Flagship_dxer
Penske Material
Could this video have been made because Delta runs their own licensing class for internals and they may not be getting the numbers they hoped for?
Yes to the first part. No to the second. Interest is very high to massive.
Same hereJust received an email stating that I wasnt chosen for the position. I interviewed back on 7/2.
I was not aware the school was that new. I thought it had been going on for some time now.
As for my video comments I standby it being well produced. What I don't get is if they have no trouble lining people up for the class, why they feel they need it. But I digress.
Getting people to line up for class is one thing. Getting "qualified" people is another. Sure, there's no shortage of interest in the job, but there may be a shortage of people who meet their standards. Just from what I saw in the video, I'm guessing they want a little more than someone with a dispatcher's license and a couple of years experience.
Confucius say currency coversion ability does not a great dispatcher make.
They should really screen the candidates more closely, Lyle...Maybe they're just getting ahead for the end of the Euro?
I really had the hard time with the personality assessment. I mean, who hasn't wanted to kill their parents?
WN/AA/UA is hiring up all of the talent because DL is disqualifing all of the talent with the damn testing battery which has nothing to do with dispatch or not calling them at all in the case of some great people I know.
So instead of getting the most talented dispatchers into the OCC they would rather subsidize people who can pass their moronic tests and get $2000 a pop from them to boot. It doesn't help that the company has hog tied them to provide advancement from within.
Confucius say currency coversion ability does not a great dispatcher make.
I met a Delta Flight Superintendent years ago. He was an internal hire, started with the company working the ramp, and worked his way up. He had something like 25 years and supervisory experience with the company before he was selected for the OCC. And I think that was typical for Delta back then. They never hired outside candidates.
With that as a backdrop, this video makes much more sense. They are trying to generate internal interest. But they don't just want some guy who threw bags for 6 months. They want someone who has been there for a while, with a proven track record of success. They want someone who has "grown up" with Delta.
The problem is, if you've got 15 or 20 years in the customer service/airport operations side of the house, how likely are you to want to change over, go to the bottom of the seniority list, and start all over again? It's one thing to do it when you're 25, it's another when you're 45. Not everyone is a dispatch geek.
So, as I see it, it's not about garnering $2000 from would-be Delta dispatchers. Nor is it about hiring the most "talented." (which is not a word I would associate with the dispatch profession. Any job you can qualify for in five weeks isn't exactly rocket surgery.) It's about getting people who understand that Delta is a customer service company that happens to fly airplanes, not the other way around.
But that's just my opinion.
Excellent point on starting over,but if you're at a major and take a shot as an internal chances are that you'll probably start off near or at your top out as a ramper starting as an assistant DXer or DXer.
Good point. A major airline dispatcher or assistant dispatcher generally starts out at 45,000-55,000 a year and tops out a 100,000-120,000 per year range. All this for a job that requires a month of schooling. The $2,000 you pay for dispatch school quickly pays for itself.
Now I can see the work hours being an issue. A junior dispatcher is going to get the worst working hours and a schedule that can be all over the place. You will likely see a lot of midnights and start times in the 2-5 AM range with 8-10 hour shifts. It will be highly likely to work most weekends and holidays. If you are a ramper or customer service agent or any other internal with any kind of seniority or good schedule, I can see some being reluctant to get into such a situation where your life routine needs to change so much. The working hours dispatchers do aren't for everybody. You can be junior as a dispatcher for ten to twenty years.