Next Step After Training
What are the names of some entry level low time corporate jobs? Or what I'm trying to ask is entry level jobs that will help you get into corporate besides networking? Like charter, cargo, etc.. What is best after flight instructing if I dont want to go the airline route? I'm about to attend Aviator college for their program. After doing my tour, it seems like KFPR will be hard to network over there. There isn't much air traffic to any networking.
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If you don't get lucky and meet someone while instructing (longer x/c's with students to larger airports where you hang out in the FBO for a bit would help), you'll probably need to shoot for 135 minimums and pick up a 135 entry level job (fly by night cargo, etc).
Just had a recent topic on here with this pretty much same thing...some people get lucky, but you need to focus on making yourself as marketable as possible. Make a good resume and business cards one you get farther along. Plus you're just about to start training...so none of us have the slightest clue how the market will be when you get out, we could have regionals snapping up 250/10 guys again, or furloughs will be happening left and right. |
Cargo is a good way to go. Many guys go from flying freight to a charter gig they networked into. Flying freight is a good way to make friends who might know somewhere thats hiring, or find something on a field thats up your alley.
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Originally Posted by edavis
(Post 966861)
What are the names of some entry level low time corporate jobs? Or what I'm trying to ask is entry level jobs that will help you get into corporate besides networking? Like charter, cargo, etc.. What is best after flight instructing if I dont want to go the airline route? I'm about to attend Aviator college for their program. After doing my tour, it seems like KFPR will be hard to network over there. There isn't much air traffic to any networking.
Of those I have done aerial mapping, flight instruction, banner tow, ferries, pumping Jet A, skydiver flying, Part 135 and 91 corporate flying, and a few things related to aircraft engineering since I have the appropriate degree. Serious fruit has never fallen after ten years of doing all this and seems about as far away as it ever has been. On the other hand, I do not have much else to do and I love airplanes. Newbies always think in terms of getting just one month past their next flight certificate and the gravy corporate jobs are just somehow going to happen at that point. That almost never happens, it is the exception and not the rule. You would be much smarter to plan for the long-haul. Asking questions like you are is the best way to understand the process. but it would be foolish to think you are going to doing anything very spectacular like flying a Gulfstream for a large corporation in less than about 10 years of doing a lot of rather less exciting things. |
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