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How common is the "Co-Captain" in the Corporate world?

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carl p

Reformed Freight Dog
Joined
May 17, 2008
Posts
324
How many of your flight departments employ Co-Capts vs. Co-Pilots? I would guess that companies flying international would hire more CCs. Has there been an article published regarding the value of hiring a Co-Capt over a Co-Pilot?
 
We only hire Captains, or hire ones that are Captain "qualifiable". Both pilots are typed on the equipment, but the PIC is still the one listed on the DX log and who signs for the bird. Our pay is based on seniority and longevity not seat position.
 
"Co-captain" sounds like flight department marketing semantics aimed at soothing nervous new charter customers...
 
Only captains where I fly. We don't hire people unless they have considerable experience. Why are you asking?
 
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Two captains where I work, hence the term "co-captain".

Per SOP, the PIC is whoever is the left-seat (flying) pilot.
 
How many of your flight departments employ Co-Capts vs. Co-Pilots? I would guess that companies flying international would hire more CCs. Has there been an article published regarding the value of hiring a Co-Capt over a Co-Pilot?



Its a term to calm the fragile egos...lol.

Seems like if someone can pass a type ride at FlightSafety (got a pulse?) they are a "Captain" There just isn't many "co-pilots" in the corporate world. Now, it really does make sense to type everyone for various reasons, but in reality that has nothing to do with ones real qualifications.

I guess who cares what you are called....but all I have seen "Co-Captain" status do is confuse the over confident typed co-pilot into thinking he should be making more money...after all, he is a "Captain"...and he DOES fly left seat....with a babysitter (he doesn't see that part)..LOL.

Its easier and cleaner to break everyone down as PIC/SIC, regardless of what you want on your business card...just be sure to define the roles on each flight, hence many places employ only Captains yet some of these Captains are never PIC!

Corp pilots love titles...I have seen enough "Senior International Training Captains" in this business to last a lifetime.
 
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Back when I was in the corporate game if you were hired as a co-pilot that may mean you rarely, if ever, flew. At my company I was a Sabre 40 captain and a Sabre 65 co-pilot; I never touched the controls of the 65, not even on empty legs.
There was a G-1 on airport who had a co-pilot that was never allowed to fly either, so it wasn't just us. Bottom line, if I was being hired as a corporate co-pilot I'd ask about their policy about co-pilots flying.
 
Gulfstream200:[ I have seen "Co-Captain" status do is confuse the over confident typed co-pilot into thinking he should be making more money...after all, he is a "Captain"...and he DOES fly left seat....with a babysitter (he doesn't see that part)..LOL.]................. I could not disagree more esp. on the larger corp. aircraft. 99.9% of the time a corp pilot on these aircraft have thousands of hours (paid their dues many times over) fly from Left seat and make the flight decisions with their "Co Captains". I believe that the biggest use of the term of "co Captain" is to retain highly qualified,experienced people in both seats. this costs money and for the non aviation types it is easier to explain two high salaries by using the term co captain than explaining why a co pilot should be so well paid......just my 2 cents.........
 
Co Captains are very common in the corporate world for 1 reason: THEY VALUE EXPERIENCE-not just seniority.

We only hire Captains-real Captains with 6000 hours MINIMUM, in reality our flight department averages over 11,000 hours per pilot and many years international experience.

Saying you don't hire a co-pilot is one thing, actually hiring only Captains and paying them all Captains pay is another.

In the corporate world it is easy to confuse the person occupying the left seat as "Captain". In reality, experience, skill, professionalism and responsibility determine a true "Captain". You need to have earned all 4 to truly advance in the corporate world.
 
Gulfstream200:[ I have seen "Co-Captain" status do is confuse the over confident typed co-pilot into thinking he should be making more money...after all, he is a "Captain"...and he DOES fly left seat....with a babysitter (he doesn't see that part)..LOL.]................. I could not disagree more esp. on the larger corp. aircraft. 99.9% of the time a corp pilot on these aircraft have thousands of hours (paid their dues many times over) fly from Left seat and make the flight decisions with their "Co Captains". I believe that the biggest use of the term of "co Captain" is to retain highly qualified,experienced people in both seats. this costs money and for the non aviation types it is easier to explain two high salaries by using the term co captain than explaining why a co pilot should be so well paid......just my 2 cents.........

Oh I agree! Hence you have 2 qualified PIC Captains. Pay them as Captains. Pay them well.

The confusion arises when a co-pilot gets labeled a "Co-Captain" and gripes about why he only makes 95K-105K....after all, he's a "Gulfstream Captain" goddamit.

