by Sir Puma » Sat Sep 03, 2011 11:53 pm
Here is some general advice, not just aviation specific. Great pay, Great job, Great location. Pick two. If you want a well paying job in aviation, you will most likely need to move.
I spent 6 years in the Air Force, 3 years in commercial aviation and 3 more in general aviation and I was constantly on the move from place to place, company to company just trying to stay on top of the job market. I was laid off more times than I can count and generally called back. I worked as a mechanic (structural maintenance specialist) and in logistics as a materials manager. I can tell you this, the more education, degrees and certifications you can rack up, the better your pay and the better your job options will be. But you will still be limited to location.
A lot of major companies are laying off engineers at this time because they're getting the ones they keep to multitask to save money. Companies will keep wage earners from collecting overtime but will work salary workers to death.
In the end you can do it two ways. You can do something you love and have fun at it, or you can do something that will make you loads of money. Usually to make loads of money working for someone else, you have to put in so much time and effort that you won't have a lot of personal time and you may not enjoy what you do.
My Papa once told me, "Find something you love to do and find a way to make money doing it." If you're happy with what you do and you can make money doing it then you won't mind putting in lots of hours and will get more reward out of it.
I've worked aviation, IT, electrician (commercial/industrial/residential), security, and now I am self employed as a professional gunsmith. I learned early in life that I love fixing things. I don't really care what I work on, I'm just happy fixing stuff and now I make money (very little) fixing guns and I'm happy with it.
"Guard well the words you use, for they can be the keys to your freedom or the manacles of your slavery." - me