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ePlane takes off as an aerospace products marketplace

ePlane takes off as an aerospace products marketplace

A fledgling online aerospace marketplace, ePlane is spreading its wings, says CEO Gideon Shmuel.

“Aerospace is a traditional B2B market, but when I talk to buyers and sellers, they no longer have an objection to going digital,” he says. “The new generation of younger people are the ones who need to get the job done, and they don’t have a black book of who to call when they need an engine part.”

The average price tag is $12,000, but engines listed for sale on ePlane.com can run more than $2 million.

EPlane, launched in June 2017, is out to increase its share of the global market for aerospace products used in the maintenance, repair and overhaul of aircraft and aircraft components. The market for such products is primed to scale to $116 billion worldwide by 2029, up from $81.9 billion last year, according to a market forecast report by Oliver Wyman, a global management consulting firm for aerospace and other industries.

The market for MRO products is being served by a growing number of online marketplaces that have emerged over the past several years, including fipart, PartPilot, PartsBase, AeroParts Now and Honeywell Aerospace’s GoDirect Trade.

Other aerospace ecommerce sites operated by aerospace manufacturers and distributors include Monroe Aerospace, Jet Parts Engineering, and The Boeing Co.’s MyBoeingFleet.com and Aviall.com.

Aircraft engines listed at $2 million and up

Gideon Shmuel, CEO, ePlane

On ePlane.com, an average number of 500 customers each month purchase aircraft parts ranging from brake valves and radio altimeters to aircraft engines, Shmuel says. The average price tag is $12,000, but engines listed for sale can run more than $2 million, he says.

EPlane doesn’t break out revenue figures, but figuring 500 buyers per month and an average price of $12,000, Digital Commerce 360 B2B estimates that annual sales could run about $70 million. Shmuel notes that buyers on ePlane.com process requests for quotes with a combined value of about $500 million a year. “A high percentage become transactions,” he adds.

Buyers listed by ePlane include airlines JetBlue, Air France-KLM, Air Arabia and Flair Airlines, and aircraft MRO services firms Aero Sky, Bombadier MRO, Duncan Aviation and Davenport Aviation.

Among ePlane’s online features and services are:

More services ahead

Still operating in a startup phase, ePlane doesn’t charge any fees to either buyers or sellers, acting for now as a free service as it builds its brand. But it’s planning to soon introduce additional services that will carry fees, Shmuel says. These may include logistics, warehousing and fulfillment services; expanded market data on customer demand trends for particular products and product categories; and opportunities for suppliers to advertise their products and services. EPlane has about 55 employees.

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