Groundpounder
Quitter
Glad I didn't waste my time filling out the Delta app. What a joke.
Makes perfect sense...at OBAP last year the Delta recruiter told me that with my GPA I needed more TPIC time....even though I was a 737 captain flying 90hrs a month to and from Central America.
Little did they know my mother passed away my sophomore year and I took two years off from college to get my life together and yes my GPA suffered. BUT, I guess I took too long to graduate.
Dan208B said:@ATN_Pilot Delta has decided to use a set of metrics based upon their past successes and failures with newhires and flying qualifications is only a small part of that puzzle.
\Moral of the story I guess is that sometimes it's better to have a "checkered" past where someone's gone through and cleaned you up a bit and you're better for it than for you to never have had an instance of bad judgment or adversity in your life.
EDIT: Typo
This is going on my Delta app when the time comes.all the love and care a beaver mechanic could give
Link? Let's see!
The thing is, the current system is not the same they have used in the past.Delta has found that their algorithms while not perfect, has been highly successful in targeting and hiring their ideal candidates for decades. It's highly data driven. New hire performance is tracked deep into their career and placed into a large database.
The problem with Delta (and I say this as a longtime fan and customer) has always been arrogance. There is nothing whatsoever superior about a Delta pilot when compared to a Northwest, United, Continental, Southwest, American, etc. pilot. They all use different processes and criteria, and they all get roughly the same result. Yet Delta will never admit that reality.
Oh, dear God, the arrogance has already infected you too!
The thing is, the current system is not the same they have used in the past.
@ppragman I completely understand what you're saying. And I don't agree with what Delta uses. But it's their company and they are hiring people and can use whatever metrics they desire whether we like it or not. My goal is simply to try to help people understand why they may not be getting a call based upon the information I've received.
The thing is, the current system is not the same they have used in the past.
This is not necessarily a good thing. Hell, Chester F-ing Nimitz ran a destroyer aground and was courtmartialed when he was an ensign. He went on to be one of the biggest billy-badasses ever. I feel like people need to be allowed to make some mistakes in their lives to progress - lord knows I've made plenty, and some of the most amazing people of all time made tremendous mistakes early on. Squeaky clean doesn't necessarily equate to excellence in the profession.
As an anecdote, I worked across the field from an outfit that ran float planes around. The nicest one they had was a beautiful beaver that had "never been crashed or wreck or sunk - no, not even once!" It was immaculate. The others had all been crashed multiple times in their lifetime and had been gone through thoroughly and put back together with all the love and care a beaver mechanic could give, but they all looked and flew a little bit worse. This one had never had the "special treatment" and when it finally got a minor ding that required a more hardy working-over than the usual annuals and 100-hrs it'd been getting, they ended up checking deep in places that probably hadn't been touched in 30 years. What they found on the inside was scary - corrosion city. Moral of the story I guess is that sometimes it's better to have a "checkered" past where someone's gone through and cleaned you up a bit and you're better for it than for you to never have had an instance of bad judgment or adversity in your life.
EDIT: Typo
I mean no offense to anyone here that works there (and I really mean that because I think it's a great organization), but you're exactly right. I was on a jumpseat about 2 years ago and asked to look at a flight ops newsletter when one of the guys was finished reading it. It mentioned the importance of wearing a clean pressed uniform and went on to say that "other pilots in the industry look up to us." Honestly I think a lot of folks at other airlines would be pretty offended by that but it's true and it's part of the mindset I've seen from certain parts of the airline. On that note there are LOTS and LOTS of great people there but that mindset does exist. People easily forget what the history of this industry has been and how quickly things can change.
Oh, I get that, the big D isn't really my cup of tea anyway (I'm a medevac pilot, I doubt I'll do anything but this unless something freaking astounding comes along)...but, I think it's wrong, I think it excludes good candidates, I think it has the potential to select for the wrong kind of people, so on, et cetera. I appreciate you sharing the knowledge though - that's what makes JC what it is.
Folks also keep in mind that hiring has just hit the tip of the iceberg. Just because your score is not high enough now doesn't mean it won't be soon. GPA and time to graduate will be much less a factor later on.
@ATN_Pilot Delta has decided to use a set of metrics based upon their past successes and failures with newhires and flying qualifications is only a small part of that puzzle.