbers of new air filters are fitted. They are known as HEPA filters, and are a type distributed by Satair. New acquisitions in the Far East Satair already has offices in Singapore and China but if the company is to become one of the main players in the global market, it needs more growth ... in the Far East. So Satair is looking east again. At the beginning of 2006 Satair expands its activities in Singapore by buying a company called TPA Pte. Ltd. TPA is a highly esteemed supplier of equipment and spares for the aviation industry, bought mainly from German suppliers. TPA also has a department which repairs components, which gives Satair the opportunity to offer customers in the region a source for faster repairs. And the TPA acquisition gives Satair local sales staff in Korea, Japan and Dubai, where the company has not hitherto been represented. China – key market Satair has all Chinese commercial operators and a number of local manufacturers of aircraft and helicopters as customers and regards the Chinese market as key to its future. In 2008 Satair acquired a 49% holding in the Chinese company, Sichuan Ruibo Hydraulic Compo‑ nent Service, which specialises in repairing hydraulic products for the aviation industry. In conjunction with the purchase of TPA, the Ruibo acquisition means that Satair has definitely begun to realise part of its strategy for the new millennium: to become a fully developed service company increasingly able to offer its customers an one‑stop‑shop service. Satair takes part in the launch of the Chinese air‑ liner ARJ21, which seats around 80 passengers. The aircraft is designed to serve the Chinese regions. Working with Pall Corporation One of the leading manu‑ facturers of filters for use in aircraft is the American Pall Corporation. Satair has been a distributor of Pall products in Europe and the Far East since 1991, and Pall became a large stockholder in Satair at the 1997 IPO. In 2005 Satair took over PAS, which is Pall’s distribution activities in the commercial Aftermarket in North and South America. As a supplier to Airbus, Satair delivers thousands of rivets and other components to the giant Airbus A380. 26-2 7 Tom Hansen, Corporate Customer Development Manager, Satair employee since June 1, 1984. A trim tab – and a helping hand “It was the day after Christmas, back in the 1980s. I was on AOG duty and suddenly received a call from an aircraft mechanic employed by one of our Fokker F27 customers. He had a problem. One of the customer’s F27s was due to fly a group of journalists to the Paris‑Dakar rally but she was on the ground at Kastrup Airport and needed a particular spare part in order to take off – a trim tab, a structural part of the wing, about two metres long. The mechanic was looking for such a part and wanted to know if Satair could help – because at the time we were one of the main distributors of F27 products. Naturally we could. I myself took the spare part out to the mechanic at the airport, where it turned out he was working all alone because it was Christmas. I offered to give him a hand – and sud‑ denly I found myself up a ladder, holding the trim tab while the mechanic screwed it into place. At one point, there was something that didn’t quite fit – and the mechanic knocked the component in position with a rubber hammer. The picture of me up a ladder as he knocked the tab into place with a rubber hammer is an image I shall never forget. It isn’t so often we get right up close to the finished job with the parts we supply – and it was quite an experience making the difference out there at the aircraft. Feeling quite literally that we were helping to keep the aircraft in the sky.” been working here since 1984. Over the years Satair has become a big ”I’ve part of my life, and I have had many of those good experiences that say something about our corporate culture. There have been changes, and Satair has altered over time, but there has always been something special, some‑ thing that’s never changed. And that’s the genuine desire of our employees to help each other and our customers and suppliers. We always take our work seriously – but it’s often a bit of humour that gets the job done. Tom Hansen ” Satair today Copenhagen – right next door When you’re the world’s biggest independent distributor of components and spares for the aviation industry, there’s a lot of sense in having your headquarters on Amager, right next door to Copenhagen Airport in Kastrup. North America, the Middle East, the Far East – Satair has the whole world as its home