I just think its far easier to call a spade a spade..you are a F/O, copilot, whatever until you can sign for the airplane with another F/O.....long term occupation of the left seat by typed FO's isn't good for anyone.

I don't think this is a big deal in most smaller operations, but can be if you have a larger pilot group with salary differences amongst all the "Captains"
 
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It is not just pilots ... About 2 decades ago most corportations had a President, Vice Prsident of Fiannce, Vice President of Operation, etc. Then there was "title inflation" ... Pres. could become CEO, a VP of some level was now "President", the VP of Finance became CFO so the Assistant VP of Finance could become VP of Finance, etc.
 
G200,

Going out on a limb here, but you gotta be the biggest Gulfstream fanboy I've ever seen! ;)
 
It is not just pilots ... About 2 decades ago most corportations had a President, Vice Prsident of Fiannce, Vice President of Operation, etc. Then there was "title inflation" ... Pres. could become CEO, a VP of some level was now "President", the VP of Finance became CFO so the Assistant VP of Finance could become VP of Finance, etc.


Now thats funny....believe it or not all pilots at my last job were "Vice Presidents" according to the company. LOL!

Heck, you can call me an a$$hole (some have) just pay me and treat me well.

:D
 
Overseas is where they really get wrapped around the axels about "Captain" and "Co-pilot". Never understood that.
 
The owner was given the option to hire an FO when we started the operation and his answer was, " I am about to spend $30 million on an airplane and you are trying to save me $30K on a salary?" Needless to say the director hired two captains.

I once worked at a large Fortune 10 flt department where titles ran wild. When I walked in the door everyone had some sort of title, "asst training captain and asst safety capt on the XYZ fleet" was one of my personal favorites (actually listed on a business card". They hired all captains except for the last guy in the door.

I got myself in big trouble when down town sent me the "fill in the blanks" business card form. I figured I needed a title so I decided to call myself " the junior assistant executive chief of nothing, with everything to do"

The director got a phone call from down town asking him what he wanted to do because it would not fit on the card. Not one of my career highlights......

I can remember sitting down with my grandfather having a beer and we were talking about it, he gave me some classic advice that I use to this very day when someone tries to give me a title:
"I can't put tomato sauce on a title and feed it to the kids" since then I have heard another variation, "Unfortunately my landlord stopped taking titles last week, he only accepts cash"

A title is just another way to get you to do more work without paying you for it. Call me what you want just pay me.
 
It is not just a pay issue, it is also an ego, morale, self-worth issue for the employee.For many, to say at a neighborhood bar-b-que that you are "a Vice President" or "Assistant Vice President of Finance" sounds much better (and usually make the employee feel better in social settings) than bookkeeper.
 
G4G5 said:
I got myself in big trouble when down town sent me the "fill in the blanks" business card form. I figured I needed a title so I decided to call myself " the junior assistant executive chief of nothing, with everything to do"

I LOL'd.

The director got a phone call from down town asking him what he wanted to do because it would not fit on the card. Not one of my career highlights......

No sense of humor there, eh?

Now that I think of it, "Executive Vice President of Business Aircraft Transportation" has a nice ring to it...:laugh:
 
We actually had a guy who felt pride in that "Vice President" title....I once told him on a crew swap in Athens at 0400.... "Hey Mr. VP of Lav Dumping, here's a $20, go monitor the $hitter change"

another personal favorite..."Director of Training"...(calls FlightSafety twice a year)

Only pilots.
 
Everyone is a "Captain" or a fairly new hire about to be bumped up to "Captain", but no inexperienced guys. In our house, the "Trip Captain" (more titles for the ego police) runs the trip. But in my opinion, it is only extra work with absolutely no extra money. If the other guys get off arranging everything and staying glued to the phone, then more power to them. I couldn't give a rat's ass what they call me, where my name is on the trip sheet or the bulkhead display or what seat I start out the trip in, just pay me fairly.
 
Only captains where I fly. We don't hire people unless they have considerable experience. Why are you asking?

Just trying to learn as much as I can about this side of the biz. My current employer used 1(800) dial-a-pilot in the past, but we are trying to change that mentality. I can't imagine having (or being) a high level VIP in the back with a crew up front that has never flown together, and all trained with different procedures. That is the result of a non Pilot running the show here in the past. Thanks for the replies, keep them coming. Has there been an article published regarding the value of having Co-Capts or Capt qualified (and experienced) Pilots as opposed to Co-Pilots?
 

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