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    ‘Pacesetter’ leads the way in Special Recruiter Assistance Program at Fort Riley

    Preparing to Reruit for the Nation

    Courtesy Photo | Sgt. Tyler Martin, Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear non-commissioned...... read more read more

    FORT RILEY, KS, UNITED STATES

    09.05.2018

    Story by Sgt. 1st Class Victor Gardner 

    1st Infantry Division Sustainment Brigade

    Sgt. Tyler Martin, Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear noncommissioned officer, 24th Composite Transportation Company, 1st Infantry Division Sustainment Brigade, was among the first wave of Soldiers from Fort Riley to participate in a Department of Defense initiative — the Special Recruiter Assistance Program — from June 23 through July 24 in Monson, Massachusetts, in order to provide a homegrown face to a town with possible military recruits.
    SRAP brings a total of 3,000 Soldiers to recruiting stations across the nation. Each Soldier spends 30 days supporting local outreach efforts to create awareness of the Army lifestyle and career opportunities in an area where they have lived, worked or have a significant personal tie.
    According to Maj. Gen. Jeffery Snow, U.S. Army Recruiting commanding general, about 50 percent of youth today admit to knowing little about their own nation's military and even struggle with naming all the services. This is where SRAP and Soldiers like Martin come into play.
    Martin learned of the opportunity to be close to home and try something that was new to him; recruiting. Or, as Martin puts it, “learning about a new person’s story with every encounter.”
    “I’m not really nervous about talking to other people but that’s when we are all in the same shop,” Martin said. “I really didn’t know what I was getting into. I just knew that I was going to be home recruiting. I went in not knowing too much about recruiting but I decided to do it.”
    Martin was one of 20 Soldiers from the 1st Inf. Div. Sust. Bde. to interview with the Command Sgt. Maj. Matthew Majeski, the brigade’s senior noncommissioned officer, for this great opportunity. He says that the turnaround time for his selection was very fast.
    “I wasn’t expecting much to happen but I got a call to go in and speak with (Majeski) during a four day (weekend),” Martin said. “I talked with the command sergeant major and he told all of us to stay flexible and he would be in touch.
    “I didn’t think much about it and when I told my wife she didn’t think it was going to happen. A few days later I get a call and told I’m headed out in a few days. It was like an eight-day turnaround from the time I talked with Command Sgt. Maj. (Majeski) and me being on a flight home.”
    Once Martin arrived at the Monson recruiting station he began learning how to speak to and with potential recruits. He was assigned to Sgt. Jason Duffy, a recruiter for the Monson station.
    “When I met Sgt. Duffy, he welcomed me and began to tell me about the station and what it is they do,” Martin said. “He showed me the ropes. How to fill-out the information cards and gave me a bunch of business cards we went out the door to prospect. He took me over the mall and said, ‘just watch what I do.’ He (Duffy) took me around and taught me what to say and not to say. It was really fun.”
    Thinking back on his own experience, Martin said it was different from this vantage point as opposed to when he was recruited.
    “I got to learn a whole lot of stuff that I didn’t know when you’re on this side (enlisting) of it,” Martin said. “When you’re trying to enlist you never see what’s going on behind closed doors. When you’re doing the recruiting system and doing the SRAP, it’s like you learn a lot of stuff that you never knew before.
    “I learned about meeting mission. I learned that certain (military occupation specialties) have bonuses and other don’t and they (the recruiter) can see all of that. But mainly you learn about people and what they want to do later on in their careers, like go into the police force.”
    After a week, Duffy allowed Martin to speak to prospects on his own. Martin said that he had earn the trust of Duffy and the other recruiters at the station.
    “Sgt. Duffy and I would go out as a team and take turns just talking to people about military life and the benefits,” Martin said. “It was more so about listening to what the person wanted and to help them. I actually found myself talking to prospects late at night, like around 9 p.m. at Walmart while I’m with my wife. But I found it to be more than a job because I wanted to make sure the station met their mission and it was fun.”
    During Martin’s time at the Monson recruiting station, he pulled off a feat that the station’s first sergeant challenged him to do.
    “When I got my initial counseling from the first sergeant, he said that he hadn’t done recruiting in a while,” Martin said. “But he said he could put one (recruit) in before me. Well one day a kid I had talked to walks into the station with a card in his hand and says, ‘someone gave me this card a week ago and I’m here to get more information.’ All the sergeants were looking around at each other asking who it was and then I said, ‘I remember you and I’m glad you came in.’ The other sergeants were like how did you do that? I just smiled and since I don’t know too much I let the actual recruiters take over. It was pretty cool.”
    Toward the end of Martin’s time at the station, he said he began to really like working with the recruiters in the station. He said he enjoyed how they helped one another, and how he wanted to move into that direction.
    “Man I really enjoyed my time there,” Martin said. “I would love to be a recruiter and go work back in that station. “

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 09.05.2018
    Date Posted: 09.05.2018 15:28
    Story ID: 291520
    Location: FORT RILEY, KS, US
    Hometown: BOSTON, MA, US
    Hometown: MONSON, MA, US

    Web Views: 166
    Downloads: 0

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