Do you have to wait a certain number of months before you can reapply again?
When I applied it was a moot point because boards were very infrequent. Seems there's a 6 month wait time now but from what I understand, boards are more frequent these days (Quarterly and sometimes monthly for some designators).
OK since I'm going for Naval Flight Officer I have to do the aviation portion of the ASTB not just the OAR. However, I've been finding it extremely difficult to get my score up on the aviation portion, but my OAR score is good. Would you recommend changing my designator? I'm very open to other designators, the only reason I'm doing aviation is because my recruiter told me it has the "best bases."
I would not count Lemoore, Fallon, or anything in New Jersey as a "best base" but YMMV. I think Charleston is the bees knees but I also don't have any PTSD from Nuke school and I don't mind the humidity.
I know.. If I'm being honest, I want to go as a Public Affairs Officer but he told me that it isn't a "good path" and to push for aviation instead. Not sure if he gets paid for recruiting a certain amount of Aviation designators or what but it certainly feels like there is a reason he wants me to do Aviation so badly and apply as a Naval Flight Officer because he isn't really taking into account what I want to do.
At the end of the day, it's your career. You can apply for whatever you want but it sounds like your recruiter is trying to be realistic about your chances. PAO, HR, and FAO are all designators that prioritize prior-enlisted accessions or other officers from other designators transferring into the community. The latter still requires that you be a commissioned officer in some other field before you can request to transfer in.
would you recommend I enlist first then if I want to do PAO? I have a bachelor's degree, not sure if that would give me any sort of advantage to other E-1s..
Absolutely not! The likelihood that your indecision will be taken advantage of is high and you could end up chipping hot paint and busting rust in a paint punt in Bahrain in July. That's not a fun time. Since you have a degree, focus on being an officer if you have a desire to serve. There are also other ways to serve without being IN the military. There are positions with the DoD and the Navy as a civilian doing PAO type work, in fact, most of the people I see writing copy or handling social media are civilians. That still provides the ability to travel and you can work behind the scenes in places like Italy, Japan, or Florida. You may also find work outside of the public affairs realm in the protocol office handling public relations between government and military offices and doing event planning (You'd go to lots of parties but also have to plan and manage them). I believe these jobs are all listed on
https://www.usajobs.gov/.
As others have said, you really need to know what
YOU want to do and what will make
YOU feel fulfilled and "happy" in life. It doesn't sound like the commitment of the military, especially in a job field
YOU are
not passionate about, is going to be a good fit for
YOU.
He was not. The corporate world is very strict about who they allow in front of the camera to be their spokesperson. Even cannabis companies are going "mainstream" these days.