R2D
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Congrats on the job!
Thank you.
Congrats on the job!
It's clearly not based on "pure skill" since he doesn't have dispatching experience. Best guess as someone else pointed out is that he's an internal hire. And good for him... It's a great opportunity! We should all be congratulating him!
Needing experience as an external hire isn't a "silly misconception" as you stated above. It's a requirement, as you'll see if you get your license and start applying for jobs. Most airline's application process will automatically boot your application if you don't meet their experience requirement.
Unless you are an internal hire already holding a potential upcoming position with American, I'd plan on paying your dues like the majority of us. If you get on with American or any other major by the end of the year, I'll personally buy you a congratulatory beer. But first, you must get a license. Figure out those weight and balance calculations yet?

I just got two loaves from heb! No peanut butter required with all dat jelly!We need a lot of toast here cause I see a lot of Jelly !!!
I'll see my way out ...
Unless you are an internal hire already holding a potential upcoming position with American, I'd plan on paying your dues like the majority of us. If you get on with American or any other major by the end of the year, I'll personally buy you a congratulatory beer. But first, you must get a license. Figure out those weight and balance calculations yet?
Why all the negativity? This is GREAT news. It gives everyone a chance based on pure skill- not the silly misconception of years of experience. I can only hope the positive karma you received translates to my goal of American by years end.
Remember - even though an internal candidate may not have dispatch experience, they have something that is readily available that an external candidate can't easily provide. That is the company knows who this person is. Their work history, attitude, and personality are the 3 most obvious ones. The most knowledgable dispatcher in the world will not get hired anywhere if any of those 3 components are lacking in any aspect.
I lost out to internal candidates for several job openings. I may not have agreed with it at that time but it makes one look in the mirror and learn what one can do better.
Delta Echo said:I have a hard time buying this. With the connections that exist between hiring managers and HR types at various airlines, they can get a good feel on a candidate externally as well as they do an internal. The bigger issue and one every dispatcher who has or is not at the top level should have is those with zero dx experience bypassing them to a career gig with benefits that those of us with time in the field are worth. I ask again, no major is going to hire a pilot without more than the required number of hours, right? Legality or not an amount of time in 121 dispatch should be a hard requirement for what we consider the top echelon dx positions. If your sitting around one of those places in another position and want to benefit from being a dispatcher, then just don't get your license, start climbing the ladder at a regional, second tier cargo line, ULCC, ad hoc operator. Your not earasing anything else you've done and your making experience in dispatch. When you apply to the major, there not going to hold your previous experience there against you and your dx experience will show you seriously want to be there in that capacity and have the experience to do the job better. So my message is if your at a dx career airline working ramp or tracking pilots, etc. And want to make a transition to dx remember there is a long line of us with time in the trade gunning for that position, if you want it too, you can best your chance by joining us and putting your time in for it. You may not need as much time in dx for it, but your paying your dues and getting the experience that matters in landing the career dx spot.
It simply doesn't work this way for dispatch though. There is no hard rule (e.g.1500 hour requirement) for dispatchers. The only requirement is that one holds a valid FAA license. The rest is up to the individual airline.
I understand where you are coming from, but also understand a company transferring someone who has devoted years to their airline in another capacity by rewarding them with a lateral move. From a company's standpoint, I can see how they would find value in time in service as well as known work ethic, history, attitude, aptitude, etc... over someone they've never met.
It doesn't make someone who's paid their dues at a regional and/or supplemental any less valuable but it just comes down to the company's prerogative.
Also, in some cases, if an airline does hire internally, it doesn't make sense for someone to quit and get a job at a regional. They will likely take a big pay cut but also lose out on years invested and how that relates to retirement, benefits, etc... I have a friend who is staying at a certain major for this reason exactly. He was hired into dispatch as an internal hire with no dispatching experience and trained. If he'd left, he'd have lost out on seniority and certain lifetime benefits when retiring.
Delta Echo said:I have no sympathy for someone that has zero 121 dx experience that bypasses someone with 121 dx experience to a gig at major. Doing something outside of dx at a major doesn't fill the need to have experience. Period. As far as worrying about retirement, if that or a paycut it is the concern, then maybe they should stay at what their doing. I don't see any sympathy from those that play the bypass game to those working at a lesser place for dx experience. There should be hard time requirements for dx, just like pilots. It would ensure those looking to move up have the experience to do the job for the level of compensation offered. It would also end majors hiring someone with zero experience simply because they have been there. A major is not nor should be a trianing ground for someone that has zero dx experience. I suppose the other option would be to give all 121 dx the pay, schedules, work rules, etc. The majors have. No one with experience is getting shortchanged and what airline one dispatches at is more a choice of were one wants to live. But in a real world, how likely would this be to accomplish? Thus, if you want your dx experience to pay off, you have to pay your dx dues.
Jacob said:There's no real point in complaining about how companies that you have no control over decide to hire dispatchers.
Why are you so mad?I have very little sympathy for someone that has zero 121 dx experience that bypasses someone with 121 dx experience to a gig at major. Doing something outside of dx at a major doesn't fill the need to have experience. Period. As far as worrying about retirement, if that or a paycut it is the concern, then maybe they should stay at what their doing. I don't see any sympathy from those that play the bypass game to those working at a lesser place for dx experience.
There should be hard time requirements for dx, just like pilots. It would ensure those looking to move up have the experience to do the job for the level of compensation offered. It would also end majors hiring someone with zero experience simply because they have been there. A major is not nor should be a trianing ground for someone that has zero dx experience.
I suppose the other option would be to give all 121 dx the pay, schedules, work rules, etc. The majors have. No one with experience is getting shortchanged and what airline one dispatches at is more a choice of were one wants to live. But in a real world, how likely would this be to accomplish? Thus, if you want your dx experience to pay off, you have to pay your dx dues.
Just to add onto what @pljenkins said, internals at our company have to take the same dispatch test that the externals take. If they pass the test, they get the same interview panel and then hope that they did well enough to make the cut. Internal or External, it comes down to passing the test and interviewing well.....not "paying dues."