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Pilot94 8th Aug 2013 19:39

Career In Aviation - What's the best way?
 
Hi everyone, to start of with I have to say I didn't know where to post this question since it's about more than one thing, but hopefully you guys here will be helpful.

I'm 19 and a CAA/FAA PPL holder and at the moment I'm at "Hour Building" stage before continuing with my training.

I heard a lot about how hard it is to get an Airline job these days and since I have only started training I want your help to let me chose best option for me to have a greater chance of getting in to an Airline. My original plan was to go modular and apply for an airline but a lot of people say I don't have a lot of chance to get a job at the end of that, so it's just a waste of money so I'm not sure what I should do.

So my choices are:
- Keep doing what I'm doing and continue modular before looking for a Job.

- Go to University from September to do Aircraft Engineering Degree, then after university continue modular flight training and start looking for a Job.

- Go modular but do as much as possible at good flying schools, as I should be able to afford to do integrated ATPL's at OAA (I'm on about just the exams) then some good school for MEL-CPL if anyone can recommend one?

- Apply to R.A.F. for Flight Crew.


The optimal goal is to get paid for flying an Airplane so I would really appreciate your opinion guys, as my decision time is approaching like a concord. Thanks in advance.

Pace 9th Aug 2013 08:06

Firstly just check you can get a first class medical then identify what areas of commercial flying you want to do? Airline or other.
If its Airline modular or not it will cost money.
My son was very focused and resisted all advice from his school to go to university.
He went through the modular route via Oxford and then applied to CTC who were closely associated with EasyJet.
He was selected and type rated on the 737 and very lucky that EasyJet took on 6 more young pilots through CTC in the recession.
He was one of those 6 and at the age of 20 was right seat on a 737.
The Engineering option at University sounds a good option as a back up but keep focused on what you want to do.

Pace

mikehallam 9th Aug 2013 09:20

Learn to spell key words !

mike hallam.

Pilot94 9th Aug 2013 13:28

Thanks for your help Mike Hallam. Can you point them out for me?

Thanks Pace, I have a CLASS 1 medical.

And basically I want to end up in an Airline at the end of my training. Such as Easyjet, Ryanair, FedEx or whatever will be hiring at the time. I just want to make sure that with my Modular training this can be achieved. And I know it will cost money, but modular I can manage, I just don't want to spend like 90,000 on integrated 18 months training just to get the job.

A and C 9th Aug 2013 14:30

Who is making the money ?
 
The airlines are in the business of selling seats and have over the last few years taken this policy to the point at which they sell all the sell on the aircraft except the captains.

Cabin crew have to pay for their training and so do FO's so showing a profit for both the airline and training provider.

Some of these people have got the trainee pilot fully line trained and then put them on a zero hours contract giving them very little post line training flying. This has resulted in people being unable to pay the training debt and having to declare personal bankruptcy.

All the training with most of these programs will come for your taxed income, one company ( the sadly long gone XL airways) did cook the contract so that the new pilots were kept on a lower pay grade until the debt was repaid, the balance of the pay being used to pay the training debt as the trainee pilots never received the money in was not subject to income tax so saving the trainee pilots 30% of their training costs.

The RAF want officers first and pilots second so you need to show that you want to be an RAF officer first and a pilot ( a very close) second, you can also end up in some very unpleasant places, but on the up side the pay is OK and the training is of the very first order.

You can try the self financed modular route, this is the cheapest civil way to get a pilot job but you have to fight total rubbish that is spouted by those offering integrated training about the quality of your training ( and by inference you!) that they use to sell their programs to the airlines.

Good luck with your quest but what ever you choose go in with your eyes wide open.

Pilot94 9th Aug 2013 14:43

Thanks alot "A and C" your reply was very helpful! Just so I don't get in to the debt situation I'm paying as I go, and this way I should be able to finish everything within 3 years without having any loans.

I do prefer Airline over R.A.F but R.A.F gets you the job definitely, compared to the modular F/O. So this is the hardest choice in front of me: To risk it, go modular and hope to get a job, or to go R.A.F and get the job but not the always wanted one.

Dave Clarke Fife 9th Aug 2013 15:07


Originally Posted by Pilot94 (Post 7984821)
Thanks for your help Mike Hallam. Can you point them out for me?

Think he's alluding to the third word of your opening title

Pilot94 9th Aug 2013 16:25

LOL, "a" and "i", simple mistake when typing fast.

gasax 9th Aug 2013 19:37

There was a time when airline pilot were regarded as highly trained professionals and paid and treated accordingly.

This is all in the past tense in terms of someone your age. Do you really want to be a well paid bus driver?

