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Command Post What is this?
Posted on Apr 28, 2020
Capt Brandon Charters
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Cathy Miclat
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Thanks for posting this, Brandon! I work with Vets2PM and we help transitioning military and veterans earn meaningful, lucrative post-service careers. I am Director of Career Services and I speak with Veterans every day (spoke with an Army COL yesterday) about their resume, LinkedIn profile, and in general, preparing for their job search.
Each of your topics is spot on, of course, and I'd like to add a little about each.
The correlation between MOS and what that translates to in jobs in the CivDiv - Yes, your MOS ensures you have depth in a specific area, however veterans have breadth of experience. Matching MOS to jobs in the CivDiv is usually disappointing. I suggest doing a Venn Diagram of sorts, understanding your expertise, and how it translates to what you want to do (what would you do for free...and what careers get you closest to that), coupled with your geographic preferences, and let's face it, what pay you require to get started. Take those results and begin your research at least a year in advance and start networking and conducting research that will lead you to what you want to do moving forward, and with which companies.
Veteran Friendly companies - I've done some consulting on this topic, and you are on point - Veteran Friendly means nothing if there are not a) programs in place to support it all the way down the organization and b) true support for veterans after they are hired. Questions to ask or information to seek: Does the company have a Veteran Resource Group? Does the company provide a mentor or formal onboarding program for Veterans? Does the company include a Veteran in job interviews? Does the company have a Veteran on the TA staff who manages Veteran resumes when they are submitted? I could go on and on here, and veteran hiring program or not, I believe Veteran Underemployment is a direct correlation to companies not understanding the resume when a veteran applies, and therefore they pass over highly qualified candidates...it's one of the reasons I'm a professional resume writer who specializes in transitioning military - to - civilian resumes.
Planning your transition LONG before the TAP class is key. Before a year out (of you have the luxury of knowing when you are transitioning / retiring), and always, really, you should be doing the Venn Diagram of what you look like post-transition. Get your resume in order, get your LinkedIn profile in order, begin to network and build that network thoughtfully - people who will be your peers, subordinates, and senior leaders in the industry you are interested in, and with the companies you are interested in, and in the geographic area you are targeting.
Advanced planning is key; one day you will transition. Period. Plan for it now because the military provides amazing resources to do this at little / no cost - and that is rare in the CivDiv. Take advantage of it. We train for the PMP and other certifications, and they are covered under most COOL programs, as are tons of certifications. Take advantage of that while you can. Credentials are hard to get under the GI Bill, so use the COOL funding while you can. Otherwise you are left with two choices post-transition: taking a free program that doesn't give you much latitude and proper time to plan for testing; or you are going to pay for a quality program. Nothing wrong in investing in yourself, as millions of people do, however, if you can get it for free...do that!
Thanks for your great article and I appreciate the opportunity to participate in the discussion!
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TSgt Manuel Perez
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If the military training and MOS/ AFSC/Or other military job descriptions and you seek a licenses, certified translate to civil jobs, FAA certified for Pilots and Mechanics.. thier a shortage now, and STEM personal are in high demand .
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PFC Steven Kleiner
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Transitioning out is incredibly hard. When I left the military I had no resources to help me. That is why I am a mentor with ACP and at the company I work for I am a veteran advocate.
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PFC Tim Bertsch
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before you get out of service go get your teeth work done ,and eye wear make sure you have copy of all your medical records if you were hurt when an where dates make sure you keep them in a safe place go over your records before you process out ,because when you get out uncle sam loses alot of records that is no 1 you do list dont wait
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SFC Richard Baerlocher
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I retired in 1986 as a Food Service Instructor, and Logistics Specialist. I had 2 MOS's that I kept current because of their similarity. My wife, now ex, wanted to return to Oregon. I didn't really care where I retired as long as I was with my family, and could provide for them. I went to the Oregon Employment office to get a listing of jobs, and went to them and applied. One of the businesses told me the military doesn't show me much. Others said I was over qualified. I finally was hired by someone that had a maintenance contract with the McNary dam to provide daily maintenance at the visitors areas. Then I started college, and then started working for the Post Office. If you are in logistics, apply for logistics jobs prior to your retirement or separation. There are many companies looking for qualified logistics experts, and the military has the best.
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SGT Benny Deshazer
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I'm a retired military spouse looking to renew my military ID card can you help?
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Capt Brandon Charters
Capt Brandon Charters
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Great question. I would go to RallyPoint home: https://www.rallypoint.com/home, click the light blue box that says "Ask a question" and use the tag 'spouse'. This should get your question out to a few thousand folks who might be able to help.
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SFC Louis Willhauck, MSM, JSCM, and ARCOM
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I guess it depends on what you are looking for. A few months before I retired (1989) I started working evenings part-time as a Receiving Clerk in a warehouse. After I retired I applied for a computer operator job at the same company (1990). A few months later (1991) I applied for a Data Analyst job and while doing that I picked up programming (also had some simple programming experience from the Army) and my job description expanded (1992) to include that as well. When Y2K (remember that?) started heating up I took a job in Arizona (1998) at twice what I was making. (The place I was working offered more ($10K increase) but not enough... and I got a little pissed that if they could offer me that to stay, why didn't they offer me that all along?) Anyway, I changed jobs one more time when the company I was working in Arizona got taken over by a band of corporate pirates. This new job (2000) was as IT Manager. In 2003 I decided it was enough and totally retired.

It seems one must do what feels right for them.
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MAJ Tom Harper
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If you get to the interview don't sell yourself short. If you were in the military you know how to show up on time, you can complete what you were instructed to do, you can give a class on something you knew nothing about a year ago. That last one is a biggie and I can barely drag it out of veterans when they are interviewing.
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SFC Philip Ogden
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They say they want military really don't want us. Waste of time with those companies
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SGM Charles Twardzicki
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Biggest item is: what can you do for them! How can your military experience and skills make them more successful? They hire people that fit into the company and can make an improvement.
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