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Suggest a Feature →Geospatial Intelligence
Exploits and analyzes imagery and geospatial data from satellite, aerial, and ground-based sensors. Produces intelligence assessments from imagery analysis.
“As a Geospatial Intelligence Analyst, you'll exploit satellite imagery, full-motion video, and advanced mapping systems to provide critical intelligence on enemy positions, infrastructure, and terrain. You'll master GIS technology and remote sensing — skills in massive demand across the intelligence community and the booming commercial satellite industry.”
You stare at satellite imagery for a living, and you have become the human equivalent of a Google Earth zoom function with a security clearance. You can identify a T-72 tank from orbit by its shadow. You know the difference between a SAM site and a soccer field from 400 miles up, and you've had arguments about it that required a second analyst to adjudicate. Your eyes are a national asset and your optometrist is genuinely alarmed by your screen time — which is classified, because even your work schedule is classified. You will spend eight hours zooming into a single image looking for something that may or may not be there, and when you find it, you'll feel like Indiana Jones if Indiana Jones had a cubicle and a dual-monitor setup. The IPB products you build are works of art that will be briefed to generals and attributed to 'the intel shop.' Your name appears nowhere. You are a ghost who really, really understands terrain. But here's the kicker: the civilian GIS and remote sensing market is BOOMING, and every defense contractor with a satellite contract will fight over you. NGA, NRO, Maxar, Planet Labs — they're all waiting. You'll triple your salary and still get to stare at pictures from space, just with a standing desk and stock options.
MOS Intel
- 1Learn GIS tools (ArcGIS, QGIS) beyond what the Air Force teaches. Geospatial analysis is a booming civilian field and GIS skills are in demand from NGA to tech companies.
- 2NGA assignments are the gold standard. The experience and networking are career-defining — push hard for those billets.
- 3Build a portfolio of unclassified geospatial work (using open-source imagery) to demonstrate your skills to civilian employers.
Geospatial intelligence is a growing field with strong civilian demand. The recruiter will describe analyzing imagery for national security, and that's accurate. What they may not convey is that a lot of 1N1 work is painstaking, detail-oriented analysis — staring at imagery for hours looking for changes or specific indicators. It's intellectually engaging but can be tedious. The best assignments are at NGA or agency billets where you work on high-priority national intelligence problems. Tactical assignments supporting flying units are more dynamic but less analytically deep. The TS/SCI clearance and GEOINT skills are increasingly valuable in the civilian world — NGA, defense contractors, and commercial companies need geospatial analysts. Supplement your military training with GIS certifications for maximum post-military competitiveness.
What this actually is in the real world
Your skills translate. Here's what civilian employers call this job — and what they pay.
GEOINT Analyst
Dead-on matchGIS Specialist
Dead-on matchRemote Sensing Analyst
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