Jeppesen [UPDATED]
Today, Jeppesen is a subsidiary of Boeing, but its core product has undergone a revolution. The paper charts are fading. In their place is —an iPad-based electronic flight bag (EFB). Pilots now carry an entire global library of charts, weather overlays, and real-time NOTAMs (Notices to Air Missions) in a device lighter than a single manual.
In an industry where zero defects is the only acceptable standard, Jeppesen has achieved something remarkable: for over 80 years, a pilot has never crashed because a Jeppesen chart was wrong. That is not just a business success. It is a monument to the idea that careful information, beautifully organized, can be the difference between the sky and the ground. This piece provides a strategic, historical, and operational overview of Jeppesen, suitable for a business, aviation, or design-focused audience. jeppesen
If you have ever looked out of an airplane window and marveled at the seamless journey from takeoff to landing, you have witnessed the work of Jeppesen. Yet, unlike Boeing or Airbus, the name “Jeppesen” rarely appears in passenger conversation. It is the invisible architecture of flight—a quiet, essential force that has guided nearly every commercial pilot for over eight decades. Today, Jeppesen is a subsidiary of Boeing, but