Career
According to various press reports and the book "On the Lincolnshire" by Larry Kahaner, Jack Goeken founded Microwave Communications Incorporated in the 1960s so that he could expand his radio-repair business. He reasoned that if he could set up a microwave repeater system between Chicago and Saint Louis, he would be able to sell more radios to truckers. When Goeken tried to apply for a license to establish his repeater system, he learned that American Telephone & Telegraph Company had a monopoly on such communications, and that he would be denied a license.
Goeken, being a tenacious entrepreneur, challenged against what he believed to be an injustice using the court system.
Eventually, the lawsuit he filed would lead to the breakup of American Telephone & Telegraph Company and usher in an era of competition for the telecommunications industry. Microwave Communications Incorporated made Goeken a multimillionaire, and he used his personality and wealth to found many other innovative companies, including the FTD Mercury Network (flower delivery), Airfone (later sold to General Telephone and Electric), In-Flight Phone Corporation, and many others
Mr. Goeken established Goeken Group Corporation as the vehicle to manage his business ventures.
After selling Airfone Corporation to General Telephone and Electric Corporation, Goeken alleged that General Telephone and Electric breached their contract by not allowing him to run the company as he saw fit, and he asked a court to void his non-compete agreement. A court agreed, and Goeken then founded In-Flight Phone Corporation in Oakbrook Terrace, Illinois, with the intent of competing with General Telephone and Electric Airfone, which held a monopoly on air-to-ground telecommunications.
In 1990, the Federal Communication Commission approved Goeken"s plan to share the Airfone frequencies, and solicited applications for and subsequently issued licences to several companies to operate digital Terrestrial Aeronautical Public Correspondence (TAPC) services. In-Flight Phone Corporation was awarded one of these licenses, and Goeken was clear to compete with General Telephone and Electric Airfone.
In-Flight Phone Corporation attracted more than $200 million from investors, and Goeken set out to build the first nationwide digital air-to-ground telecommunications network, capable of delivering static-free telephone calls, internet service and information services, to airplane seats.
The company successfully competed for service contracts with USAir and other airlines. In 1996, Goeken sold In-Flight Phone Corporation to Microwave Communications Incorporated Corporation
Goeken was an alumnus of Joliet Central High School. His early days in founding Microwave Communications Incorporated are recounted in the book On The Lincolnshire, by Larry Kahaner.
Goeken"s personal biography is at.