MathNerd
Active Member
- Joined
- Sep 2, 2018
- Posts
- 721
- Qantas
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Hi all - hopefully don't need an introduction, been around a while and some of you have probably thought "jeez that MathNerd guy loves his SQ flights and airport codes" or along similar lines.
Well today I come with a humble request: for all of us here on AFF whose lives are so intertwined with aviation (whether it be leisure travel in comfort using points or work travel up and down the Eastern seaboard), we all like it one way or another.
Bit of background, I'm a secondary school mathematics teacher in VIC. Love my maths, love teaching it, so it's a rewarding career.
BUT - I love travel (well, just the flying part - don't we all). The excitement of booking a ticket in J (using points or otherwise) and the eagerness while waiting for the day to roll around, then researching aircraft types, seats, catering, etc etc we've all been there.
I'll cut to the chase - is there a career(s) option out there that involves:
1) GDS, ticketing, interlining, check-in procedures, alliance benefits, airport codes etc; and
2) Flying as a "mystery shopper" of sorts - think being someone who gets sent on a random plane on a random day in J or F and has to write about the experience as feedback/improvement for the airline
Why? Well, one of the very very few things that cheeses me off (trust me, I've got patience in leaps and bounds *except* in specific situations), and I really mean this, is incompetent/adamant check-in agents. For those of you fortunate (unfortunate?) enough to fly out of an airport that isn't "podium ranked" ('podium rank' meaning big ones like LHR, JFK, DXB, SIN, etc; that deal with pax with complex travel itineraries), you'd know all too well the pain of agents not knowing about interline arrangements, baggage allowances, seating decisions etc. You'd have all thought "I know more about this than they do and their job is to know this!". Perfect example - my friend's question about a BLR-SIN-MEL itinerary in J and Y and the legally allowable baggage allowance. Not only did the agent try to argue the destination was SIN, not MEL, they had no clue what the allowance was.
I'd love to train in this area, use knowledge of airport codes, TIMATIC rules, ticketing fare buckets and all that jazz and actually do right by pax (unlike what's experienced all too often).
The second question? Well need I say more? Having a job where you're flying in J or F? Who'd say no to that?
So - to end this essay (sorry for the length, there's so much ground to cover), what training, short courses or literature is out there, and what career options, if any, exist for people that are passionate about aviation from this perspective? Flying/pioot of course is something else but that's on the technical side of aviation.
Thanks Fire away questions, criticisms (is this guy out of his mind?) or well wishes.
There's plenty more to write but I have to restrain myself (the same way that you have to restrain from asking for an entire bottle of Krug on a flight).
Well today I come with a humble request: for all of us here on AFF whose lives are so intertwined with aviation (whether it be leisure travel in comfort using points or work travel up and down the Eastern seaboard), we all like it one way or another.
Bit of background, I'm a secondary school mathematics teacher in VIC. Love my maths, love teaching it, so it's a rewarding career.
BUT - I love travel (well, just the flying part - don't we all). The excitement of booking a ticket in J (using points or otherwise) and the eagerness while waiting for the day to roll around, then researching aircraft types, seats, catering, etc etc we've all been there.
I'll cut to the chase - is there a career(s) option out there that involves:
1) GDS, ticketing, interlining, check-in procedures, alliance benefits, airport codes etc; and
2) Flying as a "mystery shopper" of sorts - think being someone who gets sent on a random plane on a random day in J or F and has to write about the experience as feedback/improvement for the airline
Why? Well, one of the very very few things that cheeses me off (trust me, I've got patience in leaps and bounds *except* in specific situations), and I really mean this, is incompetent/adamant check-in agents. For those of you fortunate (unfortunate?) enough to fly out of an airport that isn't "podium ranked" ('podium rank' meaning big ones like LHR, JFK, DXB, SIN, etc; that deal with pax with complex travel itineraries), you'd know all too well the pain of agents not knowing about interline arrangements, baggage allowances, seating decisions etc. You'd have all thought "I know more about this than they do and their job is to know this!". Perfect example - my friend's question about a BLR-SIN-MEL itinerary in J and Y and the legally allowable baggage allowance. Not only did the agent try to argue the destination was SIN, not MEL, they had no clue what the allowance was.
I'd love to train in this area, use knowledge of airport codes, TIMATIC rules, ticketing fare buckets and all that jazz and actually do right by pax (unlike what's experienced all too often).
The second question? Well need I say more? Having a job where you're flying in J or F? Who'd say no to that?
So - to end this essay (sorry for the length, there's so much ground to cover), what training, short courses or literature is out there, and what career options, if any, exist for people that are passionate about aviation from this perspective? Flying/pioot of course is something else but that's on the technical side of aviation.
Thanks Fire away questions, criticisms (is this guy out of his mind?) or well wishes.
There's plenty more to write but I have to restrain myself (the same way that you have to restrain from asking for an entire bottle of Krug on a flight).
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