world citizen, I would recommend that you
read again my previous contributions to this thread. You might correctly accuse me of some
provocation, you cannot really accuse me of disrespecting
your profession (or the "industry") especially as you haven't been considerate enough to inform me (or the others reading this forum) of what it is you actually
do, so that I can properly show my disrespect, if any was indeed forthcoming...
On the other hand, I would
never ever envisage taking someone off a
Very
Large
Crude
Carrier and installing them directly as skipper onto any motor yacht. Though I can confirm that this is exactly what some Greek companies (who had their feet both in the merchant marine
and private yachting sectors) attempted to do in recent times with somewhat mixed results to say the least.
Firstly, any yachts around today that are equipped with
DP systems must be as rare as VLCCs with double-hulls
and possessed of Ice Class 1A classification...
Secondly, I write having personally watched an experienced Greek master mariner on his first-ever outing after "transfer" from the command after many years aboard a large container ship to a modest 30m displacement motor yacht at the behest of the shipping company. This was in the Larnaca Marina. Having 2 motors each producing in excess of 450HP is small cheese to what you'd find on a large commercial vessel. The difference is in how you use it. For this particular master mariner, his experience lead him to believe that it was entirely in order that he engage the throttles "ahead" whilst leaving his stern-to berth and rely solely on the rudders for steerage and control...?! Needless to say, it was by sheer luck and wits that he managed to come to an "emergency stop" in the best tradition of the term, literally 2-3 metres away from the very solid breakwater surrounding the marina...

Like far too many ex. MM officers with little experience of "small-boat" handling...?! Ask any deckie off a large yacht with fresh MM officers where it simply
has to be one of these officers who drives the tenders - everytime they drive the tender for 10 minutes, it takes us half a day to fix the dents?!
Lastly, I personally deal with a number of Greek-run yachts and have done so for very many years.
All of them are invariably headed by
experienced and competent master mariners. That is to say,
competent for yacht service. In the same way as you wouldn't expect a yacht skipper to just jump aboard a VLCC and conduct the ship from the Gulf into say Southampton (though when you think about it, why couldn't they - with tugs in assistance at each end - if a yacht can stop on a dime, the VLCC would just need
several hundred's of thousands of dimes worth. Unfortunetly, yacht skippers wouldn't do it for the money some of these MMs accept...

), you can't expect everyone to simply walk off a commercial ship and assume that they have the necessary competence in all the facets required to running a private yacht successfully
just like that.
But what you
do have in the yachting industry today is a huge
polarisation in earnings. On the one side, you have competent yachties and ex. MMs earning quite generous wages. On the other, there are equally competent mariners from developing nations where the skipper is lucky to earn what a deckie with 2 years' experience earns on another yacht. The difference often depends on who "sold" the yacht (or the idea of one) in the first place...