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Colgan management says their employees/pilots are above average but they come in below average Q400 pay.
Why is that?
Why can't you pay close to what Horizon pays?
Colgan management says their employees/pilots are above average but they come in below average Q400 pay.
Why is that?
Why can't you pay close to what Horizon pays?
Those who stand for nothing, fall for anything.
Damn, I like that! Can I use it, or is it already trademarked?
I love being average. My pee pee is average, my IQ is average, my waist is average, my hair is average.... Why not make average pay for my average bank account.....
Be average, it pays in the long run! hahahahh
NOT
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Here's a thought. Instead of worrying about the average.......be above average...
Pay above average wages to your pilots and mechanics. Hire and retain the best and most highly motivated group of people you can find. Weed out the losers because everyone will WANT to work for you. Offer on-time incentives like Southwest and save money on fuel as your pilot group is more highly rewarded to get your planes to their destination ahead of schedule, instead of pulling back the torques to make sure you overblock.
Watch as your airline provides ABOVE average completion factors and on-time performance because your employeess are enthusiastic about their job and the company bottom line.
Save all the money you are now throwing away retraining pilots and mechanics trying to keep up with attrition.
Save all the money you are throwing away in pilot and mechanic recruitment.
Setting the bar at being average is like taking your sister (or brother) to the prom.
I THINK THIS PAY IS SHAMEFUL.
I HOPE THE COLGANS ARE READING THIS STUFF, (apparently they do) AND I HOPE THEY RECONSIDER.
However, I WILL be going to this Q400, if only for more money, cuz I don't make enough where I am now. Pathetic isn't it.
Here's a thought. Instead of worrying about the average.......be above average...
Pay above average wages to your pilots and mechanics. Hire and retain the best and most highly motivated group of people you can find. Weed out the losers because everyone will WANT to work for you. Offer on-time incentives like Southwest and save money on fuel as your pilot group is more highly rewarded to get your planes to their destination ahead of schedule, instead of pulling back the torques to make sure you overblock.
Watch as your airline provides ABOVE average completion factors and on-time performance because your employeess are enthusiastic about their job and the company bottom line.
Save all the money you are now throwing away retraining pilots and mechanics trying to keep up with attrition.
Save all the money you are throwing away in pilot and mechanic recruitment.
Setting the bar at being average is like taking your sister (or brother) to the prom.
Also, painfully, the amount of money going to mechanics, dispatchers, other ground personnel, and especially flight attendants MUST be decreased. Helpful, yes, but none of these folks are as directly responsible for the operation of the airline as the two individuals in the front of the aircraft.
Automotive Gasoline was about a buck less than ten years ago, yet is close to $3 per gallon in most parts of the country as of the time that I write this. The country cannot exist without gasoline, so we pay the $3 per gallon. I would submit that the country can not exist without air travel; why then, do we not increase the price of air travel accordingly? Big oil companies are making record profits, why shouldn't the airlines, a historically underperforming sector of the economy, do the same?
What would happen if no one bid the Q?
I LOVE this idea. I wish it could work.
Unfortunatetly, the flying consumer looks at the price of the ticket first and foremost. You could have the best airline in the entire world by any logical, quantifiable metric, but if that airline consistently has ticket prices just one dollar above the competition, it will go out of business. Clean, on-time flights, that serve tasty meals, with happy, productive employees, are all well and good to the passenger, but what really matters to them is the final price of the ticket.
Pulling the torques/throttles back in flight is simply a rational, logical reaction on the part of the pilots to the predicament they are placed in by the flying public.
What would happen if no one bid the Q?
the rate for the Q sucks, they got to do better
I LOVE this idea. I wish it could work.
Unfortunatetly, the flying consumer looks at the price of the ticket first and foremost. You could have the best airline in the entire world by any logical, quantifiable metric, but if that airline consistently has ticket prices just one dollar above the competition, it will go out of business. Clean, on-time flights, that serve tasty meals, with happy, productive employees, are all well and good to the passenger, but what really matters to them is the final price of the ticket.
Pulling the torques/throttles back in flight is simply a rational, logical reaction on the part of the pilots to the predicament they are placed in by the flying public.
Ironically their pilot group is VERY WELL paid. I don't think it is a coincidence.