CallawayGolf
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- Nov 13, 2009
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Pilots have an enormous responsibility not following procedures could be costly, deadly and devastating to the airline. No one doubts that. However, while all that is true, pilots arent expected to make the same type of decisions that have the same kind of impact to the company, its employees, its customers or the communities in which it operates as does an executive. A pilot following established procedures and protocols makes (or loses) perhaps a few thousand dollars for the company for each flight. By contrast an executive can make multiple decisions in a single day that might have 10s or 100s of millions of dollars worth of direct impact to the company with no procedures, protocols or checklists by which to go by.Good day Calloway,
What would the financial impact be to USAirways if one of their pilots kicked the incorrect rudder during an engine failure on takeoff in a fully loaded 321? Give me a best guess estimate. Let's base our pay on that shall we?.
There is a big difference and the comparison between the two is apples and oranges to the extreme. Im not at all diminishing the responsibility and contribution of pilots, FAs, MX, or any other workgroup. Im simply saying that the executives carry a very different kind of responsibility and can easily sink the company and put all 30K employees on the street if they get it wrong. Should a $50k/year employee be making $1B decisions for the airline as a normal course of his/her job? I say no because the risk is not commensurate with the salary earned. Its relatively easy to go and get another $50k/year job if you bankrupt the last company you work for. Its not so easy to go and get another CEO, COO, CFO type job at a Fortune 500 company if you fail as an executive because of poor management decisions.
BTW - how long do you think US would be in business if the average pilot made $1M/year?