15 of the hardest interview questions you have to answer to become a flight attendant
It's been said that it's harder to get invited to the Delta flight-attendant training center than to get into Harvard University.
"It's very competitive, and people get passed over all the time," Annette Long, a flight attendant with 14 years of experience, previously told Business Insider about the flight attendant hiring process.
If a candidate has a compelling enough résumé, they may face a variety of interview techniques including video interviews, Q&A sessions, and in-person meetings.
Long says that many flight attendants apply and interview several times before getting the job, having to wait six months to a year between interviews because job openings are so scarce.
"When you make that first impression, you've gotta do it perfectly — you don't get a second chance," she says.
Here are some of the toughest questions flight-attendant candidates have faced along the way, according to anonymous candidates on Glassdoor:
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'You have one seat left on a flight, and you have five passengers waiting on standby: A military man in uniform, a pregnant woman, a woman and her infant child, an elite customer who is a frequent flyer of Northwest Airlines, and a gentleman trying to go and see his ill sister. Who will be the one to get the empty seat on the flight, and why?' — Northwest Airlines (now Delta Air Lines) flight attendant candidate
'You are mid-flight and the pilot asks you to preform a task which you are not authorized to preform. How would you handle the situation?' — Air Wisconsin Airlines flight attendant candidate
'Create a PA announcement for a couple celebrating their 50th year anniversary' — Delta Air Lines flight attendant candidate
See the rest of the story at Business Insider
Contributer : Tech Insider http://ift.tt/2xaEwWO









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