Ace Your First Civilian Job Interview With These Veteran-Approved Strategies

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NORTHAMPTON, MA / ACCESSWIRE / November 4, 2024 / Transitioning from military to civilian life brings its challenges, but tapping into the wisdom of those who've been there can make all the difference. As we celebrate Veterans Day, four T-Mobile employees share what they've learned since landing their first civilian jobs, and what veterans can do right now to prepare for that first interview

Moving from military to civilian jobs isn't just a career change - it's entering a whole new world.

In honor of Veterans Day, four T-Mobile employees sat down to share their personal stories of chasing a new profession after service. Whether T-Mobile was their first civilian job after a decades-long military career or they held many new jobs since transitioning years ago, these employees agreed on one common challenge: Translating military prowess into civilian speak during interviews.

By the end of 2023, T-Mobile achieved an expansive, company-wide initiative from 2018 to hire 10,000 veterans and military spouses over a five-year period. Now, veteran employees are sharing advice from their lived experiences in hopes it will help fellow veterans who are stepping into their next chapter in the civilian world to walk confidently into their first job interview.

Meet T-Mobile's proud veterans and hear their tips to walk confidently into that first civilian job interview.

  • Russ Nelson, T-Mobile's Senior Regional Facilitator for Leadership Development, former U.S. Army Combat Reconnaissance Scout.

  • Stephen Gundrum, T-Mobile Team of Experts Coach, former Nuclear Machinist Mate for the U.S. Navy.

  • Jeff Rhodes, T-Mobile Group Project Manager for IT Business Development, retired Battalion Commander and 21-year U.S. Army Veteran.

  • Jessica Cody, T-Mobile's Senior Regional Facilitator for Leadership and Development, eight-year Veteran Chemical Specialist in the Army Reserves.

Tech to the Rescue

Russ Nelson says his biggest tip is to leverage cutting-edge AI to bridge the gap between military jargon and civilian job requirements. The former U.S. Army member and current Senior Regional Facilitator for Leadership Development at T-Mobile says that when he transitioned in 1997, he had difficulty translating his military experience into terms that are meaningful to civilian employers.

"I did not know how to articulate my experience, especially with the military occupational specialty (MOS) I had," he says. "I didn't know how to share the soft skills that I'd learned beyond all of the hard combat skills that came with reconnaissance."