market. And Copenhagen is centrally located and in the right time zone when you’re represented all over the globe and busy every day servicing the world’s airlines and manufacturers of aircraft and aircraft parts. Satair has its headquarters at Amager Landevej on the island of Amager. It’s where you’ll find Corporate Management and Satair’s administrative units – for example, Corporate HR and IT – and it’s where the network of threads is gathered from across the world. From the outset, Satair has had its warehouse on Amager – and things are still that way. Bolts and screws in the air An ordinary airliner is built from as many as three million different parts, many of them replaceable. Bolts and screws, oxygen masks and coffee‑makers, hoses and lamps – Satair’s core service is the distribution of more than 100,000 consumables. While Satair’s OEM Divi‑ sion services manufacturers of aircraft and helicopters, Aftermarket Division looks after the maintenance and repair market. Satair’s OEM Division looks after distribution and sale of components directly to compa‑ nies which build aircraft and helicopters. Whereas Aftermarket bases its work on many large distributorship agreements, OEM operates differently. This division has a handful of major distributorships with suppliers, and focuses instead on having contracts with customers for the supply of production components. Satair OEM generates much of its business through long‑standing outsourcing contracts under which Satair is responsible for a very wide range of goods. From Amager to the Far East – Satair has become the world’s largest independent distributor of spares and components for the aviation industry. And the future is wide open. Aftermarket and OEM Satair’s Aftermarket Division handles the daily sales and distribution of many thou‑ sands of different parts and components for a wide range of commercial airlines, workshops and other customers worldwide. The bulk of Aftermarket sales stems from major distribution agreements – several of which Satair holds on an exclusive basis. In 2008 Aftermarket represents about 400 manufacturers of aircraft components, and services more than 1,000 Aftermarket customers throughout the world. Aftermar‑ ket accounts for more than two‑thirds of Satair’s total activities. 28-2 9 From merchant to distributor Satair today is different from – and more than – the Danish trading company set up 50 years ago based on a good idea, a bunch of enthusiasts, and a lot of hard work. The company – once a trader and merchant – has become an international and strong distributor and a dynamic service company. Satair operates at the centre of a complex and ever‑changing aviation industry and forms a link between manufacturers of aircraft and aircraft parts and operators. Operators need to keep their planes flying, aircraft manufacturers have to be serviced, and the whole thing must be based on a strong network of suppliers and manu‑ facturers – which must be carefully maintained. Many countries, one company If an aircraft needs a spare part in order to take to the skies, then that part has to be fitted – irrespective where in the world the aircraft may be. It takes delivery reliability, a sense of timing – and, not least, the ability to be in the right place at the right time. Up through the 1990s Satair has become a truly international player, and through a series of acquisitions and mergers now covers the globe. By the beginning of 2008, Satair was represented at many different points throughout the world. Liew Kah Meng tests a control box in the repair shop in Singapore – where Satair has been represented since 1988. The Far East – the future market The Far East represents a growing strategic market for Satair and being in a position to service such OEMs as Airbus and Boeing locally within the Far East is of immense commercial value to Satair. The company has made a series of acquisitions over the years and set up offices in Japan, Singapore, China and elsewhere. Examples of this are the acquisition of the distribution company TPA in Singapore in 2006, and a 49% holding in the Chinese repair company Sichuan Ruibo in 2008. The combination of stable spare‑part supplies and local aircraft‑repair skills is proving a winning commercial formula. Suppliers need to be able to offer the major OEMs local Far East solutions, and at the same time Chinese airlines, for example, need to have ready, local access to the right spares. One‑stop‑shop The acquisition of repair companies such as Ruibo in China serves at the same time to