aviation readiness system

Get Pilot-interview-ready before the real thing.

The role database picks what to test, voice analysis scores how you answer, video analysis checks presence, and the AI tells you how close you are to interview-ready.

Covers
Soon
Mode
Voice + video
Refund
14 days
P
Readiness cockpit
Pilot
Ready score
76%
close
Sample AI verdict after a spoken rep
Role fit81%
Answer content matched against the target bank.
Answer structure76%
Opening, evidence, tradeoff, and conclusion.
Voice clarity70%
Pace, filler words, concision, and confidence.
Role depth66%
Specificity against the role and seniority bar.

Scores combine the target bank, answer structure, voice delivery, and video presence when camera mode is on.

Sample prompts
Database target
Structure + pacing
Voice analysis
Presence + eye line
Video analysis
AI verdict

Close, but not interview-ready yet. The story has the right ingredients, but the opening is too slow and the business outcome needs to be sharper before a real panel.

Specificity drill
How the session works

See the rep, the score, and the next fix.

A Pilot session is not a static guide. It makes you answer, scores the recording, explains the score, and gives you the exact next rep to run before the real interview.

Answer in the browser

Run a real prompt out loud. Start with voice, then add camera mode when presentation matters.

Get scored on the recording

The report checks target match, structure, specificity, pacing, filler words, and follow-up control.

Rerun the weak rep

The next drill comes from the same target bank, so you fix the exact answer that still sounds risky.

Soon
bank coverage
Voice + video
analysis modes
Database
readiness inputs
14-day
money-back refund
Live readiness check

Stop reading. Find out how close you are to ready.

The page shows the surface area. The paid session turns the role database into a live readiness check: speak the answer, turn on video when the interview is high-stakes, and get a verdict on what still fails under pressure.

Role database

Pilot prompts are selected from the bank by role, round, cue, and failure pattern.

Voice analysis

The AI scores structure, pace, filler words, specificity, and how well you handle follow-ups.

Video analysis

Camera mode checks presence, eye line, concision, and whether your answer looks interview-ready.

Readiness verdict

The output is not a generic tip. It is a clear call on how close you are and the next drill to run.

What this interview tests

The hard part is not knowing questions. It is answering like someone who has done the job.

Corporate pilot interviews follow a predictable arc across flight departments, charter operators, and fractional ownership companies, but the specifics matter more than you'd think. Most loops run four to six hours across two or three sessions: a technical screening with a check airman or chief pilot who digs into your systems knowledge and decision-making under pressure, a behavioral round with the flight department manager or director focused on how you handle crew dynamics and client interaction, and often a fin...

What separates the interview questions across companies is less dramatic than you might expect. Every panel probes your systems knowledge—not because they need you to recite limitations from memory, but because how you think through a systems problem reveals whether you'll troubleshoot methodically or panic. They'll ask about your worst flight, your most uncomfortable decision, and how you've handled disagreement with a captain or mechanic. These aren't random.

Main risk
Sounding generic when pushed for details
What we grade
Structure, specificity, judgment, delivery
Best practice mode
Timed voice rehearsal with follow-ups
Inside the practice loop

A paid session does the part a static article cannot.

It makes you speak, pushes back, scores the answer, rewrites it, and brings the weak spots back until they sound ready.

Live roleplay

Answer out loud while the interviewer interrupts, redirects, and asks for concrete evidence.

Rubric scoring

Each answer gets scored for clarity, structure, specificity, and seniority cues.

Rewrite coaching

See the stronger version of your answer, using your real story instead of canned advice.

Next-session loop

Weak answers come back until they are crisp enough for the actual interview.

Pressure drill 1
Tell the story without rambling.
Pressure drill 2
Handle a skeptical follow-up without freezing.
Pressure drill 3
Turn a vague example into a measurable result.

Bank being built now.

We’re building out the public bank for this role. Paid sessions still start with the strongest prompts we have for the role and fill gaps with role-matched follow-ups.

48-hour plan

What to do before the real interview.

This turns the page from browsing into action: baseline, rewrite, re-answer, warm up.

Run the plan
Day 1

Find the weak answers

Run a baseline session and mark every answer that lacks a clear situation, action, and result.

Day 2

Rewrite and re-answer

Use the coach rewrite to tighten your story, then answer again under time pressure.

Interview day

Warm up the exact muscles

Run a short drill on the questions you missed most often, then stop before fatigue sets in.

Practice Pilot interviews out loud.

Try a sample question first. Voice $29/mo. Video $59/mo. Paid plans include a 14-day no-questions refund.