waveflyer
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 9, 2005
- Posts
- 10,005
The problem is if you do get the interview without the type, and do well, you then have to buy it if you don't already have it. That is paying for your own training. Do you disagree with that assessment?
Do you understand the point? They want employees who take ownership of the company. They will empower you to take care of the customer- but Swa wants you invested. You will be paid far in excess of your type rating investment in the first year- but we want pilots who are willing to bet on themselves and southwest.
You seem fixated on this- yet I made over $70k in my 1st year here.
What is it called when continental pays less than $30k and no health benefits for 6 months? How about $27k at united or $40k at Fedex, but btw- we're sending you to hong kong where a 2br apartment is $5k/month?
It's a throwback, for sure. It helped determine who really wanted to work for southwest and who just wanted a stop gap before moving on to a legacy. Can you blame them?
Now I think it has a better role- it protects against those pilots who are just here for the money and don't care to contribute to the overall corporation.
In this capitalistic society- this is swa's right and if you don't like it- don't buy the type. The market however, will probably leave you cold-
I paid for my school and all my initial ratings- I fought for a career and won. To me it's not a bad thing. It's an entrepreneurial spirit that ought to be encouraged.
Lesser companies wouldn't find the pilots willing to do it.
IMO.