Cabin door open for more men to join Dragonair
Airline wants to narrow airborne gender gap by recruiting males into female-dominated jobs
While employers commonly come under fire for not hiring enough women, Dragonair wants to hire more men.
As it seeks to recruit more flight attendants for its expanding Asian routes, the airline is looking for greater diversity - including men and Putonghua speakers.
"The nature of our job is to care about people," Lee said. "More gentlemen are accepting the job of a service provider."
In the past two years, the airline has seen an increase of 25 to 30 per cent in applications from men.
"It helps," said Lee, as men also "tend to be talkative, and they will [show] initiative more, to help people".
Anthony Fung Tien-wei, a senior purser who has worked at Dragonair for 13 years, said he started working as a flight attendant as he waited to hear back about a job with the police force.