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GuppyWN said:Hey Vette,
I like your attitude. Wanna job at SWA? I can't really help you get a job but we always need guys? like you here.
Gup
BenderGonzales said:Awww... do the big-bad airline management folks get their feelings hurt? .
BenderGonzales said:Tough. Interviewing is an opportunity to look at the inside of an operation. As pilots we show up salivating for the chance to fly for company "X" when what we SHOULD be doing is interviewing THEM...just as they interview us..
BenderGonzales said:Researching a company can only take you so far. Think of the interview as a first date. First impressions mean a lot. Sure, she is still the one who knows whether or not you're getting lucky -- but you can still decide if you even WANT to!.
BenderGonzales said:I find it amusing that airline management wants to hire "lifers". The fact that they expect that kind of commitment is laughable when you consider that they will offer no such commitment to you. As soon as the economic environment turns they will kick you to the curb without a second thought. (sounding more like a woman all the time actually)..
BenderGonzales said:In the mid 1980s a US Airways pilot was furloughed. He subsequently got hired by Southwest and, over the next decade, upgraded. In 1999 he was recalled by US Airways and returned. His reason? The retirement, at the time, was superior at USAir..
BenderGonzales said:Today he's furloughed (and I dont know where he is.) He made a business decision and he's living with it..
BenderGonzales said:I refuse to jump headfirst into some airline job simply because they have a flavor-of-the-month "name". Let's leave that kind of faulty decision making to the young-kids at the regionals..
BenderGonzales said:There are good companies out there. Both SWA and FedEx are examples. It stands to reason that there might be pilots at both who wonder what color the grass is on the other side. The best way to see would be to take part in an interview. There is no rule that you must say "yes" if the job is offered. .
BenderGonzales said:For FedEx management to take offense to such a practice simply proves they are oblivious to the evolution of the pilot-career. We have been burned by management before (furloughing us when times get bad, but expecting 100% loyalty indefinately). .
BenderGonzales said:One poster here (I forget who) has a signature line that says, "Run your life like a business". I think that is sage advice.
Really? I'm asking the question because it doesn't seem like more than 10 years has gone by since SW, and cargo in general, were having to settle for second- or third-tier pilot candidates, while the Legacy carriers were enjoying first-pick.Rez O. Lewshun said:SWA and FX are the flavor of the month? Maybe flavor of the plus quarter century.
Dave Benjamin said:FedEx is a good job but it's not for everyone. Nor is SWA. Trying to analyze this guy's decision is a waste of bandwidth.
Whistlin' Dan said:Historically, the FOTW cycle seems to run about 10-12 years at most, and we're already more than halfway through this one. If I were a young pilot in the job market today, I'd be looking for a company whose star is still on the rise, not one that has either peaked, or likely will peak before my expected upgrade.
Maybe that's what this guy was thinking, too...
Dave Benjamin said:This is a really dumb thread. The guy made a decision based on the information available and personal considerations. Unless you know the guy you have no clue. Have you ever stopped to think that perhaps there were other strong factors in the decision? Maybe his wife got offered a 6 figure job in the Bay Area, her parents are willing to watch the kids, and OAK is a junior base. In a case like that would the guy be smarter to go to FedEx?
FedEx is a good job but it's not for everyone. Nor is SWA. Trying to analyze this guy's decision is a waste of bandwidth.
Purpled said:And that about sums it up.
Rez O. Lewshun said:Stay focused people!
It isn't the fact that he went career shopping.... it is the way he did it!
firstthird said:I suspect that the reason for the thread is that getting a FEDEX interview is not as simple as putting in an application. If it was then I would agree, not a big deal. But since you need a sponsor (or 3), do a meet & greet that is separate from the interview, get yourself to both the meet & greet and the interview and pay for a hotel room; it is a significant investment of time and effort for the interviewee and the people who sponsor him.
Thus, the hoi polloi find it interesting that someone would go to all that trouble and then turn it down due to an initial base assignment. Just seems strange. I agree that it is obviously an intensely personal/family decision; but that being said, asking people to walk your stuff in, get you a meet & greet, etc and then turn down an offer invites questions. Of course, the whole story could be vastly different but this wouldn't be an internet rumor board if everything was reported in the USA Today already, we wouldn't be coming here if it was.
Purpled said:Yeah, I think we get that part. But you're the only one who seems to know the way he did it and one quote doesn't really capture the atmosphere. We'd all agree with the 'don't be a jerk' philosophy.
The real focus is that it is pointless to guess why(or how) he did what he did without his input. Everything else is just conjecture. Sure, I'm curious too, but I'd want to hear it from him or from someone that he's told.
Peace!
