I have a very good working relationship with airlineapps.com and we had a really good telephone chat today about a few issues.
What I will share with you is "completeness counts".
If they're asking for what you did between high school and applying, most airlines aren't looking for "Well, I went to high school, went to college and have been at XYZ for 12 years".
They're looking for more of a true narrative on professional and personal development. The more complete your answer is directly indicative to your seriousness applying for their airline. If there is an employment gap, you just didn't sit on your couch, talk about it. If you sat on your couch, you're not showing drive. Your application is a "pre-auditon" for a job that all of your better prepared co-workers are applying for as well.
There are some things you can get away with on a regional application, but those things WILL NOT FLY on the major level and, again, at the major level, there is no foreseeable "shortage" so make sure your crap is correct.
I have to bold this:
DO NOT USE "TEXT SPEAK" ON YOUR APPLICATION. Do no abbreviate, use proper punctuation, capitalization and especially grammar — you are not SMS'ing your BFF on your Droid and LOLZ it does count wot you type on UR app d00dz.
Make sure your numbers add up on your experience and, if it's not truly PIC, do not list it as PIC. They know all the "tricks in the book" — do not get yourself flagged as being dishonest this early in the process.
Read the question. Answer the question. Do not "over think" it.
Airline Apps really wants you to be successful. Remember, it may be an online application you complete through your web browser, but there are flesh and bones people that read it at every level and the decision of whether to invite you to an interview isn't some strange metric, it's a person.
Your hours matter less than the whole "portrait" of the applicant. If you've sat on your ass in the left seat of a CRJ-900 the past ten years, but your first officer is well-networked, has done volunteer work, updated his application and "reads like he's hungry" (my interpretation) on his application, he will get the interview and you probably will never.
It's not a numbers game, it's a "comprehensive picture" game.
Stay hungry, act like it and good luck.
What I will share with you is "completeness counts".
If they're asking for what you did between high school and applying, most airlines aren't looking for "Well, I went to high school, went to college and have been at XYZ for 12 years".
They're looking for more of a true narrative on professional and personal development. The more complete your answer is directly indicative to your seriousness applying for their airline. If there is an employment gap, you just didn't sit on your couch, talk about it. If you sat on your couch, you're not showing drive. Your application is a "pre-auditon" for a job that all of your better prepared co-workers are applying for as well.
There are some things you can get away with on a regional application, but those things WILL NOT FLY on the major level and, again, at the major level, there is no foreseeable "shortage" so make sure your crap is correct.
I have to bold this:
DO NOT USE "TEXT SPEAK" ON YOUR APPLICATION. Do no abbreviate, use proper punctuation, capitalization and especially grammar — you are not SMS'ing your BFF on your Droid and LOLZ it does count wot you type on UR app d00dz.
Make sure your numbers add up on your experience and, if it's not truly PIC, do not list it as PIC. They know all the "tricks in the book" — do not get yourself flagged as being dishonest this early in the process.
Read the question. Answer the question. Do not "over think" it.
Airline Apps really wants you to be successful. Remember, it may be an online application you complete through your web browser, but there are flesh and bones people that read it at every level and the decision of whether to invite you to an interview isn't some strange metric, it's a person.
Your hours matter less than the whole "portrait" of the applicant. If you've sat on your ass in the left seat of a CRJ-900 the past ten years, but your first officer is well-networked, has done volunteer work, updated his application and "reads like he's hungry" (my interpretation) on his application, he will get the interview and you probably will never.
It's not a numbers game, it's a "comprehensive picture" game.
Stay hungry, act like it and good luck.