illustrate another significant development trend. Whereas the people who drove Satair in the early years were fundamentally traders and masters of buying and selling, the company facing the new century has gradually become a full‑blown service provider. Manufacturers and operators are trimming their businesses and processes and are increasingly looking for fewer and more efficient relations and partners to whom they can delegate an ever‑increasing share of procurement, warehousing, logis‑ tics and other support functions – while they themselves are better able to concentrate on their core business. A deal is a deal Satair has always based its business dealings on relationships, close contacts with cus‑ tomers and suppliers, and the principle that a deal is a deal – and that will continue in future. But from selling hoses, filters, screws and bolts directly from mile‑long shelves to the waiting customer, the business is changing ... in future, core products will be more in the way of service concepts, with Satair taking more or less total responsibility for warehousing and repairs. The bedrock of this business comprises employee know‑how, a global presence, the right components on all shelves, and the ability to offer overview, control and process optimisation in place of simple part numbers. So the strategy at the beginning of the 21 century points in the direction of full‑service business models, with Satair acting increasingly as a one‑stop‑shop in repair and maintenance. A joint business, a common platform Satair has branches all over the world, more than 500 employees and several thousand part numbers to manage every day for cus‑ tomers and suppliers. That takes overview and very solid founda‑ tions – especially when, more and more, you offer to take over and manage all warehouse functions for your customers. Employees, customers and suppliers must be able to communicate seamlessly, and in 2008 Satair has installed a new IT solution which covers all parts of the company – another important stone has been added to an already strong foundation. 3 0- 3 1 Satair on the map Satair has grown to become a global enterprise and is today represented all over the world. Sales and warehouse Warehouse Sales representation Repair Center Satair A/S, Kastrup/Copenhagen Denmark Headquarters Aftermarket & OEM 160+ employees Satair Pte. Ltd., Singapore Aftermarket 70+ employees Satair USA Inc., Atlanta, Wichita & Ft. Lauderdale USA Aftermarket & OEM 50+ employees Satair China, Beijing & Chengdu Kina Aftermarket & OEM 35+ employees Satair Hardware UK Ltd., Shoreham & Southend UK OEM 160+ employees Satair Hardware SAS, Senlis/Paris France OEM 40+ employees 3 2- 3 3 Satair and its board of directors Satair started off life as a family‑run company, and despite changes in the Board over the years, the original family ties are still strong. In 2008 there are still two representatives of the founding families on the Board – Finn Rasmussen, a descendant of Manufacturer Jens Frederik Rasmussen, and Carsten Soerensen, son of Rigmor and Knud Soerensen. International tone John Staer and the Satair Board of Directors in 1996 with N.E. Nielsen, Chairman. Left to right: Finn Rasmussen, Carsten L. Soerensen, Gert Christoffersen, Gunnar Christensen, N.E. Nielsen, Mads Rahbek, Joergen Hoey and Holger Elbek. One member, Lisbeth Nielsen, was absent when the photograph was taken. When N.E. Nielsen takes over as Chairman of the Board in 1994, it’s a signal that changes are about to occur and that an international outlook is on the cards. To succeed with inter‑ national expansion requires knowledge of local conditions in other parts of the world both within and outside your particular industrial sector – and Satair achieves this by welcoming international members to its board. In 1998 a representative of a leading French shareholder became a board member, and in 2000 the Board welcomed a very experienced American, with links to Satair’s main sup‑ plier. This was followed in 2006 with the election of the CEO of the company that had sold TPA in Singapore. In Anniversary Year 2008 the Board of Directors comprises six members elected by the General Meeting (three from Denmark, one from the USA, one from Belgium and one from Singapore) and three Danish employee representatives. In 2008 Satair has one of the most internationally representative boards of any Danish public company – which affords the Board of Directors a unique background awareness of what it takes to operate a worldwide business enterprise. International insight is a