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Old 10-12-2007, 08:43 PM
  #11  
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Airline resumes should be different than other career resumes. You will apply online, get a call and email them a resume. I used Excel once, but I had to redo it because they wanted Word.
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Old 10-12-2007, 08:59 PM
  #12  
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Originally Posted by vagabond View Post
1:There are templates and there are templates. Other than the one offered by Microsoft, is there a template that is acceptable to airlines? Is it available on APC?
2:Also, I thought that wannabes apply online so when does a resume come into play?
3:Isn't it true that airline resumes are not like the curriculum vitaes of some other professionals?
1:Yes. Basically any template that isn't MS Word is acceptable. If you use one available on APC or another template website, you're still ahead of the MS crowd. What I recommend is looking at various templates and choosing one that fits best, and then modifying it to fit your particular resume better. No two resumes are the same, so why use the same template?

2:SOME airlines accept resumes online, not all of them. Regardless, while some airlines certainly utilize www.airlineapps.com, not even all of those are exclusive to those. Airlines will always request a resume after reviewing an application online. It never hurts to send in a solid cover letter that is unique and has unique points about the airline (not "XXX is an industry leader, I wanna work there, great place to work, etc) along with a resume. If you're somebody screening resumes and you get a nice little packet from somebody that is well written, interesting, and concise, wouldn't you bring that person in over one of the hundreds of people using airlineapps?

3:Eh. Sure. Yes and no. Sort of for the reasons I mentioned above CVs are a little different from other industries. CVs in general always have the same purpose: to get your experience across enough to get an interview. In aviation, that happens to be a little bit more straight forward and, unfortunately, arbitrary. Because of the vast amounts of pilots out there, and the relatively dull seniority system, it pays to keep your resume concise and highlighting certain distinctions you've received. A pilot that flew for a legacy for 20 years certainly has a lot of prestige, right? Well, all that pilot can say for their title is "Captain", and any person who reads that knows exactly what that is, and will sift through any BS. That title, unfortunately, is the same title as a 4 month employee of Mesaba. For that reason, titles and jobs necessarily speak for themselves in aviation, and because of this, a resume is that much shorter. No BS. And that's why I say unless you're applying for something other than a purely flying position, all that really matters is your flying jobs, any awards you've gotten for them, your flight time, any military time (ANY, not just recent or active duty) and the institution where you got your degree from (if you have one). With all that, even if you've had multiple flying jobs in the past, you'll be hard pressed to fill up more than a page unless you start yanking around the resume reader with terms like "To use my excellent piloting skills to yada yada yada".

Remember. KISS but show that you're different.
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Old 10-12-2007, 09:06 PM
  #13  
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I pretty much just looked at a few templates online and created mine accordingly. I was talking to a friend that doesn't know a whole lot about aviation and he said something funny: He told me to put that I agree with the companies standards and ideals.... I guess that would mean I agree with the low pay and decline of the industry? I'll be careful not to put that kind of b.s. in my cover letters.
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Old 10-12-2007, 09:20 PM
  #14  
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Whatever you guys do, Do Not Be Like This!

http://www.airlinepilotforums.com/sh...ad.php?t=15795
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Old 10-12-2007, 09:26 PM
  #15  
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Ah yes, forgot to add that. Print it on BORING but special paper. It's even called Resume Paper! Just don't print it out from your school's computer lab on their plain white paper. You can have it in a very very very light beige, but even just plane white is fine as long as it's heavy, quality paper. And obviously clean, not smelling of anything, and don't chew gum or chew your nails or drink soda or whatever during the interview.
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Old 11-02-2007, 01:38 PM
  #16  
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I personally put the most impressive info on my resume. (IE actual vs. sim)And since I used embedded exel cells, I only had room for so much information.
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