Posts Tagged ‘airline careers’

What Are You Waiting For? – Over 450,000 New Airline Pilot Jobs By 2030

Thursday, February 2nd, 2012
airline pilot hiring boom - 777

Will you be ready for the upcoming airline pilot hiring boom? - Photo courtesy of Brandon Farris

If you’ve been waiting for the right time to start your airline pilot career, wait no more. According to Boeing, the world’s airlines, both in established and emerging markets, will require over 450,000 new commercial pilots to fly the aircraft currently on order with the major manufacturers. Here’s the company’s breakdown of where those airline jobs will be based:

  • Europe – 92,000+
  • Asia Pacific – 183,000+
  • China – 72,000+
  • North America – 82,000+
  • Latin America – 41,000+
  • Middle East – 36,000+
  • Africa – 14,000+
  • Russia/CIS 9,800+

In the airline business, seniority is everything. The sooner you start, the more seniority you’ll earn.

Here’s a great place to start… Check out our Flight School Listings and contact each school you’re interested in for specifics.

Good luck!

source: http://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/in-focus-can-pilot-training-keep-pace-with-demand-367291/

Reader’s Digest Offers Inside Look at Airline Pilot Jobs

Saturday, October 30th, 2010

In recent articles, Readers Digest is offering an inside look at airline jobs.

Reader’s Digest is running a couple of articles that should be of great interest to future airline pilots. The magazine interviewed 20 pilots and flight attendants and condensed their responses into 3 articles: 50 Secrets Your Pilot Won’t Tell You, 13 Things Your Flight Attendant Won’t Tell You, and 10 More Things Your Flight Attendant Won’t Tell You.

The articles are excellent reading for any air traveller, but should really interest those seeking jobs with the airlines. They offer a real inside look at pilot and flight attendant jobs from the people that know them best: pilots and flight attendants.

Several of the “secrets” told by the pilots aren’t particularly surprising, like scheduling and pay troubles, given the amount of press those issues have gotten lately. One pilot in particular indicated that he didn’t appreciate passengers complaining to him about other aspects of the airline experience, because his “retirement was taken to help subsidize your $39 airfare.” Take that as you will, but it says something about the current state of many airlines-no area is safe when it comes to cost-cutting. Some of the cost-cutting that goes on at some airlines, as indicated by the pilots in the article, is mildly concerning. Namely the thought that airlines are cutting fuel margins close enough that deviations are sometimes required due to fuel.

While the rest of the content in the articles is informative, the final tip offered by a pilot in North Carolina completely sums up the airline pilot experience. The pilot states, “Here’s the truth about airline jobs: You don’t have as much time off as your neighbors think you have, you don’t make as much money as your relatives think you make, and you don’t have as many girlfriends as your wife thinks you have. Still, I can’t believe they pay me to do this.”

For more information on flight training and choosing the right school, check out our Flight Training Resource Center or find flight training near you.

Sources: Pilots, FAs Vent To Reader’s Digest and 50 Secrets Your Pilot Won’t Tell You
This article was written by Matthew Everett, a private pilot, aviation writer, and frequent contributor to AviationSchoolsOnline.com. You can follow him on twitter @leaving_tf or find his blog at http://leavingterrafirma.com.

Continental Recalls, Reactivates Pilots

Thursday, May 20th, 2010
By Kyle Garrett – AviationSchoolsOnline.com

Continental Airlines is beginning to recall some of the pilots it furloughed in 2008, and is reactivating some pilots who took a voluntary leave of absence. According to a May 19th article on CNNMoney.com, a spokesperson for Continental confirmed that 15 furloughed pilots and over 100 pilots on voluntary leaves have been recalled / reactivated respectively.

The pilots are being brought back on as Continental increases its international flight schedule and replaces retiring pilots.

According to the CNNMoney.com article, “Hunter Keay, senior airline analyst for Stifel Nicolaus & Co., said the recall is a small but positive sign for the airline industry.”