Have him look me up also. I get pinged all the time for job offers. Many are just out of left field, but it is something. I know many who have not been looking and head hunted with great job offersWill do
Have him look me up also. I get pinged all the time for job offers. Many are just out of left field, but it is something. I know many who have not been looking and head hunted with great job offersWill do
Pretty breezy……..still a good amount of snow leftMorning
How's the breeze up on the hill?
Pretty breezy……..still a good amount of snow left
Hit and miss? That's a waste of your time.Linked in is hit and miss. I’ve applied for well over 1000 jobs in 3 years and gotten maybe three interviews off of it. One offer but it was completely different than the posting. And a lot are scams out of India parading as American companies.
I’ve had better luck finding the jobs listed, then going to the company’s website that the job is for and direct applying. Did that and landed my current job in just 2 days.
Hit and miss? That's a waste of your time.
Yep 2 sides. The military sure sells all the marketable skills you gain by signing up. That sucks if it is that tough to find a job especially if you are in the Guard.Mumble mumble...
Missing the point... for a career military person... who has no home community and local business base it is a very different thing. Guard guys go home after a couple week trip (as things go back to "normal" after the endless war). When I retired, my "friends" were scattered across the earth and I moved to a location where I knew nobody. Everything changes... it sounds goofy.. but I didn't have clothes to wear in a civilian workspace after 21 years of knowing exactly what I was wearing every day
It's different... can't really explain it well unless you've experienced it and nobody in your command has ever retired so they are zero help.
Not trying to be a jerk about it... but
Thanks
Yep 2 sides. The military sure sells all the marketable skills you gain by signing up. That sucks if it is that tough to find a job especially if you are in the Guard.
Exactly that, our boy is Airborne. Went in at 17, full time Army. He is on the short list for E8 and is located far away from anyone he knows. His only civilian clothes are camo for deer hunting season. I am working with him to explain as a squad and platoon leader in Iraq and Afghanistan he is management material. He knows absolutely nothing but full time green, he grew up in the Army. We are very proud of him. But given he is not even 40 yet, he has a whole nother career ahead of him should he so choose. Sincere thanks @WV64Signet for the kind support. It is a tough transition for him.Combat Arms specialties require a great deal of interpretation... for senior noncommissioned officers, it's the intangibles. Organizational skills, management, leadership, interpersonal skills, dedication... It's a huge advantage to any business.
Exactly that, our boy is Airborne. Went in at 17, full time Army. He is on the short list for E8 and is located far away from anyone he knows. His only civilian clothes are camo for deer hunting season. I am working with him to explain as a squad and platoon leader in Iraq and Afghanistan he is management material. He knows absolutely nothing but full time green, he grew up in the Army. We are very proud of him. But given he is not even 40 yet, he has a whole nother career ahead of him should he so choose. Sincere thanks @WV64Signet for the kind support. It is a tough transition for him.
What's great about retired active duty you can go federal say post office etc. and buy your active-duty time back towards your next retirement. helps immensely.Exactly that, our boy is Airborne. Went in at 17, full time Army. He is on the short list for E8 and is located far away from anyone he knows. His only civilian clothes are camo for deer hunting season. I am working with him to explain as a squad and platoon leader in Iraq and Afghanistan he is management material. He knows absolutely nothing but full time green, he grew up in the Army. We are very proud of him. But given he is not even 40 yet, he has a whole nother career ahead of him should he so choose. Sincere thanks @WV64Signet for the kind support. It is a tough transition for him.
What's great about retired active duty you can go federal say post office etc. and buy your active-duty time back towards your next retirement. helps immensely.
Really? I bought back close to 12 years and no impact now with the guard retirement?Lot of rules around that .. timing can be complex. I only got expeditionary and combat tour credit because I wanted to collect my military retirement check.