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Ep.310 Why Rolls-Royce Sold Uptime, Not Engines


Season 2 Episode 51


Airlines used to buy engines the hard way—massive upfront costs, unpredictable breakdowns, and “heartbreak charts” full of revenue spikes and repair crashes. Then Rolls-Royce changed everything with one line: Power by the Hour.

Instead of selling engines, they sold uptime. Airlines now pay a fixed fee for every hour of flight, while Rolls-Royce monitors performance, handles maintenance, and replaces parts before they fail. The result? Predictable cash flow for airlines and steady recurring revenue for Rolls-Royce.

It’s brilliant alignment: the less downtime, the more everyone earns. Rolls-Royce isn’t rewarded when engines break—they profit when planes stay flying.

The lesson: Sell the outcome, not the parts. Align incentives so your customer’s success becomes yours. That’s how you turn volatility into value.

Today’s Move: Rewrite one offer to sell the result, not the product—one line, fixed fee, shared success.

🎧 Listen now to Good Morning, Money! — daily stories that turn business models into lasting wealth.

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Published on 3 days, 12 hours ago






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