Author: Rico Franco
Photo Courtesy of Yerdos Ussenov
When the world’s borders were sealed off in March 2020, millions of travelers found themselves trapped in foreign countries with canceled flights and empty airports. While commercial airlines grounded their fleets, one Kazakhstani charter broker saw a golden opportunity amidst all the adversity. Yerdos Ussenov, working from his office in the Russian and CIS aviation market, launched a product that would challenge the very foundations of private aviation economics.
The concept, called Jet Sharing, emerged from desperation and ingenuity. Ussenov recognized that wealthy individuals stranded across different continents still needed to return home, but traditional private jet charters carried prohibitive costs for single passengers. His solution: pair travelers flying on the same route and share the comfort of a private jet without the cost of chartering the whole aircraft.
The Birth of Accessible Luxury Aviation
Yerdos Ussenov’s background seemed unlikely preparation for industry disruption. With a bachelor’s degree in pedagogy, he had worked as a private jet charter broker since 2017, gradually climbing to head of charter sales in two years and then chief sales executive. The business aviation world operated on established protocols: wealthy clients paid premium prices for exclusive aircraft access. Sharing, at the time, seemed completely the opposite of the luxury experience these customers expected.
The onset of COVID-19, however, completely destroyed such expectations. Flight restrictions paralyzed commercial aviation, creating a massive gap between stranded travelers and available transport. Ussenov’s employer tasked him with developing solutions for clients desperate to reach their home countries. “We could help our clients to come back to their homeland when they were stuck in different countries,” Ussenov explains. His Jet Sharing concept addressed both the humanitarian crisis and business survival simultaneously.
The product’s success exceeded expectations. Beyond emergency repatriation, the service attracted regular business travelers who discovered that shared private flights offered superior value compared to commercial business class tickets. Ussenov’s team developed a dedicated application, creating seamless booking experiences that rivaled established airlines. The innovation positioned his company as a legitimate competitor to major carriers on popular routes.
Industry Transformation and Competitive Response
The impact was felt all across the European aviation markets. Companies throughout Russia and Europe began replicating Ussenov’s model, validating his approach while creating new competitive pressures. Traditional private aviation operators found themselves competing not only with each other but with this hybrid model that blurred lines between private charters and commercial services.
Yerdos Ussenov’s success highlighted fundamental inefficiencies in private aviation. Aircraft typically flew empty on positioning flights, generating no revenue while consuming fuel and crew resources. Jet Sharing converted dead-weight flights into profit centers, maximizing asset utilization while reducing per-passenger costs. The model challenged industry assumptions about exclusivity and pricing structures.
The business thrived even after pandemic restrictions were lifted. Customers who initially used the service out of necessity continued booking shared flights for routine travel. The product’s popularity demonstrated sustained demand for affordable luxury aviation options. Ussenov’s team continuously refined the platform, expanding route networks and improving user experiences.
Recognition Without Credit
Despite the product’s success and industry influence, Yerdos Ussenov received little public recognition for his work. His employer claimed credit for the concept while omitting his contributions from marketing materials and industry publications. This oversight reflects broader patterns in corporate aviation, where individual achievements often disappear into company branding. The geopolitical landscape eventually constrained the business. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine triggered international sanctions and flight restrictions that severely limited operations.
The war disrupted routes, eliminated market access, and forced many aviation companies to restructure or cease operations entirely. Ussenov’s success story became entangled with broader political consequences beyond his control. Although working in a different industry, Ussenov occasionally arranges charter flights for former clients. His experience illustrates both the possibilities and limitations of individual innovation within complex global systems. The Jet Sharing concept proved that creative thinking could reshape established markets, even when external forces ultimately determine business sustainability.
“With our product, we have become big rivals to commercial airlines that provide business class flights. Our clients consider us like commercial airlines that frequently fly to the most popular destinations,” Ussenov notes. His words capture the essence of successful disruption: creating value that customers embrace while fundamentally altering competitive dynamics. The war may have ended his aviation career, but the model he created continues to influence how the industry thinks about shared luxury travel.
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