I would not have a problem working in management. The people down there are quite nice. Pilots hate management because management deals in the real world not a pilot fantasy land.
Oh? I remember it was me who was in the left seat of the jet with a NQP pilot when the braking action reports were poor and our hold over time was less time than it takes you to collect your thoughts. At that same moment management was at home, enjoying a hot cup of cocoa with their wives, having completed their work day.
When I was in management and made mistakes, there was always this little key that said "backspace" that would undo 99% of my errors without anyone being the wiser and more serious errors were often overlooked by my superiors as part of the learning curve. There were meetings, but no checkrides.
I'm not sure where "pilot fantasy land" is, but I think I would like to go there... I imagine that this "fantasy land" probably doesn't involve 05:30 duty ins, 14 hour days, lines with 330 hours away from base and immediate and long lasting consequences for innocent omissions. I imagine there would be no involuntary junior manning and comfortable quiet hotel rooms. There would be no lousy, unhealthy, food and no Doctors probing my neither-regions looking for goodness knows what. There would be no long waits on on the curb in the sleet, or 130 degree cockpits with deferred parts of the ECS. Certainly there would be no getting the smoking room and Jeppesen updates, or late bags.
When "successful" airline CEO's are on their third DUI while raking in millions for their perfomance spending millions on failed merger attempts & retirement funding grabs - I can't say I understand how you believe pilots are in "fantasy land" while those with office views are dealing with the "reality" of line operations.
How is it that pilots are in "fantasy land" when we are the productive part of the company? We produce the product, we earn the revenue. Why is it that airlines' gate agents, rampers, pilots and all of us who serve the customer are allegedly in "fantasy land" while those who only step foot in an airport occassionally are face to face with "reality?"
Newman, if you don't mind the question - how long have you been around this business? Yes, it takes management, and thankfully SkyWest management is a whole lot better connected to reality than you are.