sound footing on which to act quickly, professionally and knowledgeably when the time comes for strategic decisions. Love of business, love of flying “Sound commercial principles are still a key to Satair’s way of doing business. Satair has its roots in Denmark – but as a modern, international company it embraces the world. If there’s anything the company has done well, it has been taking the down‑to‑earth Danish approach to commercial thinking and transferring it to its actions and transactions in the wider world. Satair is a business enterprise staffed by good, modern‑minded busi‑ ness people who know a healthy deal when they see one. Every day you’ll find well‑qualified, talented and competent employees behind all the many agreements and deals that make Satair one of the world’s leaders in its field. From Singapore to Atlanta – it’s our employees that are the foundation of our company. They are the ones who can see, grasp and take advantage of the many opportunities we come across in our everyday dealings – and negotiate transac‑ tions big and small. With its network of employees all over the world, Satair possesses a great inner strength that lends the company an outward unity – even though it reaches halfway across the globe. It has a corporate culture that not only encourages plans – but also encourages you to put your plans into action. Company employees have always played a key role on the Board. During one of Satair’s worst crises – before I arrived at the company – employee representatives demonstrated an astonishing composure and strength, which helped bring Satair through a difficult period. Today they bring a detailed knowledge of agreements and markets to the boardroom, af‑ fording an extra dimension to its work. At the same time, they are good representatives of the strong culture and spirit that binds Satair together. A spirit which continues to permeate all parts of the company and which helps make Satair a dynamic and exciting company to manage. At Satair we share a passion for negotiating the best possible deal and developing a strong and sustainable business across geographical and cultural boundaries. But we also share something else. We share a fascination for what it’s all about. Seeing an A380 gliding across the sky in all its majesty, and thinking that you’ve done your bit by delivering the nuts and bolts that hold the giant together up there in the air – and you’d be excused for feeling just a bit sentimental!” an A380 gliding across the sky in all its ”Seeing majesty, and thinking that you’ve done your bit by delivering the nuts and bolts that hold the giant together up there in the air – and you’d be excused for feeling just a bit senti‑ mental! ” N.E. Nielsen, Satair’s Board Chairman since 1994 34-3 5 Ambitioner og fælles mål: Delivering 500+ I Satair handler det om at flytte andet og mere end partnumre. Hvis man vil være de bedste i en voksende branche fuld af muligheder for forretning, så kræver det et højt ambitionsniveau. Målet er en omsætning på over 500 mio. dollars inden 2010 og en øget indtjening. Det mål skal nås gennem nytænkning, godt samarbejde, øget vækst og styrkelse Ambitions af de gode relationer and shared både interntobjectives: og eksternt. Delivering 500+ • Growth At Satair is to move more than just partkonstant. numbers.Fordi To be theforstår leader at in Lige siden denthe 23.job december 1957 er Satair vokset man se dearigtige growing muligheder industry full på de of business rigtige tidspunkter, potential takes og fordi a high man level sletof ikke ambition. kan lade være.The I dag company’s distribuerer objective Satair til is to mere reach endsales 100of lande moreogthan har USD over 500m 2.000 by aktive 2010 kunder. and to improve its profitability. To achieve that objective will require in‑ novation, close cooperation, increased growth, and a consolidation of good •Relationships both internally andgode externally. Hele relations Satairs forretning hviler på relationer mellem mennesker. Både internt i virksomheden på tværs af kultur og geografi og eksternt i forhold til Satairs mange ofte mangeårige relationer til kunder og leverandører. • og Growth • Innovation Satair has been growing continuously since December 23, 1957. Because company identified right possibilities at store the right time – and I Satair vilthe man hellere has gå foran end the se andre løbe med de forretningsmu‑ ligheder. because Det kræver it can’t nytænkning help growing. og innovation Today Satair i driften distributes af forretningen. to more than Satair 100 