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Good Luck Fem and all who patiently wait...save a spot for me. Hoping for an interview soon...Fem said:Good luck too all, and remember SW plans on 7000 pilots by 2012, they might as well be us!
I would venture to guess a bit higher than 150, since there were 18 (split into 9 & 9 for LOI's and Interviews) on my day. If we take an average of say 15/day for the month (4 days/week for 4 weeks), there could have been 240 who met the board. If the 73 number is right, then that would make the "take" rate around 30%. The big unknown is how many folks got deferred to the next board, since I know of at least 2 from my group alone who are in that situation (at least SWA was cool enough to call them though and let them know of their "deferrment" to the next board instead of leaving them hanging!).I don't know Skimoguls. I'm guessing, about 150 or so. 12 per day, 4 days a week for three weeks. Just an uneducated guess.
I could be wrong but they only interview 3 weeks out of the month, like Stash said above as well, so your numbers might change a little bit, by about only 50 pilots. That brings the average up a bit. There were 12 guys in my interview and at least 8 of us made it. But you are right, you need to give them quite a bit of the information that they want. That's one reason why I'm thankful I had done a live prep before hand. It helped me get past the DB in June and every penny was well spent. For myself and most others, I was worried about clamming up and not telling the interviewer what they wanted to hear from my stories, like -- How have you changed because of your experience...Can you accept your own mistakes...How have you become a better person and pilot because of it...etc. There is a myriad of things that they need to hear from you in a very short period of time, so don't hold back and let 'em have it!9_Driver said:If we take an average of say 15/day for the month (4 days/week for 4 weeks), there could have been 240 who met the board. If the 73 number is right, then that would make the "take" rate around 30%
Some great points Ski. I opted *not* to do one of the live interview preps (partly because living over in Germany made it logistically tough, and part because I had heard some rumors of "overprepped" folks having trouble with the interviewers), but there are definitely some good folks out there who can offer some pointers for the interview. I took alot of the info Judy Tarver gave us during HPA's course to heart, that's for sure. It's pretty easy for me to sit down and talk with folks anyway (guess I got that from my mom who's a "southern raised" gal from Georgia), so I just got a buddy that I fly with here to sit down with me one afternoon, go over some of the gouge questions and listen to how I presented things in the S-T-A-R format. Worked out great in my case. I guess it all depends on how comfortable/nervous you feel about being open in front of folks you've never met before, especially with so much "on the line." My bud from 737 training didn't fare as well - even with the interview prep. Hope he gets another shot in a year!SkiMoguls said:That's one reason why I'm thankful I had done a live prep before hand. It helped me get past the DB in June and every penny was well spent. For myself and most others, I was worried about clamming up and not telling the interviewer what they wanted to hear from my stories, like -- How have you changed because of your experience...Can you accept your own mistakes...How have you become a better person and pilot because of it...etc. There is a myriad of things that they need to hear from you in a very short period of time, so don't hold back and let 'em have it!
That's what it's all about is making the cut. I didn't worry too much about sounding too prepped because the SWA interview is different than any other interview. They want to get to know you in a very short period of time and my prep with Craig Thornton was just as much a confidence boost as it was a help to clean up and leave out all the junk in my stories. My interviews were about 45 minutes each, counting the water after each question.AlbieF15 said:One US Air furloughee that I helped on the phone did not make the cut, but so far everyone I've helped in person has been successful. Another had a DB that got slipped. Results have been pretty good...well above those 35%-45% alluded to on the boards.
My advice is simple. If you want an interview coach, ask for references and ask about success rates. We don't all do things the same way.
I met her in January when I was gettin' my type at Higher Power in Dallas. She is working for herself out of Dallas as a resume/interview prep/consultant/jane of all trades so to speak. Wonderful person and does a great job from what I hear.viking737 said:Who does Judy Tarver work for these days?
I remember her being head of AA pilot recruiting in the late 80's.
Sorry to put you on the defensive Albie - no slight was intended towards interview prep folks. In his case he spent the money for the type, added a few hundred dollars for the prep, but ultimately didn't make it. Sucks for him - but that's the way things go - there's no guarantee and everyone knows it. He'll get another chance next year.AlbieF15 said:At the risk of sounding "harsh", when you say "my bro got THE interview prep" can you be more specific as to who they prepped with? I'm very disappointed for your bro, but the data on how he prepared might help others.
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My advice is simple. If you want an interview coach, ask for references and ask about success rates. We don't all do things the same way.
ivauir,ivauir said:prep was money well spent, because I got nervous as he!! and I needed a dress rehearsal and some educated, unbiased feedback. Only you know yourself: if you think you need help, then spend the money and do not second guess yourself. Just don't kid yourself into thinking you can buy this job.