Notices
Regional Regional Airlines

Resign during Indoc?

Old 01-24-2019 | 08:09 PM
  #1  
Thread Starter
New Hire
 
Joined: May 2016
Posts: 2
Likes: 0
Default Resign during Indoc?

Are there any negative repercussions for resigning during indoc in favor of taking another job at a different airline?
Reply
Old 01-24-2019 | 08:40 PM
  #2  
tomgoodman's Avatar
Gets Weekends Off
 
Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 6,248
Likes: 0
From: 767A (Ret)
Default

Originally Posted by BusterF15E
Are there any negative repercussions for resigning during indoc in favor of taking another job at a different airline?
Tarzan say: “No let go vine A until have good grip vine B.”
Reply
Old 01-24-2019 | 10:22 PM
  #3  
Gets Weekends Off
 
Joined: Jan 2019
Posts: 310
Likes: 0
Default

Originally Posted by BusterF15E
Are there any negative repercussions for resigning during indoc in favor of taking another job at a different airline?
Depends...

Why are you leaving?

Leaving a regional for a career destination like Delta? Sure, have at, everyone will understand.

Lateraling over to another regional before you complete training? Could be dicey.
Reply
Old 01-24-2019 | 10:25 PM
  #4  
Gets Weekends Off
 
Joined: Jul 2015
Posts: 155
Likes: 0
Default

No, shouldn’t be a huge deal as long as you are honest why. Ive been in the regionals for a few years, made a lateral move myself (not in Indoc) and it’s never been an issue getting on with another regional...most of the people I fly with tell me they’ve been other regionals.

Plus who cares what people think, make sure you’re at a company you’re going to be happy at that also makes the most sense. If anyone asks down the road tell them the truth. Good luck!

Good luck!
Reply
Old 01-25-2019 | 06:12 AM
  #5  
rickair7777's Avatar
Prime Minister/Moderator
Veteran: Navy
 
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 45,130
Likes: 796
From: Engines Turn or People Swim
Default

Originally Posted by Mjm8710
No, shouldn’t be a huge deal as long as you are honest why. Ive been in the regionals for a few years, made a lateral move myself (not in Indoc) and it’s never been an issue getting on with another regional...most of the people I fly with tell me they’ve been other regionals.

Plus who cares what people think, make sure you’re at a company you’re going to be happy at that also makes the most sense. If anyone asks down the road tell them the truth. Good luck!

Good luck!
Weeeeell....

Leaving after one year, no issues at all.

But leaving during training will DEFINITELY raise concerns that you might have been asked to "resign in lieu of termination". That would not show up on PRIA, so an interviewer will always have doubts.

Better to finish training, but even leaving on probation creates the same vague concern, just to a lesser degree.

It would help if you have a really good explanation, like driving to work from your established home vice a transcon commute. I would buy that one. Also the timing of the second interview and job would be a factor... minimize the air gap, that shows it was a premeditated move on your part. A 2-6 week gap would be suspicious.

Showstopper? No. Might it cost you a job offer somewhere down the line? Maybe, but again depends on your explanation.
Reply
Old 01-25-2019 | 07:31 AM
  #6  
Line Holder
 
Joined: Nov 2018
Posts: 26
Likes: 0
Default

Practical advice, maybe? Why not push start date out with new airline 6 months, finish training, see how you like it and then move if its right. This way if something DOES happen during training (not only failures, but maybe health or family issues), you already have your next job and would not have to explain leaving. Worst case, you went thru the training once, second time should be a breeze. Just a thought.....
Reply
Old 01-25-2019 | 08:24 AM
  #7  
Line Holder
 
Joined: May 2017
Posts: 317
Likes: 1
Default

Originally Posted by Never2Late
Practical advice, maybe? Why not push start date out with new airline 6 months, finish training, see how you like it and then move if its right. This way if something DOES happen during training (not only failures, but maybe health or family issues), you already have your next job and would not have to explain leaving. Worst case, you went thru the training once, second time should be a breeze. Just a thought.....
Also something to think about is how much you will owe the company and when that money is due. It depends on the language in the contract, but you'll most likely have to reimburse for ATP-CTP and probably for some of the training you've already have.
Reply
Old 01-25-2019 | 08:33 AM
  #8  
Gets Weekends Off
 
Joined: Feb 2008
Posts: 20,880
Likes: 194
Default

When you finally get the interview with the company you want and they ask if you are going to quit on them if another airline calls you might feel is slightly better how will you answer?
Reply
Old 01-25-2019 | 08:37 AM
  #9  
ninerdriver's Avatar
Porco Rosso
 
Joined: Apr 2018
Posts: 2,522
Likes: 0
Default

Originally Posted by rickair7777
Weeeeell....

Leaving after one year, no issues at all.

But leaving during training will DEFINITELY raise concerns that you might have been asked to "resign in lieu of termination". That would not show up on PRIA, so an interviewer will always have doubts.

Better to finish training, but even leaving on probation creates the same vague concern, just to a lesser degree.

It would help if you have a really good explanation, like driving to work from your established home vice a transcon commute. I would buy that one. Also the timing of the second interview and job would be a factor... minimize the air gap, that shows it was a premeditated move on your part. A 2-6 week gap would be suspicious.

Showstopper? No. Might it cost you a job offer somewhere down the line? Maybe, but again depends on your explanation.
This. Resign during training at your own risk. My airline allows folks who won't finish training to resign before they're officially terminated in order to avoid PRIA stigma, so HR folks might be skeptical.
Reply
Old 01-25-2019 | 08:55 AM
  #10  
TiredSoul's Avatar
All is fine at .79
 
Joined: Sep 2016
Posts: 4,490
Likes: 42
From: Paahlot
Default

Yeah but you can’t “fail” Indoc so leaving in the first week would just be a little red flag and not a big one.
Regionals seem to be a revolving door.
Personally I’d do at least 6 months to remove any suspicions.
And even then it would need to be the offer of a lifetime or a logical career step that just came earlier then you expected.
What’s so much greener on the other side?
Reply
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
WARich
Delta
11229
06-10-2020 07:42 AM
eagledriver122
United
64
07-11-2015 12:10 PM
Short Bus Drive
Major
10
06-11-2008 07:55 AM
miker1369
Hangar Talk
1
11-11-2006 04:17 PM
YoYoMa16
Regional
18
07-17-2006 11:45 AM

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Thread Tools
Search this Thread
Your Privacy Choices