countries andskal has udvikles more than 2,000 activesupply customers. skal gå foran, når der nye effektive chain-løsninger til virk‑ somhedens mange kunder og partnere. •Relationships • People Satair bases its entire business on having good interpersonal relation‑ ships. Both internally within the company different cultures and Det er medarbejderne, der udgør rygraden i Satair, across og sådan har det været fra dag ét. Men geography hvor detand engang externally var en in gruppe relationnøglepersoner, to Satair’s many der and tegnede often dec‑ virksom‑ heden, erades‑long det i dag relations en hel organisation with customers af engagerede and suppliers. mennesker, der trækker i fællesskab. • Innovation At Satair we would rather lead the way than see others run off with the prime business opportunities. Running a business requires innovation and fresh thinking. Satair must take the lead in developing new, efficient supply chain solutions for the company’s many customers and partners. • People It’s people that give Satair its backbone, and it’s been that way since Day One. But whereas it was once a group of key individuals who represented the company, today an entire organisation of committed people are pull‑ ing a willing load. Close‑up of the Chinese market The number 10 has positive symbolic significance in Chinese culture – so when Satair’s China office celebrated its 10 anniversary in 2005, it was a special day in more ways than one. Satair has been operating in Singapore since 1988 – but in 1995 the moment had come to join the rapidly expanding market in China. And with its office in Beijing, Satair became the first foreign distributor of its kind to set up in that country. The aviation industry market in China in 2008 is the fastest‑growing aviation market in the world. Since 1995 air traffic in the country has increased by 14% a year, and the number of aircraft has risen from only about 100 to around 1,000. The aviation industry is booming, and the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) expects that by 2010 several thousand new aircraft will be required – simply to meet the needs of air traffic within China’s own boundaries. What began as an outfit with two employees has grown today into a well‑founded sales and service business employing many people. Satair’s Chinese employees service a growing number of both local and international manufacturers and operators – in conjunction with the office in Singapore and the rest of the Satair team. A global player – at local level In China personal relationships are the key to negotiating a good deal, which is why a local presence is so important. Because in China you need to know the culture and the language – and realise how important personal trust is. And you have to take the time it takes to build up a good relationship to local customers and partners. Satair today is one of the leading players in China when it comes to helping aircraft into the air and keeping them there safely. The company has great ambitions, and Satair will devote much effort over the next many years to increasing and consolidating its presence in this mighty country. It’s an ambition well founded in the fact that Satair already has a good local brand image – Satair China and its employees are recognised for their integrity, transparency, good service and stable support. business we place ”IngreatChinese emphasis on personal rela‑ tionships. People are prepared to do business if they’re with good friends and feel secure – other‑ wise, no. It’s highly professional – and simply another way of running a business. ” Hu Yongdong, General Manager, Satair China. In Beijing Satair China shares premises with CASC/Airbus Customer Support Centre. This is also where the company has its warehouse – integrated with Airbus’ local warehouse. 3636-3 7 We are committed to serving our customers and our suppliers We succeed through knowledge and competence We demonstrate initiative and commitment We will conduct business professionally, ethically and respectfully ” To me Satair is a growing family of diverse members and cultures. Bruce Lowe, USA e been th nce has e profitri a e p to x te iness in s u ra‑ My bes b K eU lt integ ing of th r a very difficu of e m rebuild ti ty afte and a ti g n e in g rd a me, I makin ry rew ent for was ve m p is lo th e , tion nning a nd dev cts of ru rning a e a p le s a t a y gre man ng from mentori olved in v e . in th s d a w at team njoye s and e m a gre s o e fr in s rt u o b supp rs and my pee land ” Kevin ler, Eng Chand ” My