Too Many People, Not Enough Closers: Why Aircraft Deals Are Getting Slower and Messier | EP 33 episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 28, 2026 · 26 MIN

Too Many People, Not Enough Closers: Why Aircraft Deals Are Getting Slower and Messier | EP 33

from VREF | The Truth About the Aviation Market · host Jason Zilberbrand

Podcast: The Truth About the MarketHost: Jason Zilberbrand, President of VREFAircraft transactions used to be simple.Buyer. Seller. Broker. Attorney. Escrow. Pre-buy.Now a single deal can involve brokers, support teams, transaction managers, in-house counsel, outside counsel, lenders, insurers, tax advisors, maintenance consultants, and pre-buy facilities.And somehow… deals are not getting easier.In this episode of The Truth About the Market, Jason breaks down how modern aircraft transactions became over-layered, over-managed, and harder to close.Because complexity does not always reduce risk.Sometimes it spreads responsibility so thin that nobody is actually in control.In this episode, we cover:• Why aircraft deals used to move faster with fewer people involved• How brokerage shifted from relationship-driven selling to corporate-style process management• Why more titles, more teams, and more structure do not automatically create better outcomes• The hidden reason large brokerage firms are building “organizations” instead of relying on individual dealmakers• Why aircraft sales still depend on instinct, judgment, and human closing ability• How documentation negotiations turn into endless revision cycles• Why pre-buy inspections often expand beyond their original purpose• How minor squawks become major negotiation points when too many parties get involved• Why responsibility gets diffused when every advisor has a voice but no one owns the decision• The point where protection stops protecting the buyer and starts killing momentum• Why a perfectly structured deal that never closes is not a success• How buyers lose leverage by asking for too many layers of validation• How sellers weaken their position when they let the process expand unchecked• Why lenders need to balance risk control with execution speed• Why aircraft transactions do not reward perfect information — they reward informed judgment• The one thing every successful deal still needs: someone accountable enough to drive it forwardJason also explains why aircraft transactions still close the same way they always have:one person, one moment, one decision.Not because the process was perfect.Because someone took ownership.The bottom line:Complexity is not a strategy.Execution is.The best deals do not have the most people.They have the most clarity, the most alignment, and someone accountable for getting to yes.For accurate, defensible aircraft valuations trusted by lenders, insurers, and professionals worldwide, visit VREF.com.Fly safe. Stay smart.

Podcast: The Truth About the MarketHost: Jason Zilberbrand, President of VREFAircraft transactions used to be simple.Buyer. Seller. Broker. Attorney. Escrow. Pre-buy.Now a single deal can involve brokers, support teams, transaction managers, in-house counsel, outside counsel, lenders, insurers, tax advisors, maintenance consultants, and pre-buy facilities.And somehow… deals are not getting easier.In this episode of The Truth About the Market, Jason breaks down how modern aircraft transactions became over-layered, over-managed, and harder to close.Because complexity does not always reduce risk.Sometimes it spreads responsibility so thin that nobody is actually in control.In this episode, we cover:• Why aircraft deals used to move faster with fewer people involved• How brokerage shifted from relationship-driven selling to corporate-style process management• Why more titles, more teams, and more structure do not automatically create better outcomes• The hidden reason large brokerage firms are building “organizations” instead of relying on individual dealmakers• Why aircraft sales still depend on instinct, judgment, and human closing ability• How documentation negotiations turn into endless revision cycles• Why pre-buy inspections often expand beyond their original purpose• How minor squawks become major negotiation points when too many parties get involved• Why responsibility gets diffused when every advisor has a voice but no one owns the decision• The point where protection stops protecting the buyer and starts killing momentum• Why a perfectly structured deal that never closes is not a success• How buyers lose leverage by asking for too many layers of validation• How sellers weaken their position when they let the process expand unchecked• Why lenders need to balance risk control with execution speed• Why aircraft transactions do not reward perfect information — they reward informed judgment• The one thing every successful deal still needs: someone accountable enough to drive it forwardJason also explains why aircraft transactions still close the same way they always have:one person, one moment, one decision.Not because the process was perfect.Because someone took ownership.The bottom line:Complexity is not a strategy.Execution is.The best deals do not have the most people.They have the most clarity, the most alignment, and someone accountable for getting to yes.For accurate, defensible aircraft valuations trusted by lenders, insurers, and professionals worldwide, visit VREF.com.Fly safe. Stay smart.

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Too Many People, Not Enough Closers: Why Aircraft Deals Are Getting Slower and Messier | EP 33

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This episode was published on April 28, 2026.

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Podcast: The Truth About the MarketHost: Jason Zilberbrand, President of VREFAircraft transactions used to be simple.Buyer. Seller. Broker. Attorney. Escrow. Pre-buy.Now a single deal can involve brokers, support teams, transaction managers,...

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