US Army reviews

3.9

71% would recommend to a friend

(47,986 total reviews)
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Robert

66% approve of CEO

59% positive business outlook

US Army has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 47,986 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The US Army employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Government & Public Administration industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

48K reviews
3.0
Jul 27, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Job security, can't get fired, guaranteed promotions, relatively easy to become an officer (OCS and some ROTC programs), medical benefits, leadership experience, "time off", pay isn't as bad as people would believe.

Cons

Time off- 2.5 days off a year. This is pretty awesome, but there are limitations. Most units will not allow you to take a 4 day weekend without being charged 4 days of vacation. This means that most companies that would charge one five days time off for M-F, the Army charges you 9. This is a big difference that often goes unnoticed or checked. Deployments are horrible. Some jobs are significantly worse than others. Promotions are based on time in grade and time in service. If you are an over achiever, then the military is not for you. You have to stay in at least 8 years to be recognized and promoted early. This will only get you promoted a year ahead of the worst of your peers. Even worse, most of the officer evaluations reports are subjective and completely dependent on your boss. Speaking of boss, as I mentioned earlier, you get promoted based on time and service and time in grade; therefore, you have a good chance that your boss is no better than you are at your current job. Chances are, your boss will be grossly incompetent and riding out their 20 as well.

2.0
Jul 25, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The United States Army is a necessary evil in launching a career in the Intelligence realm, it will provide a very rudimentary skill set as an analyst and a top secret clearance. With the luck of a deployment you can become setup for more interesting analytical work in homeland security.

Cons

Intelligence professionals can expect to be treated like combat arms soldiers 24/7. This often prevents the analyst from being able to accomplish his/her job. This causes most intelligence analysts to become seriously dissatisfied with their work early on in their career and 90% of them do not reenlist or return to the army after making the rank of SGT (E5). Because of the large attrition rate the upper ranks of military intelligence is composed of reclassed combat arms soldiers (non-MI). These soldiers often lack the very basics of analytical work which should be learned during their time as lower enlisted. Which builds a work force of frustrated non commissioned officers who have no clue what they are doing and often times no interest in doing, perpetuating an environment of stress which is abrasive to the critical thinking necessary to successfully complete intelligence work. Intelligence officers are often so far removed from what is actually being created as intelligence products that they are often ineffectual as well. Ultimately, what you get is intelligence sweat shops where soldiers with little rank produce 95% of the work while under the scrutiny and time lines of senior leadership who have no real clue on what it takes to produce those products. In addition to an extremely malnourished work environment, senior leadership do not understand nor care what it takes to properly train and encourage career growth in their "underlings." I can't speak for other specialties but the MI world has become a perpetual cesspool which one unfortunately has to take a swim in before being able to move on to bigger and better worlds of opportunity in the Intelligence Community.

4.0
Jul 23, 2010

US Army

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The Army will challenge and individual to his or her limitation. I definitely recommend to anyone looking for a place to grow.

Cons

Unless you are willing to get deployed to foreign countries, have no vacation, sleep in unfriendly conditions, I would not recommend the Army.

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