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Old 05-20-2015 | 02:48 PM
  #1361  
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Originally Posted by Sliceback
Mil percentage is under 50%.

I remember reading an article in the early 1980's that 93% of the previous year's hiring had been prior military.

Military guys are almost guaranteed a major airline job. But it comes years after the opportunities of the civilian guys. Check out the seniority lists and the really impressive careers are going to the civilian guys who get hired young(er).
Impressive my arce, based on casual observations of many new hires. 35+ years on the line and you can expect a big pot of dough counterbalanced by morbid obesity, High BP, cancer, a busted circadian rhythm system, chronic fatigue and God knows what else. Just take a looksee at the current thirty somethings RJ crowd waddling around the terminal stuffing their pieholes while their shirts and pants are screaming for relief. If dollars are the benchmark for an impressive career then by all means go for it, you won't be around to enjoy it after you retire.
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Old 05-20-2015 | 06:29 PM
  #1362  
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Originally Posted by asacimesp
It's one thing to have a "preference" but when 15/16 interviewees are mil... And the next day is 10/12 when they they make up a small subset of aviation it's a bias.
That's an interesting take. At WAI Delta and United both showed stats for new hires and they each had roughly 45% pure military and 45% pure civilian with the remaining 10% a mixture of both backgrounds. Definitely a military bias in the hiring pool as a whole.
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Old 05-20-2015 | 06:38 PM
  #1363  
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Originally Posted by Sliceback
It *IS* tough to get hired at a major if you're non-current.

It *ISN'T* tough to get hired at a regional if you're non-current.

Second sentence fixes the first problem.

Guys with mil/121 experience are getting a lot of attention. By getting a regional job after the military you check off several squares -

121 experience
121 training
new type rating
recent vetting by new employer
new training cycle (some carriers require, or have required, new training event within X years)
currency(!) if they've been in a staff job

And the reality is the candidate will be better off for the interviews, sim checks, and training, at his final choice if he's put in foot into the civilian 121 market.

I *specifically* asked one of the decision makers "do they have to be current, and in a flying job, to get hired?" Answer was no... "but the next question will be 'when was the last time you were a professional pilot?' And why should I hire you when thousands of guys are current and applying?"
PM question sent.

Thanks
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Old 05-21-2015 | 03:24 AM
  #1364  
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Delta CJO
3000 TT (mil and BD-700)
2600 PIC
IP/FE
4 internal recs
Emerald Coast
Looking forward to Indoc!

...and yes. This is my first post. I never came to this site before I got the CJO.
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Old 05-21-2015 | 03:54 AM
  #1365  
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Originally Posted by Sliceback
It *IS* tough to get hired at a major if you're non-current.

It *ISN'T* tough to get hired at a regional if you're non-current.

Second sentence fixes the first problem.

Guys with mil/121 experience are getting a lot of attention. By getting a regional job after the military you check off several squares -

121 experience
121 training
new type rating
recent vetting by new employer
new training cycle (some carriers require, or have required, new training event within X years)
currency(!) if they've been in a staff job

And the reality is the candidate will be better off for the interviews, sim checks, and training, at his final choice if he's put in foot into the civilian 121 market.

I *specifically* asked one of the decision makers "do they have to be current, and in a flying job, to get hired?" Answer was no... "but the next question will be 'when was the last time you were a professional pilot?' And why should I hire you when thousands of guys are current and applying?"
I'm a prior military dude. I used this approach and believe it was instrumental in getting me an interview.
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Old 05-21-2015 | 04:47 AM
  #1366  
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Originally Posted by badflaps
If there are two desk guys up for the job, and one has figured a way to stay current, the other is just sitting on his dupa..who you gonna pick?
Currency is nothing more than another discriminator. It's like needing to have 20/20 vision to fly for the military or get hired by an airline 30 yrs. ago, having a college degree, etc. Once in, none of that matters.
I once gave A330 OE to a FO at NWA who had not flown an airplane for 13 yrs. ( 10 yrs DC-10 SO, 2yrs ALPA and 1 yr. Medical) He could barely talk on the radio but made it through with lots of extra time. He was a great guy who worked hard and knew he was behind the 8 ball.
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Old 05-21-2015 | 04:51 AM
  #1367  
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Originally Posted by LibertyPilot
I would imagine that they could improve their chances significantly if they were willing to work at a regional for a short while they would probably be picked up pretty quickly.

