{"id":2811,"date":"2020-10-13T11:29:08","date_gmt":"2020-10-13T09:29:08","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/artheauaviation.com\/eng\/?p=2811"},"modified":"2023-02-27T17:34:06","modified_gmt":"2023-02-27T15:34:06","slug":"2811","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/artheauaviation.com\/eng\/blog\/2020\/10\/13\/2811\/","title":{"rendered":"CashFlow interviewed our Managing Partner, Roch Artheau"},"content":{"rendered":"
CashFlow interviewed our Managing Partner, Roch Artheau, on his vision of entrepreneurship in the aeronautical sector:<\/p>\n
Why did you become an entrepreneur?<\/strong> What is your company’s mission?<\/strong> What is your biggest mistake as a contractor?<\/strong> What is your greatest success?<\/strong> What’s the best advice you’ve ever been given?<\/strong> What do you consider to be the main qualities of a good entrepreneur?<\/strong> A management book to recommend?<\/strong> Who is the entrepreneur you admire most?<\/strong>
\nI started my job in an Anglo-Saxon company, then in another and I wanted to set up this same project with methods that were more in line with my image and my idea of service, which is closer to Latin values.<\/p>\n
\nIt’s consulting and brokerage in aeronautical chartering, intermediation between airlines and clients from small private jets to cargo planes and airliners. Just like a real estate agent but on aircraft as much as on renting, selling or managing aircraft. (No ticketing, just the whole plane)<\/p>\n
\nTo sometimes continue to believe that what is so clear to me is so clear to others.<\/p>\n
\nTo always take so much pleasure in finding solutions to so-called “impossible” missions and to pass on my passion.<\/p>\n
\nIn my line of business, to never set up an airline. In life, but which is also valid in my work, to know how to “let go”, i.e. to succeed in not mixing involvement and affect.<\/p>\n
\nListening, transmitting, giving.<\/p>\n
\nHow To Win Friends And Influence People: Dale Carnegie’s<\/p>\n
\nToday, I have a particular admiration for those who will still leave a visible imprint on the eye 500 years from now. In fact, I am more attached to architects like Niemeyer or Pei who died in the last decade; they were also serial entrepreneurs.<\/p>\n