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  • Army Has Plan to Boost Signups

    WASHINGTON - The Army has a master plan for recovering from this year's painful recruiting problems that includes new financial incentives for enlistees, greater use of computers, a new way for recruiters to make their pitch and a proposed finder's fee for soldiers who refer recruits.



    The plan was assembled after the Army fell more than 6,600 recruits below of its goal of 80,000 for the year that ended Sept. 30. It was the first time it had fallen short since 1999.



    The military services were releasing their complete year-end recruiting figures Tuesday. The Army, which has borne the largest share of the combat burden in Iraq and Afghanistan, was expected to be the only service to have fallen short, although the Marine Corps struggled for part of the year.



    Opinion surveys indicate that daily reports of soldiers dying in Iraq have dampened young people's interest in joining the military, prompting the Army to try new ways to make the war work in its favor.



    For example, since July the Army has been offering prospective recruits what it calls "assignment incentive pay." That is $400 a month in extra pay for as many as 36 months if an enlistee agrees to join any of the brigades of the 1st Cavalry Division or 25th Infantry Division scheduled to deploy to Iraq or Afghanistan.



    The Army also is encouraging combat veterans who return home on leave from Iraq or Afghanistan to meet with young people in their home towns to talk about their experiences in hopes of snagging extra recruits. The Army has found that re-enlist rates are especially high among units that have served in Iraq and Afghanistan.



    Raymond DuBois, acting undersecretary of the Army, spearheaded the effort to identify new approaches. Some imitate recruiting practices used in the business world, and not all emphasize financial incentives.



    Parts of this new strategy were put into practice several months ago; others await congressional approval. DuBois says the shifts began paying dividends this summer, when the Army exceeded its recruiting goals monthly from June through September, after missing for four straight months.



    "By virtue of what we have put in place over the last six to eight months, I'm confident the Army will achieve its goal of 80,000 recruits" for the budget year that began Oct. 1, DuBois said in an interview Monday.



    Some private analysts were skeptical. Michael O'Hanlon, defense specialist at the Brookings Institution, said Monday that if conditions get worse the future of the all-volunteer force could be in jeopardy.



    "Unless the situation in Iraq improves, or unless we drastically enlarge the pool of possible recruits in some way - for example, lowering academic standards for them, or even considering an extreme option like allowing foreigners to gain U.S. citizenship by serving - one would have to expect continued tough slogging for the Army," O'Hanlon said.



    When the Army saw its recruiting efforts fall drastically below expectations - starting last February and bottoming out in April with only 58 percent of that month's goal achieved - it embarked on some new approaches.



    The most important may have been the assignment of hundreds of extra recruiters. The Army also has asked Congress for permission to raise the maximum enlistment bonus from $20,000 to $40,000.



    Among the main features of the Army's master plan for reaching its 2006 recruiting goal:



    - Adjust the way recruiters frame their sales pitches to young men and women. Instead of focusing mainly on financial incentives and other tangible benefits of joining the Army, recruiters are now being trained to take what some call the "consultative" approach. That means addressing the individual recruits' personal hopes and fears, rather than using the traditional hard sell.



    - Put more effort into recruiting people who have begun their college careers but not yet earned a degree, on the assumption that some would be interested in taking a hiatus to try military service. Also, target those of high school age who are being home schooled - a potential market the Army has largely ignored.



    - Make more use of what DuBois calls "lead refinements" - the use of computer technology to refine recruiters' leads on potential enlistees. Using mathematical formulas based in part on demographics, a recruiter can more easily prioritize his or her high-payoff leads and thus become more productive. Ten of the Army's 41 recruiting battalions now use this technology; the Army wants to double it to 20 or more.



    - Shift more advertising dollars from national to local markets.



    - Offer a $2,500 "finder's fee" to soldiers who refer a recruit who makes it through advanced individual training, a step beyond basic training. This has yet to be authorized by Congress.



    Copyright 2005 Associated Press. All rights reserved.

  • #2
    Re: Army Has Plan to Boost Signups

    Это ладно. Я вот нашёл намёк на бабки иного рода.



    $104,400.00 Bonus/Education for the ARMY!!!!



    Active-duty Army recruits can reap an unprecedented benefit of more than $100,000 in bonuses, college funds and extra pay for accepting high-demand jobs in priority units.



    Beginning July 13, the Army offered new incentive pay of as much as $14,400 -- or $400 a month for 36 months -- to soldiers who enlist for three or more years as Infantrymen, mechanics, medics and a wide range of other career fields. The soldiers must also agree to join "priority units," which means units that are reorganizing or preparing to deploy overseas.



    Soldiers who qualify for the pay remain eligible for cash enlistment bonuses of as much as $20,000 -- as well as either a loan repayment program of as much as $65,000 or Army College Fund of as much as $70,000 -- raising the total in possible extra compensation to $104,400.00."



    This $104,400.00 does not incude normal monthly pay based on your rank or Jump pay, SF incentive pay, etc.



    Вот как система работает



    The $20,000 bonus is given $10,000 after AIT then the remaining $10,000 is given out evenly once a year for your remaining enlistment.



    The $14,400 is given in your monthly paycheck to the tune of $400 a month.



    The $70,000 Army College Fund is given when you are in school. Some use it while still in service others use it after they separate.



    А вот и МОСы, которые имеют право на этот Едубонус







    Infantryman (11X)

    Cannon Crewmember (13B)

    Field Artillery Tactical Data Systems Specialist (13D)

    Fire Support Specialist (13F),

    Field Artillery Firefinder Radar Operator (13R)

    Field Artillery Surveyor (13S)

    Field Artillery Meteorological Crewmember (13W)

    Cavalry Scout (19D)

    Armor Crewman (19K)

    Combat Engineer (21B)

    General Construction Equipment Operator (21J) Topographic Analyst (21U)

    Radio Operator Maintainer (25C)

    Cable Systems Installer-Maintainer (25L)

    Multi-channel Transmission Systems Operator-Maintainer (25Q)

    Signal Support Systems Specialist (25U)

    Military Police (31B)

    Metal Worker (44B)

    Small Arms/Artillery Repairer (45B)

    Power Generation Equipment Repairer (52D)

    Construction Equipment Repairer (62B)

    Wheel Vehicle Mechanic (63B)

    Artillery Mechanic (63D)

    Track Vehicle Mechanic (63H)

    Quartermaster and Chemical Equipment Repairer (63J)

    Chemical Operations Specialist (74D)

    Motor Transport Operator (88M)

    Health Care Specialist (91W)

    Automated Logistical Specialist (92A)

    Petroleum Supply Specialist (92F)

    Food Service Operations (92G)

    Water Treatment Specialist (92W)

    Unit Supply Specialist (92Y)

    Intelligence Analyst (96B)

    Counter Intelligence Analyst (97B)



    Not every MOS will be avaiable everyday at MEPS but these are the jobs that would qualify for the Assignment Incentive Pay Option



    Источник

    http://forums.military.com/gro upee/forums/a/tpc/f/78192862/m /1000031010001

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