What is the #1 show stopper for employment for someone who is retired?
I would recommend doing all you can to make sure you are employable as that is the only thing you can control. My recommnedations, not in any order:
1- Education and certifications that mean things in the civilian world (6 Sigma, LEAN, PMP ect.). If you do not have a degree, then get valued certifications in the industry you want to enter. If you do not know what that industry is, then get your PMP, Six Sigma Black Belt, LEAN. These certs are valued in all industries and are particularly valued in operations positions. I believe you can use the GI Bill for both the courses and certification exams.
2- Well polished resume and interview skills. Get a recruiter to scrub your resume and drill you on interviewing. This is critical.
3- Get a recruiter or a recruiting firm. Get several of them. Get recruiters in industries you want to enter and those that are generalists. They have access to hiring managers and HR departments that you do not have access to.
4- Network, network, network. When you are done, then network more. You have to be a salesman for yourself.
5- Be patient. It takes 6-9 months to get an A+ job. You have to put in a full day of work every day in those months looking for a job. Recruiters can help in this!!! If you are going on 3 months and no interviews, I would seriously re-eval your strategy.
6- When interviewing, I have noticed that some fresh vets do not have a clear answer to simple questions as what do you want to do? Understandable, I had terrible aswers for that when asked as I went through the transition process. It really lets the air out of the ballon when someone cannot answer that question.
MSGT,
I believe you hit the nail on the head for many of us old "Soldiers, Marines, Airmen, and Seamen," we focused on doing our jobs and training our subordinates and not on furthering our own educations during our careers. I myself didn't start even thinking about it until I was into my transition time towards retirement and realized I needed a degree for any real job within the government or civilian sector. I have completed my BA 3 years after retirement, and am now working towards my MA.
I also think that even though it isn't as publicized the age factor is there as well, but it is hard to prove as most companies can just say they went a different direction, meaning they wanted someone younger.
Thanks for sharing and posting.