When our military is viewed as an employer, it has the same problem as the private sector; attracting qualified people to fill jobs.
In today’s vibrant economy, there is an abundance of “Help Wanted” signs. Even though our armed forces have stepped up their enlistment bonuses, they still fall short of their recruitment goals. There are just fewer qualified people in the employment pool to fill jobs that require higher educational standards, more skills, a willingness to work hard and the dexterity to be part of a team.
The National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) found nationally, one-quarter of small employers have open positions of which 56 percent were full-time jobs.
Complicating the problem is one-fourth of the applicants lack the necessary job-specific skills and nearly half fall short on social acumen. NFIB found other notable reasons disqualifying job seekers are poor attitude, inappropriate appearance, unreasonable wage expectations, insufficient English, math and communications competencies and failed drug-testing. Military recruiters add lack of physical fitness to that list.
“We face a challenging recruiting environment in which our Marine recruiters have to overcome the fact that to begin with, 75 percent of age-qualified youth are unqualified for service due to medical, moral or educational issues,” Marine Gunnery Sgt. Justin Kronenberg said.