What do you think is the most overlooked career in aviation?

To an extent you are right, yeah, but again, that really depends on where you're at, the company culture, how much risk you personally take on. Being home more often is also priceless too (I say that from a hotel room....)
I would love to work in our San Luis Obispo base (if I lived up there, I mean). Home every night, rarely any weather or flow-control-related butthurt, everyone knows everyone else, the AM trips are done around 2 PM and the PMs don't sign in until later in the day. Sign me up.

If you're not going to make a lot of money, you might as well have a good time. Actually, that's been the motto of my past two years.

Airline CEO.

Ba-doom Crash.
Meh.
As Hailey said in Airport, they'd all be well-advised to go and stand outside at an airport from time to time and watch.
 
The most overlooked career in aviation is to work outside of aviation at a job that pay multiples of what pilots earn, which allows you to get involved in aviation at your own convenience and for your own goals.

Like what? I keep hearing about these illustrious careers outside of aviation that pay hundreds of thousands a year right off the bat; it all sounds so easy! ;)
 
Like what? I keep hearing about these illustrious careers outside of aviation that pay hundreds of thousands a year right off the bat; it all sounds so easy! ;)

Yep. Sometimes I think pilots think $100k/yr jobs grow on trees. News flash! They don't!! Most people, highly educated ones included, work long and hard for that kind of money.
 
Yep. Sometimes I think pilots think $100k/yr jobs grow on trees. News flash! They don't!! Most people, highly educated ones included, work long and hard for that kind of money.

No doubt. If you want to make six figures, expect to work 80 hours per week outside of this industry. We're still working 80 hour weeks, it's just condensed into 3-4 days at a time.
 
Yep. Sometimes I think pilots think $100k/yr jobs grow on trees. News flash! They don't!! Most people, highly educated ones included, work long and hard for that kind of money.

Not only that, once people are off regional F/O pay (yes JC, regional F/O pay isn't the entire picture!), pilot pay is generally well above the US average income level. Not to say we're not underpaid, but there is still money to be made.
 
Not only that, once people are off regional F/O pay (yes JC, regional F/O pay isn't the entire picture!), pilot pay is generally well above the US average income level. Not to say we're not underpaid, but there is still money to be made.
It's a marathon, not a sprint.
 
Like what? I keep hearing about these illustrious careers outside of aviation that pay hundreds of thousands a year right off the bat; it all sounds so easy! ;)

All I can say with certainty is my own experience. I have three other friends about the same age as me, and we were all stationed together, flew at the same flying club, and all retired from the military within a year of each other. The three of them all went into professional flying, and two of them have since been furloughed and have been fighting their way back into the profession. I thought about flying professionally for a long time, but when it came time to change careers I first looked at working a fying related job at the FAA for twice what my friends made. However, in the end went to corporate America for twice what the FAA pays. Because of the choices I made I'm able to build an airplane in my basement and fly locally with the Commemorative Air Force, both of which were long time goals of mine. My friends are all equally happy with their choices and I'm happy for them. For me, flying for a living would have been a nightmare, not a dream.

Cav is right, $100K jobs don't grow on trees, but they are out there, and you don't have to be highly educated or work 80 hrs a week to get one. What you need is the skill set and experience necessary to demand that level of compensation in the market place. Education is important to open doors, but skill and experience is what demands compensation. If the only skill you have is flying an airplane, then you may not have other options. The point of my post was that there are ways into aviation other than narrowing your skill set to only piloting. When you choose the skills you're going to develop, is it best to focus your education on developing pilot skills or is there a better option that will bring you the most satisfaction in aviaiton and life?
 