I've often been asked why I did not turn my hobby into a living. The answer is that I could not take the cut in pay. Now I'm comparatively lucky in terms of the industry I work in and the rates of pay. However do you really have any idea what you want to do to earn a living. At 19 I certainly did not. And more to the point I know a fair number of airline pilots who pretty much hate their jobs - but are unable to do much else which would earn them anything like the same amount of money.

So the obvious course of action is to get a degree. Without that you could not even get a job flipping burgers. You need a degree to be at least equal with your contemporaries.

The time to get it will also allow you to mature a little and see something of the world. You may 'get God' or some other inspiration, or you may see something which really captures your imagination.

But you may be like me and simply see a little further and be able to do that - because you have the qualifications and the interest. There is nothing more frustrating than being excluded from things due to not having the 'right' background.

As far as the services are concerned leaving them is not easy, I've worked with a few people who have done that from senior ranks - the transition has been difficult and not one of them has remained married to their service wives.... difficult transitions!

So get a degree, it is vital these days, without it, forget higher paid employment unless you want to be a mobile phone salesman or something similar. Understand just what being airline pilot for Ryanair actually entails, flying is the least part of it! Decide what you really want to do.

Pace 9th Aug 2013 21:56

Gasax

What a miserable post and how arrogant to tell him to decide what he really wants to do ?
AIRLINE PILOT !!! What is wrong with that ? As for not knowing what he wants to do at 19 ? My son was right seat in an EasyJet 737 a year later at 20 and going through a Captaincy procedure at present in the A320 !
As for a degree opening the doors to all manner of things ? It just gets you an interview and shows you are reasonably intelligent no more especially in arts subjects.

As for the RAF ? Do we still have one ?

Pace

JDA2012 9th Aug 2013 23:17

At this point I'm going to chip in - I actually know the OP (Hi!:)) and have deliberately waited to post until some other opinions were given, as I am also new to the flying game, but do have some experience in other areas which I feel I should share to balance things out a bit.

As you can see on the left, I am 31. I wish I was 19, as what I really want to do is join the military as a pilot, and for that I'm too old, for the RAF anyway. I want it enough that I'm considering emigrating to one of the short list of countries that would take me at my age, which would be a significant effort in itself even before going through any selection process. As such, if you're at all interested in the RAF, I'd apply now rather than wish you had later in life. However, if it's just a route to an airline seat, there way be other ways which are better suited to you.

As you know, I'm also pursuing the more accessible route to flying of paying my way through a modular course here in the UK (and also got my Class 1 before starting); I find integrated courses over-priced and besides this I do not have the sort of cash to pay up front, nor (having a mortgage) am I keen on a very large loan. In the meantime, if any sponsorships become available, I'll apply for those, as having someone else fund my training and offer me a flying role inside the industry would be a real bonus. I do have to balance that against having to pack my job in to train full-time, which does make me wonder whether it is better just to work through the week and fly at the weekend, getting a CPL/ATPL along the way so that I can keep an alternate career going whilst awaiting a job opportunity - this leads me to my next point.

I do regret not pursuing a career in aviation earlier in my life when more options were open to me. At the same time, I am conscious that I can still make a go of it if I choose, and am glad that I currently have a career that means I can afford to fund my own flying. I should point out that I do not have a degree; I went to university for two years (a good one, studying a "hard" science course) but took a look at the course, where it was going to get me, what that would pay and how long it would take, and decided I'd do better just to leave and get working. I do not know what others rank as a decent salary, and I am not looking to boast, particularly as I am certain I'm on small potatoes compared to some here, but regarding the statement "So get a degree, it is vital these days, without it, forget higher paid employment" - I brought in over £55k last year; I do work in the mobile phone industry but not as a salesman ;).

I've talked too much about me, and not enough about you. However, on the whole, I've seen a little of life and the world, and now wish I'd gone with my gut earlier. If you want to fly for an airline, you can either keep steadily progressing via the modular route or try to get onto a more direct route. I do expect to be able to get a job via the modular route eventually, through simple perseverence - it has got me this far! It may take a bit longer of course...still, always better to regret doing something than not doing it!

Not sure I have actually helped at all, but may assist you in knowing you don't want to be my age and still looking at these decisions :ok:.

talkpedlar 10th Aug 2013 06:31

Forget the RAF, P74!
 
Before I get flamed, P74, I sincerely wish you well.

1 Forget the RAF route.. that is for candidates who want nothing else... they'll have the measure of you out at OASC in minutes!

2 You are either poorly educated or extremely careless.. your thread is littered with grammatical errors..particularly indiscriminate and inappropriate use of capital letters and speech-marks...

Come on buddy.. take your time, take care and get it right!

Cheers, TP

Genghis the Engineer 10th Aug 2013 06:45

I agree with talkpedlar about the RAF. That route is about a career in the RAF and not a second option to anything.

I would say something similar about an aerospace engineering degree. You don't have sufficient fascination with the subject to get the title right, and aero-eng will cost £50k, 3-4 years of your life and massive levels of dedication to the subject. (And grade A or B A-levels in maths and physics).

