FormerRecruitingGuru
Making Recruiting Great Again
Hello Everyone,
After reading the board posts, I am finally posting as well. I am considering the upcoming Supply DCO board and wanted to get some advice/insight. It all seems simple, but coming from Air Force reserve, I still question everything because it is so unfamiliar to what I am used to.
Background:
Personal: 33 years old. Married. Located in Southern California (Los Angeles area).
Education: MBA in Marketing (3.9 GPA), BS in Supply Chain and Operations Management/BS in Management, and an AS in Transportation & Logistics. Graduate Certificate in Data Science from the University of Michigan.
Civilian Career: 10 years of Hospitality management, 4 years of engineering/technical experience with top automotive manufacturer.
Military: 12.5 years with Air Force Reserves as E-6 (E-7 Selected) logistician. Earned several medals (like most other candidates).
My questions are as follows:
1. Since I am in LA, where would be the likely bases I would drill out of?
2. Does anyone have any supply experience with the local bases? (such as work environment, management structure, deployment tempo)?
3. How do Navy reserves get assigned to deployments, sea duty, shore duty, etc.?
4. How is Supply training handled after DCOIC? Online information indicates that training is accomplished over 2-week annual tours and drills? no formal schooling?
5. Online information also states it takes about 3 years for a new Reserve Supply Officer to be fully trained. Does that mean you're not worldwide qualified until then?
Ultimately, I am more concerned with deployment/sea duty tempos. Coming from the Air Force Reserve, where I was deploying every 3 years, I would like to find a unit/position where I can either space them out a bit more OR just push a deployment back at least 2-3 years from now. I ETS'd from the AFRES because I was scheduled to deploy once again. I have a 6-month old and I would appreciate being home for the early years. I have been on many deployments and will gladly go again in a few years, but I am just not looking for another deployment now or for at least 2-3 years. With that said, can anyone provide insight as to how the Navy might fit my needs and if the Supply training schedule will buy me enough time to be home these early years.
* I will note that I understand the needs of the military and I could just stay out, but I have about 7 years left until retirement, and I really love the military, so I would love to find a happy medium where I can serve my country, work towards my retirement, and be home a bit more than before.
With that said, I thank everyone in advance for the input and advice.
Ask these five questions when you complete your two professional interviews.