I read an interesting article in the US World and News Report 
recently; it was titled “The 50 Best Careers in 2011”. Not surprisingly,
 one of those Top 50 Careers is flying professionally as a Commercial 
Pilot.
For pilots, airlines aren’t the only game in town” is how the article
 on Commercial Pilots begins. It then goes on to discuss a lot of 
alternatives to flying for a living outside of the Airline Industry, 
some of them high paying positions as well as some that list average pay
 but are extremely interesting and rewarding.
“In 2009, median income for commercial pilots was $65,840, according 
to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.” That statistic was mentioned next 
and may fly in the face of some news reporter’s accounts of earning a 
living in aviation. Of course, the goal most pursued is the prospect of 
flying the biggest airliners for the biggest salaries. There will be a 
lot of those opportunities as well for those who have the solid 
fundamental flight training necessary to pursue those jobs.
The article goes on to rank commercial aviation as one of the next 
decade’s most rapidly expanding areas of employment: “Employment in this
 field is expected to grow 19 percent through 2018, according to the 
Bureau of Labor Statistics. An estimated 7,300 new jobs will be added. 
With mergers and cutbacks in the industry, a lot of furloughed pilots 
are currently competing for jobs. But that should ease as the economy 
improves, air traffic picks up, and a lot of aging pilots retire.”
The article ends with the type of advice we always try to give here: 
Real advice from real people on how to land a job as a commercial pilot 
as related by someone who has been there.
“I got my commercial certificate, then my flight instructor 
certification. So I was teaching, and making a living flying a Cessna 
172 with a traffic reporter. That added up to about six hours of flying 
every day. I also flew a nighttime cargo route between L.A. and 
Sacramento, then flew an on-demand passenger charter. By the time 
American Eagle hired me in 1999, I had 2,500 hours of flying time. If 
you’re not coming from the military, that’s a typical sort of 
progression.” — Dave Ryter, American Eagle pilot and chairman of Air 
Line Pilots Association education committee.
This path to success is being taken every day by aspiring commercial 
pilots who have made a career in aviation by taking the most direct 
route to the cockpit of commercial aircraft: getting the best flight 
training available so that they can quickly advance their careers and 
achieve their career goals.
 
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www.howtobeacommercialpilot.com
 
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http://www.proflightsimulator.com/craignaomi-offer.html