Posted on Jul 24, 2014
PO1 Eric Corralejo
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I have had a few interviews and been told to my face "oh you are not what I expected". I jokingly replied because I didn't do facing movements coming in and yell good morning sir and ma'am? Answer: Umm yeah. One interviewer even said "we" tend to steer away from "military types" we are a more laid back liberal group. WTF? I am proud to be a Vet and smart enough to think for myself, I never realized it would be considered a hindrance.
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Responses: 13
SGT Ben Keen
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PO1 Eric Corralejo, I'm not sure what companies you interviewed with but I would say they are a minority. Most employers see Veterans as a strong employee to have. We have a track record of working well in both large and small groups with or without supervision. If the company you are interviewing you comes up to you with that excuse, then I would love the chance to talk to them. I've spoken with a lot of companies and I can tell you 99.9999% of them want to hire Veterans.
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SSgt David Norcutt
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When I left the Air Force in 1992, after 10 years, I applied and was accepted to become a Las Vegas Police Officer. The problem with that was the next academy date was a year or more away. In the mean time I had a difficult time getting a job, that would utilize my military experience and feed my family of 4. I was either over qualified or lacked so called real world experience. After a few months a casino security director (USAF Veteran) gave me a chance. I never went to the police academy, stayed in the casino business and for the last 22 years I have been paying it back.

I know it's a little off topic but I think it's important for veterans who are in positions to hire employees to tout the successes of hiring veterans who succeed. Prove that the negative stereotypes are wrong, show that the positive stereotypes are true. I have hired dozens of veterans, some haven't worked out for what ever reason, but the majority have worked and have become very successful.
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PV2 Louise De Simone
PV2 Louise De Simone
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YES!!!! I AGREE! I AM LOCATED NEAR THE BORDER OF NY AND THERE MAY BE CASINO'S HERE. I AM LOOKING FOWARD TO ANY POSITION I CAN HANDLE EITHER SECURITY GUARD AS I AM LICENSED IN N.Y. STATE IF YOU HAVE ANY IDEAS PLEASE LEAVE MESSAGE ON MY CELL [login to see] THANK YOU.
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PO1 Disaster Survivor Assistance Specialist
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Edited 10 y ago
PO1 Eric Corralejo Mindset. After spending 23 years in service my mind was not where it needed to fully and properly transition. Maybe it's still not - but life does not wait for you to get your mindset in the proper lane. Listen to the hints given by the interviewers - don't be the poster child for "how NOT to be a military veteran".

My grandfather served - but you'd never know it from his discussions or actions. It was only after I had been in for several years and returned home on leave that he would talk about his service. Be proud, yes. Be boastful, arrogant - not in your best interest. You know what you bring to the table at an interview, but it's far better to not overwhelm those who have never "been there, done that" - especially when they're the ones that might hire you. Show the interviewer you can adapt, adjust, overcome - not how you can destroy, mangle and overwhelm.
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PO1 Eric Corralejo
PO1 Eric Corralejo
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I have never been a boastful Vet as a Submariner secrecy has all ways been burned into me. I have tried to reword some answers out of the military context but its hard when thats really all you know. I have an Interview on the 6th and hope that my Awesome can out shine my short comings in the civilian sector. Wish me luck.
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PO1 Disaster Survivor Assistance Specialist
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PO1 Eric Corralejo Good hunting! !Qapla!
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