METARd
Well-Known Member
Forget about what it takes to get to the majors, and think about what it takes to grow as a professional. Don't go into a job with your eye on the door. Go into the job with the attitude that your are going to retire there, and make the most of it. You should be always seeking new challenges and new opportunities to learn. Grow in your job. If you're offered an opportunity to do something amazing (besides simply releasing flights), TAKE IT. Be an instructor, Be a check airman, or supervisor, Volunteer for extra projects around the office that will improve how the airline improves it's dispatch work. Join the professional associations. Work within them to improve the profession and your skills within in.
Doing these things will be the best way to improve your chances at getting hired with a major.
I think a lot of these points should go without saying. Of course you should want to excel at your job, wherever you are, and whatever your goals are. I think it's somewhat foolish, however, to forget about being at a major if that is where you would like to be one day. Just because that may be the goal, it's hardly going into a job "looking at the door". If I was happy making 50K a year, at a company I liked working at, in a location I liked living in, I'd make a career of it there. However, I think one would be selling themselves short if they simply thought about what's best for "here and now".
The original question was IF your goal was to be at a major, what's best: a regional for a few years, or a regional + supplemental international experience.
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