Any job board can hand you a stack of resumes. What it can’t tell you is which of those pilots will actually hold up under a Part 135 line check, fit your flight department’s culture, or still be with you in three years.
That’s the gap between sourcing and vetting — and it’s the difference that determines whether your next hire strengthens your operation or quietly puts it at risk.
The Problem With Generic Hiring Channels
Most job boards and general recruiters screen for the basics: certificates, total hours, type ratings on paper. That’s a starting point, not a filter. It tells you a candidate is eligible. It tells you nothing about whether they’re right.
For charter operators, corporate flight departments, and private aviation companies, that gap is expensive. A pilot who looks qualified on paper but doesn’t fit your ops tempo, safety culture, or client-facing standards doesn’t just fail to add value — they create risk. Training costs. Schedule gaps. In the worst cases, safety and compliance exposure.
What Real Vetting Looks Like
Specialist aviation recruiters don’t stop at the resume. Thorough vetting includes:
This is the layer of diligence that separates a resume that looks strong from a candidate who is strong.
Why It Matters for Your Bottom Line
Every hire your flight department makes carries real cost — recruiting time, training investment, insurance implications, and the operational risk of a bad fit. Specialist vetting reduces all of it:
Generic hiring optimizes for speed to a resume. Specialist recruiting optimizes for speed to the right hire — which is the only speed that actually saves you money.
The Aviation Recruiting Difference
We built our vetting process around one question: would we put this pilot in the left seat of our own aircraft? That standard — not a keyword match — is what we bring to every search.
If you’re tired of sorting through qualified-on-paper candidates hoping one works out, let’s talk about what a properly vetted shortlist looks like.