Did you study this career choice BEFORE you committed yourself? I can't imagine anyone thinking they could make a decent living doing this in this day in age! How old are you? How many hours total do you have?So I'm a newly minted CFI, as of a couple of months ago. Landing my first job was cake. The need for CFI's can definitely be felt around the country. Finally getting paid to fly is such a treat. However, I am extremely depressed at the politics behind this job. I've been getting in trouble A LOT lately for not being a good salesman. The students love me and learn a lot, plus I get very generous tips by first time flyers and the satisfaction of seeing a smiling face is priceless. My wife supports me. I can't pay the bills with the money I make. I'm caught in a moral dilemma. I know easier, cheaper, and quicker ways of getting things done, but they go against the flight school. Has anyone else dealt with this?
I love and HATE my job, and it kills me inside.
Did you study this career choice BEFORE you committed yourself? I can't imagine anyone thinking they could make a decent living doing this in this day in age! How old are you? How many hours total do you have?
In my opinion sales drives any business.
I feel if you are not being a good salesman you are not funding your paycheck.
If you start your own business you will need to learn to sell.
Being well liked is not the same as closing sales.
I am working on becoming a CFI so I have no idea what the day to day is like.
I do have business experience and know how to count.
It is my observation that most CFIs don’t make a good living.
If you want management to change, find out why they are the way they are and sell them on changing.
If you want to start you own business; find out why they are the way they are and figure out ways to make up for what you are giving up when you don’t do it their way.
Exactly. Most schools expect instructors to both sell the experience during the intro ride and to work to retain current students and attract new ones.I guess I'll have to disagree. Even when wrapped up in a flight school or FBO, flight instruction is still a personal service. The frontline ambassador (if you will) or salesman (if another light) is still the guy providing the service. If he can't reach out to the prospective (and enrolled) students, they are going to walk away (or leave after a lessor or two).
THere's more to flight instruction as a business than just teaching.
I disagree. A business sells its services via advertising or other media/events. The employee does the service that was sold to the bst of their abiity.
If a FBO or school wants a CFI to sell, and perform, that CFI is doing all the work that an independent CFI would, at half the reimbursement
I have a deep hate for most schools/FBO's that engage in training. They think for an average of 5 bucks an hour worked or less that a CFI is supposed to do it all while the school profits. When the school has issues, it always comes down on the CFI being the failure.
I know for a fact, that a school, ran professionally, with professional looking facilities/aircraft (not new, just not warehouse chique) will do a decent business without massive advertising (a good web site is all most places need for the most part).
I would never let my son/daughter get flight training from a local school. I have seen the inside of the business, from the CFI and A&P role, and most are borderline criminal.
Lastly if a nail salon can paint the walls and instal good lighting, any flight training facility should have the same. What is with th 1930's buildings and 2x100W bulb lighting that seems to prevail in the business. For somethng charging massive money per hour (locally its pushing 200/hr dual for SEL) look the damn part.
In summary. Being a CFI usually sucks. FBO's are crooks milking the building, people and planes for every dime while complaigning that all are responsible for the downfall of business and accepting zero responsibility.
No way, not even close. The issue had been mostly selling materials the school has as opposed to recommending better stuff. Also Im limited in how much ground im allowed to give. I always revert back to how it felt like when i was a student and got the instructor that just wanted to fly fly fly. I told myself i wouldnt become that way. Sorry for the lack of detail, its a small community. Thanks for the input guysI wasn't sure where this thread was going. I thought it would be a "should I take lessons from a suicidal CFI?" type thread.
No way, not even close. The issue had been mostly selling materials the school has as opposed to recommending better stuff. Also Im limited in how much ground im allowed to give. I always revert back to how it felt like when i was a student and got the instructor that just wanted to fly fly fly. I told myself i wouldnt become that way. Sorry for the lack of detail, its a small community. Thanks for the input guys
No way, not even close. The issue had been mostly selling materials the school has as opposed to recommending better stuff. Also Im limited in how much ground im allowed to give. I always revert back to how it felt like when i was a student and got the instructor that just wanted to fly fly fly. I told myself i wouldnt become that way. Sorry for the lack of detail, its a small community. Thanks for the input guys
Screw that!
Yeah, selling the crap is the girls at the front desks job, your duty is to your student, tell them where to get what they need, take care of em' but tell them that if anyone asks you tried to sell em'
You will do better to become known as a good instructor/pilot than a good salesman.
No way, not even close. The issue had been mostly selling materials the school has as opposed to recommending better stuff. Also Im limited in how much ground im allowed to give. I always revert back to how it felt like when i was a student and got the instructor that just wanted to fly fly fly. I told myself i wouldnt become that way. Sorry for the lack of detail, its a small community. Thanks for the input guys
Screw that!
Yeah, selling the crap is the girls at the front desks job, your duty is to your student, tell them where to get what they need, take care of em' but tell them that if anyone asks you tried to sell em'
You will do better to become known as a good instructor/pilot than a good salesman.
Uhm. If the business owner wants their instructors to sell their material than they can make that decision. You can't choose to just not do that. You can sit down with management and plead your case. If they tell you they don't care and want you to sell it then you can either sell it or you can part ways. There really is no middle ground.Thats just what i needed! Thanks dude, youre right
The "go independant" advice is great, AFTER you've gotten 8-10 students through their PPL. Get some experience with the school, then consider going it alone, but make sure you have access to airplanes for your students.
I guess I'll have to disagree. Even when wrapped up in a flight school or FBO, flight instruction is still a personal service. The frontline ambassador (if you will) or salesman (if another light) is still the guy providing the service. If he can't reach out to the prospective (and enrolled) students, they are going to walk away (or leave after a lessor or two).
THere's more to flight instruction as a business than just teaching.
If you were waiting for someone to finally tell you what you wanted to hear, better start looking for a new place to work right now, because with that attitude, this one isn't going to last much longer anyway. If you take a job with somebody, then you do it their way.Thats just what i needed! Thanks dude, youre right