FlightController
Well-Known Member
With Delta, that is frowned upon pretty big.
This always makes me laugh. Here is why. I used to work for a regional airline as a ticket/gate agent for United in NY. At the end of our contract they got rid of the company I was working for to, wait for it ... DGS ( a Delta owned company ). Also DGS already had a presence at that airport so now not only are the employees working at DGS for Delta now they had to get crossed trainer to work on United systems.Any new hires would also have to get cross trained on each system as well. Now how is that not conflict of interest? You are now using your competitors to run your outstation? So how is that any different then an employee working for two different companies. I just find that to be hilarious and such a double standard.A coworker and I talked about getting a part-time job years ago with DAL while dispatching for our Regional. We were shot down by both parties fast. It's a conflict of interest which we knew was written out in the Employee Handbook. We figured that would be an exception because we are a partner for DL. Good luck if you try it.
This always makes me laugh. Here is why. I used to work for a regional airline as a ticket/gate agent for United in NY. At the end of our contract they got rid of the company I was working for to, wait for it ... DGS ( a Delta owned company ). Also DGS already had a presence at that airport so now not only are the employees working at DGS for Delta now they had to get crossed trainer to work on United systems.Any new hires would also have to get cross trained on each system as well. Now how is that not conflict of interest? You are now using your competitors to run your outstation? So how is that any different then an employee working for two different companies. I just find that to be hilarious and such a double standard.
That I know but my point was not the fact of money but having your competition run one of your stations. How is that different from someone wanting to work for two different airlines? How is it not conflict of interest to one but is to the other ?
CF34-3B1 said:Thanks for the replies. Ok so might not happen, but I definitely want to be a dispatcher and definitely want to end up at a major so that I can stop living paycheck to paycheck one day, although I am grateful to even have a pay check at all. Do the other major air carriers pay close to what Delta pays? Also, do they hire internal just as much? Or is it more likely to make it at one of the other ones? Sorry for all the questions. I just like to have a plan or goal, even if it doesn't quite turn out how I want it, it gives me something to work towards.
Understandable they want to save money. Seriously!? What possible insider info can a gate/ticket or ramp agent pass along to a competitor? Its just asinine. I was a gate/ticket agent and I worked beside other agents within the airport from different airlines. What possible info could I get to harm the airline? I can answer that for you, nothing. This is why I find this to just be outrageous.
I don't know what I think on this anymore. When I got interested in dispatching majors were flat out not hiring. I visited many dispatch offices and talked to managers and dispatchers at the major I worked for all with the same response. You will have to go get experience. So I did. Let's fast forward 6 years. I'm at a different major because I gave up on my former carrier after 5 rounds of hiring without so much as a thanks but go f yourself email and 100 dispatchers hired with a quarter of my experience, including internals with 0.So to say I'm a little bitter about the leave to get experience camp would be true.
A former student of mine was faced with the same decision. Leave your mainline job and dispatch, or stay with your mainline job and try the internal route. My advice was if you want to dispatch then dispatch but you will throw everything away to do so and advised him of the risks. With my advice he chose the regionals.
A few weeks later one of my final students with a newly minted dispatch license was invited to interview at the major the former student left as an internal candidate. I felt terrible since I steered this student in the wrong direction and have regretted that advice ever since.