G

Pilot94 10th Aug 2013 11:21

Thanks for your help guys, and please excuse my grammar and punctuation as English is my second Language. I do tend to type fast and careless.

flyelmoair 10th Aug 2013 13:44

Give it a rest people!
 
Give him a break folks!!! He's not applying for a job through this RUMOUR NETWORK!! I'm sure if he was writing a CV or cover letter he'd give greater care and attention!

I always wanted to pursue a career in aviation and chose not to at a younger age. So I joined the RAF, got some great life experience, matured a lot quicker than I would've working in Tesco, gained some valuable contacts in the industry and gained a lot of aviation related experience in the branch I chose. And now I'm at a time in my life where I'm older, bolder, wiser, more mature, and financially stable to undertake modular training.

If I, after completing modular training, apply for an airline job it will shine through in how I present myself at the interview as to how suited i'll be for the job. Not by how many years I sat in a classroom at Uni and how many degrees I have coming out of my rear end.

Do what you want to do! Research as much as you can by trawling through this RUMOUR NETWORK for people's perceptions on the aviation industry and what's best to do. The internet is filled with websites detailing people's experiences and routes into that dream job. I've spent the last 4 years looking through various different routes and only just feel comfortable undertaking it all. Mummy hasn't helped me, daddy certainly hasn't helped me, it's all me, all my own determination.

All the best Pilot94, just don't rush into anything!

(Standby for know-it-all's to correct some grammatical errors, time wasters!!)

gasax 10th Aug 2013 19:16

Thanks or the comment Pace - how come your son, whom you are doubtless very proud, did not post? Could it be he sees them only as a stepping stone?

I know two guys who work for the LOCOs, they are of a certain age and have the huge disadvantage (as seen by their employer!) of having worked for in the their terms 'proper airlines'. Their view of LOCOs is much less than flattering, they largely hate answering to 'managers' who still have spots and communicate by email or text.

Such is working for the Locos.

I would certainly accept that the best a degree will get you is an interview. Pray tell how you are going to get a half decent job without even getting to the interview? If there is a method of doing that then I'd love to pass it on to my daughter who is in a similar sort of position. Having said that at least she texts in English....

So she is going to get a degree, her career choices are much more open because of that. Hence if her plans change then it is not the end of the world. My own career has essentially three distinct elements, which is in no way unusual, the key is not to pigeon hole yourself into something where there are no other options. If you do that the only way out is down - in terms of money, aspirations and satisfaction

Pilot.Lyons 11th Aug 2013 07:10


Originally Posted by Genghis the Engineer (Post 7985765)

I would say something similar about an aerospace engineering degree. You don't have sufficient fascination with the subject to get the title right

G

Wow G thats a bit harsh, you surprise me with that comment! Maybe it was a genuine typing error? We allmake them from tome to time :)

A and C 11th Aug 2013 07:29

University is over rated
 
The university degree has become degraded by the number of people who have degrees in the fluffy non science subjects and the dumbing down of the last Labour government.

It is clear that people who should not have got a degree have them so they have gone from a "must have" to thing to put on the form in most cases. The bottom line is that if you are just doing a degree with the hope of getting a pilot job forget it.

With the volatility of the industry getting an aviation practical skill is probably the best safety net you can have and it will help you in the search for a pilot job.
Very few people want to get dirty hands these days so there is a shortage of Licensed Engineers so that would be a good place to start a pilot career, it offers transferable skills for both piloting and other engineering functions outside aviation if the aviation business goes really sour.

As far as airline employers go ( that offer a UK base) would offer a list for who you would want to work for in terms of T & C's that they offer and job satisfaction. ( I know there are omissions but this covers the major players)

1 British Airways
2 Virgin.
3 Monarch, Thompson, Norwegian.
4 Easyjet
5 jet 2, Flybe.
6 Ryanair.

Pace 11th Aug 2013 07:38

Gasax

A degree is no longer a passport to success or to a job or to wealth creation it's a prerequisite to an interview with the other 100 applicants especially if the degree is in the arts.
Ok if your going into law or medicine that takes specialist degrees training up over several years to become a Doctor etc but that itself is a long term career choice as is aviation!
Most wealthy people I know have good business brains and most no degrees!
The degree ones end up as teachers
As for my son Yes he was flying right seat with Easy Jet at 20 but is not a prolific poster here at Pprune

Pace

Pilot.Lyons 11th Aug 2013 08:01

Career In Avaiation - What's the best way?
 
I wish you were my dad pace.... I would be flying now too!

Instead i was dragged up and my parents only cared if the social got involved.

I can only fly for pleasure now as driving instructor wages now days won't allow anything more

Better to fly than not, just wished i could do it more


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