bes t experi hagen ence is for SAP going to training Copen‑ there a . It was nd I ha my firs d the o with co t time p p ortunit lleague y to wo s from world, rk d if ferent p with ev arts of eryone team m the w o rk oving to ing part wards th as a Loreen Cheo, e same g Singapo oal. re for ortunity is an opp ir ionally. ta a ss S fe e To m and pro y ll a n o rs th pe rowth bo ” g Mike Gronnige r, USA ” The culture at Satair is professional but friendly – hardworking but relaxed. Reece Walker, England ” To me Satair is an organization that is worth to stay with till retirement. Nicholas Lo Ming Chung, Singapore ” Taking part as an Employee Representa‑ tive in the work of the Satair Board has been and is a thrilling experience – it has been especially interesting to be involved in the acquisition of new companies. For example, I have had a hand in the purchase of Lentern, TPA, PAS and Ruibo. Dorte Sonne Ekner, Denmark art ing p ce be mber in n ie r pe ve at ex in No wide a gre eting rue world n‑ s e a w m t 0 It iste us 50 ing a ies. L om e Foc , and see abilit fr p a s c of th n e d ine s p‑ nhag talent an r bus o u o ir e f Cope f h o o ive ith t t tion c w c e , e we e p ll co pers world vinced m e e h t h t o n. on nd ing t les, c izatio arou bstac ble organ eers o p d y n m a ea nities nowledg portu yk r e v a have SA ” rd, U Bob Lanfo ” I once received a Request for Quota‑ tion, and in order to be able to answer it I needed to know the type of aircraft. It turned out it was for a submarine, not an aircraft! But I gave a quote anyway – and got the order. It’s always fun to tackle a deal with a difference! Lone Petersen, Denmark ” To me Satair is an adventure, which is worthwhile in itself. Since starting up the IMM program with Boeing, I have had the time of my life at Satair. There has not been a dull moment trying to manage this diverse program. Bruce P. Brzoska, USA Brian N. Hvid, USA ” ” My visitin best expe rienc g No e rt chan ce to hwest Air with Sata ir lines, see b logis o wher has been tics s e I ha ide o th sales a DeSond f our spect da ra W s and busin hite ess. the , USA ” To m e perf orm Satair is a anc imp e v orta nce compa ery hig Chr h ny w to t iste h lle hich Lebeaupin e hu man at , Fr valu tach ance es. ” Satair is a purposeful, go‑ahead, adaptable company in which the individual employee can take on responsibility – and see Satair not as an employer but as a solid marriage! Lotte Kathrine Enevoldsen, Denmark ” cellent is integrity, ex To me, Satair n. tio ice and innova customer serv ” ance x, Fr Valerie Moreau ” As a former employee of the Lentern Group, my best experience has been the transition to the Satair family and the global support that we feel has made a significant difference in our success in Ft. Lauderdale since the acquisition. Dick Edwards, USA I believe our company is very strong, because we are a Danish company. Our shared work ethic seems to have spread across the world – and I’m sure it will continue. Kim McBurnett, USA 1957 1960 1961 1962 com s St sell erli n rst DC tor ribu dist y’s pan om ded oun is f ec d th raft chc Bee g it s fi es a om bec inte /S .A Co ral Ma na mb er 2 3 ene tG firs ece on D ger ‑6s pan ym ove 197 s to 2 Am par : Sata age ti F i r La okk r blive er 2 r d nde vej 7-d istrib in K ele utø Sat køb r fo air ast rup es f r C and beco , ne h r e a m buy KLM rry R ar C s it es a d i v ope , s fi e i S wis t, P rst stribu nha sair reci com to gen Sat s / ion Bal air put r for Air air Riv er s Pur por sam beco o e g yst i t t t e y mes a o A em n (l ll N g W ear B a f e i t ppo ilso rom er is a ech cce nA n& c ICL BE A pte raft’s irw T ero d fo dis ays elex. s Sat p ace De r m tribu air ), t fø em bec rste ber tion c om ship ent es t r e h o ec 198 f A for om DM the 0 pan w Sat : Sata A, y the hole air ’ i s r offi ans blive o firs cial kaf t no f Sca r nam fer Cha n ‑US ndina m sig e, a In D com via, et fl pionn d th ece y ti dist pan and ec mb l eg ribu y to in th o mp er t et b tør e be any he rug , og so wa issu : Et et s reh The e t B s ous eec ort p its fi com ea hcr rst pan tA aft arti D em m yo Bar C-3 plo age p o yee e o n Sat r La ns g E D 5 sha air its n 5 C dev . -4 firs res act begi ind ej 1 t of ivit n k s 4 fi øbe ies to b 7A c e are siZ in t bur u he late y, se ns aÏre US t r br ll an o . Offi A the oug d le ce g a ht t rou s in S e nd oge out ing the a apo r in ircraf re o Sat t – t pen airc h s raft ese The Sat air air Sat is a ppo ng ir T rad i en dS oer ens Knu an A avi din Sca n 38-3 9 Satair over the years 