What Everyone Ought To Know About Airport Recruitment

What Everyone Ought To Know About Airport Recruitment

The first thing to know about airport jobs is this – airport jobs are NOT restricted to the jet-setting, travel-loving youth. The ground staff in an airport is exactly as important as the cabin crew, and competition for jobs there is usually less than it would be for traveling staff.

That said, what are a possible jobs one could have at an airport?

1. Engineers in charge of electrical and fire safety

2. HR managers

3. Cargo and freight handlers

4. Ground attendants

5. Ticket officers

6. Site managers

7. Store managers

The list continues. Once you think of all that is done at an airport – from controlling flights, maintaining aircraft and driving fuel trucks to cleaning and maintaining the vast grounds and runways – you realize that the tasks at hand for airport employees are multiple, varied and range from unskilled to the highest of skilled work.

If you are employed in any sector related to engineering or management, you are probably eligible for some form of job at an airport. However, what is at stake while obtaining jobs in an airport is not just eligibility on paper, but having the right approach to the job as a whole. Working in an airport requires employees to know how the airport works – not just how to extinguish a fire, identify the composition of fuel or drive a tow truck. There are certain guides which job seekers can read to gain basic information about airports and their working, and this basic knowledge is extremely useful during job interviews. It also helps while crafting a resume, as the candidate can isolate traits and qualifications which make him/her suitable for an airport job.

As a rule, people working at an airport – especially when in public view – need to cultivate certain qualities. For example:

1. Fluent, polished speech in the common languages used. This is English in the US and the Commonwealth, French in Europe, and local languages in other areas. Knowing the vernacular is becoming more and more necessary, as budget airlines allow people who may not be educated in foreign languages to become frequent flyers.

2. Patience. The flight attendant’s nightmare is an air crash, but most attendants experience few to none of those during a lifetime. The real enemy, faced with almost every flight, is the troublesome passenger – the one who is never pleased with the facilities, who wants and then doesn’t want things, who refuses to be frisked, and so on.

3. A pleasing appearance. Even for people without supermodel looks, a smile and healthy-looking skin does wonders for the appearance. This is especially important for flight attendants, and makeup is necessary for women.

4. Presence of mind. Anyone working in an airport needs to think on his/her feet. An emergency could be as dire as two flights descending to the same runway, or as inconsequential – except to the passenger – as a faulty seat assignment. The airport staff needs to handle both of these with equal aplomb.

Airport jobs can be found through general job portals as well as through portals designed specifically for airlines and airports. Applying early with a sound portfolio can lead to a job that you would be happy to continue till retirement.


States Offer Congress New List of “Ready-to-Go” Projects Worth .5 Billion Investment Will Put People to Work – Fix Roads, Bridges, and Transit (Washington, DC)-State transportation departments have identified 9500 highway, bridge, transit, port, rail, and aviation projects worth more than billion that, if funded, can be used to create hundreds of thousands of jobs across the country. “State departments of transportation have proven that these ‘ready-to-go’ projects are a great way to put people back work, quickly and efficiently,” said John Horsley, executive director of the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO). “We’re dedicated to getting these projects out to bid fast, but we’re also committed to making certain that every taxpayer dollar is spent wisely.” of November 20, 2009, 10600 transportation projects worth more than billion have been approved for funding under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Of the 9300 highway construction projects authorized to date, more than half – 5458 projects – were either under construction or had already been completed. Three-hundred fifty-five projects approved under the airport grants program and worth .08 billion are underway or have been completed. Of the .4 billion provided for transit, approval to proceed has been received for 690 grants valued at .19 billion. Thousands of buses and rail cars have been ordered and are being assembled, and service cutbacks and