Identified Role

To support our students beyond the classroom, AIATI has established a dedicated Placement Assistance Team. Our mission is to help every student get the right start to their career journey. We actively collaborate with domestic and international airlines, travel agencies, and top companies in the hospitality and customer service sectors. AIATI regularly organizes on-campus recruitment drives, where industry leaders meet our students, evaluate their skills, and recruit them for various operational roles. We take pride in our track record of successful placements, with many of our graduates now working at some of the busiest airports and premium airline brands across India.

Ground Staff At Airport

No airport or airline can function effectively without skilled ground staff. Ground crew professionals are essential to the success of daily airport operations. At AIATI, we train ground staff to handle responsibilities such as passenger check-in, baggage handling, boarding assistance, and coordination between departments to ensure smooth flight operations. Ground staff also play a critical role in managing delays, resolving customer queries, and ensuring safety compliance within the terminal. Since these roles are less susceptible to automation, they offer long-term stability and career growth. Our examinations evaluate candidates on problem-solving skills, teamwork, and customer-centric thinking—essential qualities for success in this demanding yet rewarding field.

What responsibilities do airport ground staff need to perform in an airport terminal? The ground staff at airports has a variety of responsibilities. To guarantee that the passengers are given the right help, they must always be ready and alert. The following duties must be carried out by airport ground workers inside the terminal:


• They must make sure that passengers may check in without difficulty while flying.


• The traveller should assist with rebooking or redirection if their flight is delayed or cancelled.


• They must keep waiting passengers informed about their flight at all times.

Cabin Crew Members

AIATI administers examinations for Cabin Crew Members intending to join commercial airlines where service excellence and safety are the core principles of their occupation. Cabin Crew Members are responsible for the comfort, wellness, and safety of the passengers during flights. For cabin crew members, exams test competencies in tiered areas which are: emergency procedures card, passenger management, inflight service management, grooming standards, and regulatory framework. We even test for advanced positions such as Purser, the leading flight attendant in charge of the crew, reporting, etc. AIATI acknowledges the necessity of poise, aptitude, and compassion in this vocation and we work to define and evaluate for those qualities in our examinations.

Flight Attendant

Flight attendants are the face of the airline, providing-essentially a few important roles and keeping the flight operating smoothly and safely for the passengers. At AIATI we we administer a examinations to evaluate a candidate’s preparedness for any and all aspects of the flight attendant position- safety administration, seat coordination, inflight hospitality, and customer service. Our examination is with respect to practical application of poisition for the includes how to handle a range of passengers needs, emergencies, baggage and grossly inappropriate seating, professionalism, culture, language, and working collaboratively with crew and pilots.


1. Help passengers find their seats


2. Assist passengers with storing their luggage inside the upper rake


3. Take passenger orders for meals and refreshments


4. Serve food and drinks to passengers


5. Clean aircraft before the next flight

Whether we are delivering food and beverage, responding to passenger directions encompassing anything, manage obese children to the lav, or be sure to ensure the onboard flight is safe, we aiming to ensure to identify people who are apply for the am instructor led flight attendant role left on the exclamation point for the aspects of that extremely demanding commercial airline flight attendant position.