Are you saying that FedEx and SWA are more than 12-year cycles? If so, they haven't demonstrated it yet. I'm not saying that both haven't been getting well-qualified applicants for the last 10 years. What I'm saying is that quite a few of the people they got were hoping to get a call from one of the legacy carriers first.Rez O. Lewshun said:Are you guys reading?
FedEx and SWA aren't 10-12 year cycles!
Rez O. Lewshun said:I thought the posted email from JL was a good indicator?![]()
Whistlin' Dan said:Perhaps FedEX and SWA will eventually become "Quarter-century FOTW's," but if they do, they will be the first.
GuppyWN said:Hey Vette,
I like your attitude. Wanna job at SWA? I can't really help you get a job but we always need guys? like you here.
Gup
Hagar17 said:I'm sure I'll get flamed for this, but I wish the dude well. It took a lot of balls to turn down a job like that. No single QOL issue is more important that living where you want to live. Living in your hometown, possibly close to freinds and family and familiar surroundings, is priceless.
My question is: Why does anyone care? FedEx poolies ought to happy, that's one class slot closer to you. Current FedEx dudes, why would you want to fly with a guy that doesn't want to be there? SWA dudes, you ought to be proud the guy stayed.
Pinnacle would base him out of MEM.Hagar17 said:He is a SWA guy that lives in MEM and has a spouse that is from there. He applied to FedEx on the hope that he would be hired and spend his days in his hometown.
FN FAL said:Pinnacle would base him out of MEM.
AlbieF15 said:Rez,
Bottom line is this guy doesn't owe another pilot anything. If a guy beats you out in quals, connections, or pure luck...its tough. However, that doesn't mean he should sandbag his choices to help anyone else. He busted his chops to get hired by both companies, and the choice is his to make..
Yet the June 06 email indicates otherwise....AlbieF15 said:And I seriously doubt KD or JL really give a rat's @ss what this guy does either. They'll put someone else into that slot in a heartbeat.
AlbieF15 said:Rez,
Bottom line is this guy doesn't owe another pilot anything.
Rez O. Lewshun said:Your explanation of his reasoning seems short sighted.
We all keep refusing to look at this from KD/JL's prespective.....
There are plenty of guys that would love to come to FedEx with out the conditionals..... So why should KD/JL have to deal with it..... The fact is FX is the one of the hottest chicks on the block that many want to date... Until that changes.... They get to pick an choose...
Where is the responsibility to your fellow pilots? Why muck it up and create another hoop to jump thru for the guys trying to get on behind you...
I don't get it..... is this all about "me me me"?
AlbieF15 said:I'm not defending HOW he went about turning down the slot. When I turned down Jetblue, I did about 3 weeks before my class, and I sent Dean Melonas an email expressing my regrets, explaining my decision, and requesting a chance to talk to him on the phone about my choice. He was courteous enough to call me and I had the chance to thank him for the opporunity over the phone, as well as share what a tough choice it had been.
AlbieF15 said:However, when I made the call, I was NOT thinking "geez...if I don't go to class all my F-15 buddies from Tyndall are going to get screwed...".
AlbieF15 said:In air to air combat, there is a winner and loser. There are no ties. Second place means you are dead. So, I am proud to be part of a great squadron. However, when we fight, we fight FULL UP to bring out the best in each other. I expect no quarter. By the same token, sandbagging my own career so another pilot (who honestly...probably doesn't really give a $hit about me deep down anyway...) might one day get a job at my carrier strikes me as assinine. However, bitterly sitting on the sidelines unable to get hired and complaining about someone who did but turned it down sounds like sour grapes.
AlbieF15 said:As for sponsorship--there are two schools of thought. First is A) I won't sponsor you unless you REALLY mean it and want to work here. I don't want to waste a silver bullet if you REALLY don't want to be here. I've met a lot of SWA guys who subscribe to this method, as well as some guys at FedEx. The second is B) I want YOU to get whatever you want that makes you happy, and it that happens to be at my company--cool! I'll help you all I can. However, should you decide MY company isn't right for you...follow your own heart. I don't care--go make you and your family happy.
AlbieF15 said:If you expect to have a rotary launcher of sponsorship silver bullets, obviously you don't want your sponsoree to burn you by turning down your company. Rez--I think this is where you are going. I have no problem with this line of thought--as long as you as the sponsor are perfectly clear about what you expect from your sponsoree.
AlbieF15 said:I think his SWA sponsor was a bit disappointed and embarrassed, just like the FDX sponsor was in the example that started this thread.
AlbieF15 said:Again--to summarize... Be classy. Be honest. But look out for your own family affairs...you don't owe anyone else anything but your best effort.
AlbieF15 said:However, I busted my butt for years to keep my civilian tickets up, do some "outside the box" jobs like aerospace physiology and CRM instructor, and I chose assignments based on FLYING not on career progression in the AF.
Quitter!!!!:laugh: :laugh: