Still trying to find the answer....hmmmm...both are focusing on their customers, operations....I still don't get it. Aren't they the same?
Nope.
Still trying to find the answer....hmmmm...both are focusing on their customers, operations....I still don't get it. Aren't they the same?
Ah bored at tilted kilt.No!
Now make yourself a dang quesadilla, Napoleon!
Yeah, but unless you are third generation Arizonian, it doesn't count.I have an Arizona address!!!
Yeah but unless you are third generation Arizonian, it doesn't count.
Still trying to find the answer....hmmmm...both are focusing on their customers, operations....I still don't get it. Aren't they the same?
This is almost similar to UPS and FedEx. The companies both carry boxes, simple right? They are VERY different companies and you better know the difference when you interview at either.
That's it, I'm getting legal counsel, right meow!
Anyway... I think that we should all take a higher road. Mocking him, and him being unable to answer in kind probably isn't professional, or cute.
I'm confused. If a pilot flies for a regional like Skywest, is it possible that he would fly a different "express" airline each trip? Or do you fly for the same express airline each time?Another interview tip which is really easy to tell if you're BS'ing or not is when someone flies for, say, Skywest, you can ask "Can you compare and contrast flying Delta Connection to United Express?"
....I still don't get it. Aren't they the same?
Soooo, once again, not sure there is a difference.
You'll never KDA with thinking like that!
Comportment
Or the metric two airlines are using are different i.e D:00 vs A:00 vs A:-14

Or someone in your organization is putting out "creatively specious" data!
Just like y'all change the dictionary?

Another interview tip which is really easy to tell if you're BS'ing or not is when someone flies for, say, Skywest, you can ask "Can you compare and contrast flying Delta Connection to United Express?"
I went to a interview recently and two in the group admitted during the panel that when they jumpseated in the day before, it was their first time on the airline.

What's wrong with that? That's precisely what I (and several others in my interview group) did. I think they actually appreciated that I didn't just jumpseat nonstop Delta DTW-SFO, and instead took Delta DTW-LAS and then jumpseated (got cabin seat) on VX from LAS-SFO. On that very same flight, another intervieew pilot also came into Vegas and did the same thing I was doing.
I don't think that should be a deal breaker. One of the interview questions was "name something you see on us that is different than other airlines" so it was recommended to at least fly once on VX before interviewing.
