Growing up, I was fascinated by planes. Not just the romance of flight, but the sheer complexity of it all - the systems, the people, the invisible architecture of rules and communication that keeps every aircraft moving safely through shared skies. After all, aviation is about far more than aircraft alone.
The invisible backbone of aviation
Air Traffic Management (ATM) is a part of aviation that people rarely think about, despite relying on it every time they fly. It includes everything from airspace design and air traffic flow management to regulation, operational performance and the coordination of countries and organisations across the global aviation network.
It is an industry under constant pressure. As airspace becomes more congested and aviation continues to modernise, there is growing demand for systems and strategies that can improve efficiency while maintaining the highest safety standards. That means balancing operational, technical and regulatory requirements, often across multiple stakeholders with very different priorities.
As a Graduate Analyst at Egis, I support a wide range of projects spanning ATM, international aviation organisations and regulatory work across Europe and beyond. One day might involve analysing operational data or reviewing regulations; the next could mean supporting a bid, contributing to a report or collaborating with project teams across different countries.
The whole world connected
Many of the challenges facing the aviation sector today cannot be solved by one organisation alone. Egis works closely with airports, regulators, governments and aviation bodies to deliver solutions that improve the performance and resilience of aviation systems worldwide.
Being exposed to that environment so early in my career has been both exciting and grounding. I have already had the opportunity to travel to Rome and Madrid through project work, including a visit to an air traffic control tower in Rome that felt genuinely surreal, given how captivated I had been by aviation as a child.
Experiences like this show how decisions made behind the scenes directly influence the movement of people and goods across the world, every single day.