1967 1972 1974 1976 1978 1980 1981 1984 Satair becomes a distributor for Cherry Rivet, Precision Rivet and Wilson & Telex. It buys its first ship‑ ments of F27 parts from KLM, Swissair/ Balair and All Nippon Airways Satair becomes a Champion distributor, and purchases a large consignment of DC‑3 and DC‑4 aircraft parts in Zaïre. Satair acquires an aircraft for its own use: a Beechcraft Baron E55 1985 1988 Sat 2001 2003 2005 2006 2007 7 Sat air 1999 200 Sat air m 1998 su set te. sT PA P buy es P AS . in Ltd he in t gap Sin A US td. he in t and Inte rna K Son s, U Len tern . Fo x& C.J UK ith nw lan d zer wit in S isio Div cts ft L ircr a M OE nte rn A ires Le sh ani sD es i t pur cha s acq u erg ce ran in F ont rol Pro du es C atic s pen cni m lic ires Te pub pur cha s oes go pS ore ata Sat ir P air te. Ltd rep acqu . in air com ires a the Far pan 49% Eas y, S h t ich oldin uan g in Rui t h eC bo hin ese Sat air Sat air air Sat air 1997 198 2 7 195 Sat air acq u 1995 eijin in B old is s Sat air g ce aft Sat airc r Offi 1992 2008 Satair employees from 1957 to 2007 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 SA nc. in t he U tion al I Abu Monnan · Mar Andy Moores · Jamie Anja Siiger Hansen · Ebbe Hansen · Lene Hansen · Ove Hansen · Christin Morgan · Christopher Casper Holm-Pedersen · Henrik Hvass · Michael Højgaard · Per Iversen · Søren Iverse Moss-Clarke · Paul Mott · Kim Grøn Jensen · Kim Rene Jensen · Maja Christina Jensen · Tina Egede Jensen · Lisbeth Gjøl Jens Nell · Ashley Nicklin · · Anette Knudsen · Anja Kongsted · Henning Kongsted · Anne Lise Lagerstrøm · H Bruce O’Connor · Allan Asger Mikkelsen · Richard Mikkelsen · Søren Munk · Grete Kleiv M Orman · Martin Osborne · Ole Nielsen · Rene Sune Nielsen · Troels Algot N Ryan Parsons · Gaynor Owens · Majken Gernskov Pedersen · An Kelly Palmer · Emma Parker · Roland Rasmus Lisa Overington · David Perkins · Richar Ian Powell · Susan Richards · Bob Schramm · Mary Prowse · Rob Purnell · Frankie Randall · Kim Ransley · Luke I Remsbery · Jean Richards · Michael John Bar Poland · Nick Roberts · Emma Rudge · Alison Bunker · Graham Russell · Patrick Ryan · Alan Amanda Clements · Jere Sargent · Charlotte Sawyer · Samuel Stuart Deary · Kevin Little · Bill Pearmain · Lisa Shaddick · Danny Simmons · Jim Forsberg · Jessica Frost · Lauren Fu Stephen Simmons · Arnie Sivertsen · Harold Dean Hayward · Yvonne Hearn · Peter HeeneySmith · Garry Snow · Malcolm Spooner · Nick Glenn Hooper · Keith Hopkins · Christopher Hughes · Stephenson · Charlotte Stevens · Ray Stevens · David Johnson · Christine Kay · Marcia Kay · Jacqueline Kenn Nathan Stewart · Glenn Stokes · Barry Stone · Ken Maclennan · Julia Madhani · Victoria Martin · Paul Maynard · Bill Robin Strickland · Stephen Sumner · Martin Swinney · Megan Tannenbaum · Beverley Tanner · Mark Tanner · Natalie Taylor · Paul Taylor · Laura Thomas · Nigel Thomas · Mark Thoms · Frankie Turnbull · D · Roy Venn · Tina Verlo · Sandy Wainwright · Doreen Walker · Reece Walker · Bobby Walker · Mark Warwick · Chris Webbon · Richard Wellham · T Kathy Wiggins · Chris Williams · John Williams · Stuart Wilson · Cedric Aymonin · Olivier Bertrand · Pascal Birck · Olivier Bourgine · Francoise Bouthors-Bernard · Sébastien Boutrouille · Meddy Jean-Michel Brothier · Laurence Candellier · Yann Caro · Karine Cerceau · Antoine Chetelat · Marie Clair · Laurent Clerget · Laure Decroix · Myriam Defreitas · Sylvie Duhamel · Manuella Fleury · Jean Michel Fontaine · Fabrice Fusarelli · Grégory Gonzalez · Sébastien Guingouin · Martine Hen · Anne Karczewski · Annie Claude Koehler · Arnaud Lavisse · Murielle Lemen · Christelle Lebeaupin · Jérome Lucien · Sylvie Mandon · Audrey Mansart · Emmanuel Mathiot · Valérie Moreaux · Ariane Neuville · Louis Nicolas · Carole Piorowicz · Daniel Poiret · Sylvie Rantz · Fabienne Raynaud · Emmanuelle Ricaud · Nathalie Sinna · Sébastien Thomas · Tiphaine Trouvé · Didier Uldry · Nathalie Wowk · Ton Eichelsheim · Wenying Chen · Ying Hou · Yongdong Hu · Jin Fei Qin · Jun De Pan · Hai Lin · Yu Qing Ma · Xiao Zheng Sun · Laura Wang · Meng Wu · Emily Ye · Yuan Zhang · Xiao Li Zhao · Chunliu Zhong · Siti Musfirah Bite Abdul Rahim · Mohammad Naharuddin Bin Ali · Hamdan Bin Amran · Norfadzlina Binte Abdul Rahim · Roszita Mohd Isa · Vincent Chan · Loreen Cheo · Laura Cheong · Augusto Cobarrubia · David Corish · Gracie Dan · Sharon Fan · Rene Frandsen · Sunny Goh · Siti Zulfarae’za Binte Jumat · Kimitomo Kikuchi · Jeffrey Koh · Siok Imm Koh · Soon Ting Koo · Stephane Lecolley · Junn Lee · Jenny Li · Kah Meng Liew