I've worked MANY jobs and flying is still the best. Chances are, the best little known aviation job will stay that way for a reason. Otherwise, we would be talking about it. My favorite flying job was corporate. The REAL corporate job where the company owns or leases the plane and the pilots are employed by the company. There are corporate flying jobs where standards exist to protect the pilots from over zealous passengers. It's still very customer service oriented (the cockpit door stays open and you may have to toss bags or do whatever the company has not hired other people to do) but the pay can be good and the equipment is normally top notch. Plus, checkrides are not as stressful as airline PCs (most corporate pilots will disagree, but I think so).
 
The point of my post was that there are ways into aviation other than narrowing your skill set to only piloting. When you choose the skills you're going to develop, is it best to focus your education on developing pilot skills or is there a better option that will bring you the most satisfaction in aviaiton and life?

My overall satisfaction is good. Flying for a living simply funds the things I like to do in my spare time. :P
 
I'd say the most overlooked aviation career path is the exit.

You owe it to yourself, your future ex-wife, and soon-to-be estranged children, not to mention any of your remaining self-respect to seriously consider it.

Richman
 
I'd say the most overlooked aviation career path is the exit.

You owe it to yourself, your future ex-wife, and soon-to-be estranged children, not to mention any of your remaining self-respect to seriously consider it.

Richman

GrumpyCatGood.jpg
 
I'd say the most overlooked aviation career path is the exit.

You owe it to yourself, your future ex-wife, and soon-to-be estranged children, not to mention any of your remaining self-respect to seriously consider it.

Richman

Look everybody! Skyhigh managed to find his way from Airline Pilot Forums to JetCareers!

And my vote for the original question is blimp pilot. Just kidding. The original poster said overlooked, not overrated. :cool::)
 
There definitely are other careers out there that pay 100k+, without working 80 hours a week. I'm a RN and currently in school to become a psychiatric nurse practitioner. There is a great shortage of mental health providers in this country and psych NP's are in great demand. When I complete school, I will be able to obtain a 8-5 job starting in the 90-110K range with excellent benefits including large sign-on bonuses and being paid to relocate. I will be doing something I love and I will then have the money to pursue aviation as a hobby. Like others have said, that is the ideal situation. I'm 30, and would have to take a huge pay cut to pursue aviation as a career. I've come too far in life to do that, and could never ask my family to come with me so I could chase my dream of flying a plane for a living. I will still be able to follow my dream of becoming a pilot, on my own time, and not be in any debt. I think that's a win-win.
 
There definitely are other careers out there that pay 100k+, without working 80 hours a week. I'm a RN and currently in school to become a psychiatric nurse practitioner. There is a great shortage of mental health providers in this country and psych NP's are in great demand. When I complete school, I will be able to obtain a 8-5 job starting in the 90-110K range with excellent benefits including large sign-on bonuses and being paid to relocate. I will be doing something I love and I will then have the money to pursue aviation as a hobby. Like others have said, that is the ideal situation. I'm 30, and would have to take a huge pay cut to pursue aviation as a career. I've come too far in life to do that, and could never ask my family to come with me so I could chase my dream of flying a plane for a living. I will still be able to follow my dream of becoming a pilot, on my own time, and not be in any debt. I think that's a win-win.
You could be a flight nurse. I think most of ours are over 80k at the least.
 
There definitely are other careers out there that pay 100k+, without working 80 hours a week. I'm a RN and currently in school to become a psychiatric nurse practitioner. There is a great shortage of mental health providers in this country and psych NP's are in great demand. When I complete school, I will be able to obtain a 8-5 job starting in the 90-110K range with excellent benefits including large sign-on bonuses and being paid to relocate. I will be doing something I love and I will then have the money to pursue aviation as a hobby. Like others have said, that is the ideal situation. I'm 30, and would have to take a huge pay cut to pursue aviation as a career. I've come too far in life to do that, and could never ask my family to come with me so I could chase my dream of flying a plane for a living. I will still be able to follow my dream of becoming a pilot, on my own time, and not be in any debt. I think that's a win-win.

My Mom was a psych nurse, worked in a state facility and made $40,000 a year at the end of her career.
 
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