Originally Posted by derk74
I'm a prior military dude. I used this approach and believe it was instrumental in getting me an interview.

At my regional I've flown with several First Officers recently that have notified me that they are newly qualified, but also already have a class date at a major. Literally just checking the boxes after being hired at a 121 regional was all that was needed for these former military pilots, including ones whose last assignment was a desk. I'd say it is a pretty effective approach.
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Old 05-21-2015 | 06:03 AM
  #1368  
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Originally Posted by maddogmax
Currency is nothing more than another discriminator. It's like needing to have 20/20 vision to fly for the military or get hired by an airline 30 yrs. ago, having a college degree, etc. Once in, none of that matters.
I once gave A330 OE to a FO at NWA who had not flown an airplane for 13 yrs. ( 10 yrs DC-10 SO, 2yrs ALPA and 1 yr. Medical) He could barely talk on the radio but made it through with lots of extra time. He was a great guy who worked hard and knew he was behind the 8 ball.
Everything that you have pointed out costs money, where is Nyrop when we need him.
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Old 05-21-2015 | 07:23 AM
  #1369  
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Originally Posted by maddogmax
Currency is nothing more than another discriminator. It's like needing to have 20/20 vision to fly for the military or get hired by an airline 30 yrs. ago, having a college degree, etc. Once in, none of that matters.
I once gave A330 OE to a FO at NWA who had not flown an airplane for 13 yrs. ( 10 yrs DC-10 SO, 2yrs ALPA and 1 yr. Medical) He could barely talk on the radio but made it through with lots of extra time. He was a great guy who worked hard and knew he was behind the 8 ball.
We can't really say currency is "nothing more than a discriminator", and then go on to cite an example of someone 13 years non current (although 10 of those years on the flight deck plumbing) who still needed "lots of extra time" and knew he was "behind the 8 ball".

Companies don't want to hire lots of new hire pilots that are stastically going to need lots of extra time and are going to be behind the 8 ball. They will usually hire a few though, and carry the majority of them through. But its never going to be the norm and that's completely as it should be. If someone wants a multimillion dollar career with your company its really not too much to ask that they do some grunt work for a few months knocking the rust off.

That can be done a number of ways from job hopping at an airline that's easier to get on with to getting a type rating to as little as doing a BFR/IPC refresher (probably a bit more than the couple hours minimum…don't you hate it when people treat the least amount of training allowable by law as a syllabus goal?).

Being non current (regardless of how you define that, from 91+ days to 10+ years) is rightfully considered a negative. Its also rightfully hardly ever considered to be an insurmountable negative, and to any extent its considered a negative, its really not that hard to mitigate it and get hired anyway.

Like someone else said, there's plenty of "desk jockeys" that either found a way to stay current or quickly got re-current to get the job they wanted.
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Old 05-21-2015 | 08:00 AM
  #1370  
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Originally Posted by gloopy
We can't really say currency is "nothing more than a discriminator", and then go on to cite an example of someone 13 years non current (although 10 of those years on the flight deck plumbing) who still needed "lots of extra time" and knew he was "behind the 8 ball".

Companies don't want to hire lots of new hire pilots that are stastically going to need lots of extra time and are going to be behind the 8 ball. They will usually hire a few though, and carry the majority of them through. But its never going to be the norm and that's completely as it should be. If someone wants a multimillion dollar career with your company its really not too much to ask that they do some grunt work for a few months knocking the rust off.

That can be done a number of ways from job hopping at an airline that's easier to get on with to getting a type rating to as little as doing a BFR/IPC refresher (probably a bit more than the couple hours minimum…don't you hate it when people treat the least amount of training allowable by law as a syllabus goal?).

Being non current (regardless of how you define that, from 91+ days to 10+ years) is rightfully considered a negative. Its also rightfully hardly ever considered to be an insurmountable negative, and to any extent its considered a negative, its really not that hard to mitigate it and get hired anyway.

Like someone else said, there's plenty of "desk jockeys" that either found a way to stay current or quickly got re-current to get the job they wanted.
I totally agree. Being current is much better than being non-current when trying to get hired. My point was that once hired, it only matters if one can't get thru the initial training program within the standard footprint. $$$$$$.
In a previous life, at another carrier, I did a study about who was more likely to successfully complete a training program within the footprint. It turned out that one who had been thru more recent training cycles did better than those who had not, regardless of flight time/experience.
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