Posted on Nov 7, 2022
What should you consider when writing an ETS Award?
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We have two Soldiers in our formation, a Staff Sergeant and a Specialist who are getting out in five months and despite the career counselors and leaders best efforts they're dead set on getting out.
So, it's time to consider a get out award.
The SSG has had obviously a longer career with multiple deployments, a couple federal missions, was Active and in the Guard for two different States. Has various awards from prior service.
The SPC no deployments but was not a shirker by any means. Has nothing.
So I'm thinking... MSM and ARCOM. Worst case the MSM gets downed to an ARCOM and the ARCOM gets downed to an AAM.
Now I'm taking the initiative on writing these and then crowd sourcing improvements from NCO's and a few officers in my AO, but 5 months is a short window for S1 to get this through the chain before they're out the door (total BS, 5 months should be plenty but whatever) so what do I need to consider. I know these are different than an End of Tour or an Impact award.
I've also never written an MSM, I know it's going to go to our 1 star. That said even though I'm writing it, likely someone else will be the actual recommender.
So, it's time to consider a get out award.
The SSG has had obviously a longer career with multiple deployments, a couple federal missions, was Active and in the Guard for two different States. Has various awards from prior service.
The SPC no deployments but was not a shirker by any means. Has nothing.
So I'm thinking... MSM and ARCOM. Worst case the MSM gets downed to an ARCOM and the ARCOM gets downed to an AAM.
Now I'm taking the initiative on writing these and then crowd sourcing improvements from NCO's and a few officers in my AO, but 5 months is a short window for S1 to get this through the chain before they're out the door (total BS, 5 months should be plenty but whatever) so what do I need to consider. I know these are different than an End of Tour or an Impact award.
I've also never written an MSM, I know it's going to go to our 1 star. That said even though I'm writing it, likely someone else will be the actual recommender.
Posted 2 y ago
Responses: 12
As someone who has written or processed thousands of awards over the years (and in the not so distant future, likely the recipient of a retirement award), let me offer up some thoughts.
The ultimate goal here is to get deserving Soldiers an award commensurate with their longevity, accomplishment, and responsibility.
Longevity speaks for itself. 10 years > 6 years.
Responsibility is often coincidental with rank, but not always. In charge of troops, tasks, or equipment with quantifiable bullets say a lot about what kind of cat they are.
Lastly, achievements are often easily conveyed on paper, but you have to do it the right way and you can't recycle stuff that has been already awarded. Best practice is to show cause and effect.
Example: SSG Snuffy was in charge of the company Body Composition program for two and half years. Through his management and support of Soldiers, he reduced the unit BFC non-compliance rate by over 70%, by far the best results in the battalion.
The ultimate goal here is to get deserving Soldiers an award commensurate with their longevity, accomplishment, and responsibility.
Longevity speaks for itself. 10 years > 6 years.
Responsibility is often coincidental with rank, but not always. In charge of troops, tasks, or equipment with quantifiable bullets say a lot about what kind of cat they are.
Lastly, achievements are often easily conveyed on paper, but you have to do it the right way and you can't recycle stuff that has been already awarded. Best practice is to show cause and effect.
Example: SSG Snuffy was in charge of the company Body Composition program for two and half years. Through his management and support of Soldiers, he reduced the unit BFC non-compliance rate by over 70%, by far the best results in the battalion.
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Fair point there 1SG. The SSG's award rec is going to be more difficult since he's received a few awards in the past and I'd have to look at those.
The SPC is going to be easy, no awards so go for broke on those bullets.
The SPC is going to be easy, no awards so go for broke on those bullets.
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You should consider the accomplishments achieved over the course of their time. You should consider the level of impact they had on the unit, Guard and mission(s). Have them provide you a summary of their time and what they did during that time. Try not to double tap any achievements previously awarded for. Then, I recommend you look at ArmyWriter for bullet amd citation write ups to give you an idea as to how they can be written. Then, have your 1SG look the 638s over. Be prepared to see the MSM recommendation for the SSG downgraded. Same for the ARCOM.
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I fully expect it, but I figure it's worth a shot. I had completely forgotten about ArmyWriter.
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If they have already been awarded for something, you can't award it again. This will come in to play for the SSG.
Also, look at quantifiable accomplishments first: saved X amount of money, killed X number of terrorists, wrote X number of reports, achieved X number of hours of education. Also remember that subordinate accomplishments are leader accomplishments, too. So X number of hours of education for his/her squad/team/section, etc.
Next, look at qualifiable accomplishments. Won best squad competition. Won NCO of the quarter. Selected for hardest missions, etc.
Next look at impact accomplishments. Improved morale, created SOPs, streamlined processes, etc. If you can, find ways to turn these into quantifiable accomplishments. Streamlined processes which saved X number of man-hiurs or reduced time by 8% or whatever.
Finally, look at individual accomplishments. Schools, training, etc.
Always ALWAYS always tie everything back to impact on unit. I was taught as a rule of thumb, that you need to show how it affected that Commander's unit. So an ARCOM, signed by BDE Commander, needs to have a BDE wide impact. And so on. THIS IS NOT A REGULATORY REQUIREMENT. Ultimately, the Commander can sign whatever he or she wants (I have in my file an ARCOM that was signed by a 2-star which which had only one bullet and that only four words long). And they cannot, technically, pre-establish requirements for awards (like must have division-wide impact). But it is still a good idea. If you want that Commander to sign it, you need to give him or her a good reason to do so.
Also, look at quantifiable accomplishments first: saved X amount of money, killed X number of terrorists, wrote X number of reports, achieved X number of hours of education. Also remember that subordinate accomplishments are leader accomplishments, too. So X number of hours of education for his/her squad/team/section, etc.
Next, look at qualifiable accomplishments. Won best squad competition. Won NCO of the quarter. Selected for hardest missions, etc.
Next look at impact accomplishments. Improved morale, created SOPs, streamlined processes, etc. If you can, find ways to turn these into quantifiable accomplishments. Streamlined processes which saved X number of man-hiurs or reduced time by 8% or whatever.
Finally, look at individual accomplishments. Schools, training, etc.
Always ALWAYS always tie everything back to impact on unit. I was taught as a rule of thumb, that you need to show how it affected that Commander's unit. So an ARCOM, signed by BDE Commander, needs to have a BDE wide impact. And so on. THIS IS NOT A REGULATORY REQUIREMENT. Ultimately, the Commander can sign whatever he or she wants (I have in my file an ARCOM that was signed by a 2-star which which had only one bullet and that only four words long). And they cannot, technically, pre-establish requirements for awards (like must have division-wide impact). But it is still a good idea. If you want that Commander to sign it, you need to give him or her a good reason to do so.
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Find the metrics and fluff/word smith it for the commander sounds accurate. Definitely lots to consider on his metrics, I'll need more support on those but you gave me more to consider on what I'm looking for.
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