Posted on Feb 16, 2015
SSgt Aircraft Electrical Systems Technician, AV-8
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So I have just been called upon by the Corps to recruit the next generation of Marines. I'm not the most extroverted guy in the world and find it difficult to just walk up to people I don't know. Any tips from people who were in the same boat would be greatly appreciated. I just want to leave this recruiting tour and look back on it as a success and not a failure.
Posted in these groups: Recruiting logo RecruitingDuty honor country tadhc 4t Duty
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Responses: 4
Sgt Aaron Kennedy, MS
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"You miss 100% of the shots you don't take." - Wayne Gretzky

But seriously, the Marine Corps does not set Marines up for failure. It's not in our best interest. They're going to send you to Recruiting School, and teach you some great soft skills. You're going to take those soft skills, and you're going to marry them up with your experiences.

The Marine Corps has A LOT to offer. Just think about how much you have changed in the last half dozen years. Not just big ways, but little ways. Think about everything you've learned. Think about the opportunities.

Now think back to everything else you've done in the Marines, and remember you'll get as much out of this as you put into it.

That guy you walk up to might want to lose 30 pounds, or gain 20 pounds of muscle. Or just get the hell out of whatever town he's in. There's something for everyone. All you need to do is entice them to make the first step.
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CWO3 Us Marine
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Honesty is the best policy. Think how you would feel if someone screwed your life up. Don't sell jobs, but rather the intangibles of being a Marine. Stand by for some long hours, but as long as you are honest it will pay off. Survivor of 36 one month tours 1984-87. 86 recruits.
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Capt Richard I P.
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Offer them the challenege: 'do you have what it takes to earn the title 'Marine?'....prove it!' Then set the example. Show them what it means to be one of us.
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