Alright, Roy Geebiv!![]()
Do these help get an interview or help with the process once you're already selected? I know at some carriers, it is the latter.Letters of recommendation nay be helpful for an already competitive candidate.
Having one is good. Having two is fine, but not really an incremental benefit, three or more, hot damn, so you play golf with some pilots.
Remember, they’re never negative and everyone with a high-value name drop like a director or VP in a LOR usually is masking for lower qualifications:
“My cousin, YOUR CEO…”
“Cool, Sparky just soloed and things he’s coming to mainline”
It’s a part of the process I hated doing. Even though I had friends that I knew would write one I still didn’t like asking for them. I went to one legacy and thought that putting it on my resume would get me an interview invite immediately at my goal airline and still didn’t hear anything for weeks. I finally got one more letter of rec, I think 3 total, and the next day was given an assessment email
Bánh rế – Vietnamese sweet potato pancake |
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Boxty – Traditional Irish potato pancake | |
Gamjajeon – Korean potato dish | |
Latke – Jewish potato pancake dish | |
Milcao – Chilean potato pancake | |
Munini-imo – Pancake made with fermented potato flour | |
Quarkkäulchen – German potato pancake dish | |
Tattie scone – Scottish potato dish |
Dude... I looked that up looking for a cultural reference....
ok, it's getting late.....
(yeah yeah... rainbow)
I know it's all about playing the game, but this annoys me. Wouldn't you rather get the real candidate than a sales pitch? Guess who's gonna show up for work a year from now? It won't be the same guy you met in the "prepped" interview.On a more serious note. Just got back from doing a week of interviews and just got to say again, do…interview…prep. It is very obvious who does and who does not.
I’d also be very selective with some of your interview prep services. Seems as if one of the big name services is notorious for sending candidates to the interview with suspiciously similar TMAAT’s and sounding really canned. If an interview prep company is doing anything other than helping you prep your intro, 10 TMAAT stories, and your why brand X, run away.
I’d be embarrassed to ask someone I don’t know at all for one but I’ve seen it happen. Guess I can’t hate the playerWell, some people go out, jumpseat and collect LOR's like Pokemon cards, it's pretty easy to tell.
So to avoid every Tom, Dick and Harry tryna bum a LOR off me that's literally been on my jumpseat for 45 seconds, maybe a little education for them would benefit everyone.
People drop dimes on other people all the time, but they often don't hold a lot of weight because (a) no one wants to put their name down when you say "Well, through company email, write the Pilot Hiring Manager with your concerns" and you just open yourself up to everything from "Who is the real ass, the candidate or the person making the accusation" or libel/slander if the accusations are false.
Ex-spouses and ex-boy/girlfriends are notorious for this too. Anyone can basically say anything and in the era of social media, it's worse. BUT that's why airlines do extensive background checks.
Hopefully this isn’t one of the prep companies people are claiming they’re paying $1k+ for. The thing with prep is the ones who used it and got the job will swear by it. The ones who used prep and didn’t get it are at the other end of the spectrum. Somewhere in there is a happy medium.On a more serious note. Just got back from doing a week of interviews and just got to say again, do…interview…prep. It is very obvious who does and who does not.
I’d also be very selective with some of your interview prep services. Seems as if one of the big name services is notorious for sending candidates to the interview with suspiciously similar TMAAT’s and sounding really canned. If an interview prep company is doing anything other than helping you prep your intro, 10 TMAAT stories, and your why brand X, run away.
So it’s time to blow the dust and husky hair off the suit?When you work in a pancake factory and the bossman says, “Make more pancakes”, you… uhh… you know… make more pancakes.
I know it's all about playing the game, but this annoys me. Wouldn't you rather get the real candidate than a sales pitch? Guess who's gonna show up for work a year from now? It won't be the same guy you met in the "prepped" interview.
I'm thoroughly unimpressed with at least one service everyone swears by. That same service refused to offer any guidance for how to get hired at Spirit (and yes, they turned away more than half the applicants in my class that day), calling it a gimmie. Some people in those symposiums had none of their own stories. And I noticed that they had no desire to actually answer the first question posed by the panel.Hopefully this isn’t one of the prep companies people are claiming they’re paying $1k+ for. The thing with prep is the ones who used it and got the job will swear by it. The ones who used prep and didn’t get it are at the other end of the spectrum. Somewhere in there is a happy medium.
Story time. In the dark days just after 9/11. SW, UPS, and FEdex were the only ones hiring. I was on a full month line with a nut job captain, and he would hit up every single jumpseater from those airlines. We were based in SDF so we got alot. I was just hoping none of these guys would follow through and recommend this guy. He ended up with coveted interviews at all 3, back when it was like finding a gold nugget in a stream. Got hired by UPS. 2 years or so later ended up getting caught in a "to catch a predator" style sting. Went to prison. Lost job.... I wasn't surprised.Well, some people go out, jumpseat and collect LOR's like Pokemon cards, it's pretty easy to tell.
So to avoid every Tom, Dick and Harry tryna bum a LOR off me that's literally been on my jumpseat for 45 seconds, maybe a little education for them would benefit everyone.
People drop dimes on other people all the time, but they often don't hold a lot of weight because (a) no one wants to put their name down when you say "Well, through company email, write the Pilot Hiring Manager with your concerns" and you just open yourself up to everything from "Who is the real ass, the candidate or the person making the accusation" or libel/slander if the accusations are false.
Ex-spouses and ex-boy/girlfriends are notorious for this too. Anyone can basically say anything and in the era of social media, it's worse. BUT that's why airlines do extensive background checks.
Good interview prep isn’t a canned sales pitch. It’s a service that helps you organize your thoughts into coherent sentences. It shows dedication to getting the job and makes my job as the interviewer easier.
We should start a firm peddling 700-page applications and all in interview prep $26,500 a shot. “Bro trust me bro it’ll work bro”I wrote out three answers to every TMAAT question I could find, had people review them, and memorized them all before my last interview. 2 of the interviewers ran out of questions 15 minutes into my hour long slots, and I got the job.
The STAR format is for sure a cooperate and graduate exercise, the principal complaint I have with it is the lack of exposure lots of people have with it. If you have conducted lots of STAR format interviews yourself, you have an advantage. If you haven't, there aren't a lot of great resources out there.
Want to help me write a book?