For the first time in history being a flight attendant is considered a profession, not just a job. Fewer flight attendants are quitting, turnover is not as high as it once was, and competition to become a flight attendant has gotten fierce. Ninety-six percent of people who apply to become a flight attendant do not get a call back. In December of 2010 Delta Airlines received more than 100,000 applications after announcing they had an opening for 1,000 flight attendants. Even though it is not a requirement to have a college degree, only the most qualified applicants are hired. Being able to speak a second language will greatly improve your chance!
The only thing that affects reserve status is company seniority (class hire date). Seniority is assigned by date of birth within each training class. This means the oldest classmate will become the most senior flight attendant in your class. Seniority is everything at an airline, and I mean everything! It determines whether you'll work holidays, weekends and when, if ever, you'll be off reserve. So it's important to accept the earliest training date offered.
While speaking another language doesn't affect how long you'll serve reserve, it will have an impact on your flying career.
PROS
1. MORE MONEY. "Speakers" earn more per hour than non-speakers. Unfortunately it's only a few dollars on top of what a regular flight attendant is paid. Remember most flight attendants make between fourteen to eighteen thousand a year the first year on the job, so every dollar counts.Continue reading Galley Gossip: Flight attendant interview - The pros and cons of speaking a second language and how it affects reserveGalley Gossip: Flight attendant interview - The pros and cons of speaking a second language and how it affects reserve originally appeared on Gadling on Fri, 30 Sep 2011 09:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Permalink | Email this | Comments
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