0111 vs 7011
Administrative Specialist (USMC) vs Expeditionary Airfield Systems Technician (USMC)
Same Eagle, Globe, and Anchor — completely different daily realities hiding behind "every Marine is a rifleman."
If you asked a 0111 to describe their reality in one sentence: nobody respects admin until something they care about requires admin to fix it — then you are briefly the most important person in the building. If you asked the same question to a 7011: the expeditionary airfield mission is genuinely demanding and occasionally dangerous — aircraft arresting systems require precise installation and the consequences of errors are significant. Neither would believe the other one. Both would be correct. Both come with "military discount." The discount on your twenties is the same either way.
After the Uniform
The part the recruiter skips: what each job actually translates to once you're a civilian — and what it pays.
Salary data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program. A guide, not a guarantee.
Recruiter vs. Reality
The pitch versus what people who actually did the job report back.
“Admin Marines keep the entire personnel system running — pay, records, unit diaries, correspondence, everything that makes a Marine Corps unit function as an organization rather than just a group of people with guns. The organizational and records management skills translate directly to office administration, HR, and government service careers, and the hours are significantly more predictable than the infantry.”
You will become intimately familiar with MOL, MCTFS, unit diaries, and the specific formatting requirements of every administrative document the Marine Corps has ever invented. You are the person everyone comes to when their pay is wrong, their leave was rejected, or their award package disappeared into the administrative void. Nobody respects admin until something they care about requires admin to fix it — then you are briefly the most important person in the building. The work is repetitive, detail-intensive, and chronically thankless, but the hours are genuinely better than most MOSs and you will never hump a mortar baseplate up a mountain. The civilian translation is strong for office management, HR assistant, and government administrative positions. If you can navigate the Marine Corps personnel system without losing your mind, corporate HR will feel like a vacation.
“You'll set up and operate the systems that turn a field into a functional airfield — lighting arrays, VASI systems, arresting cables, and the full range of expeditionary airfield infrastructure that Marine aviation depends on to operate from places that don't have airports. Expeditionary airfield operations are uniquely Marine Corps and your skills are needed every time the MAGTF operates from austere locations.”
You will set up lighting arrays in the dark, in the rain, on ground that was not prepared for airfield operations, with Marines asking you why it isn't done yet before you've finished unloading the equipment. The expeditionary airfield mission is genuinely demanding and occasionally dangerous — aircraft arresting systems require precise installation and the consequences of errors are significant. In garrison, you'll maintain the equipment and train for the next deployment. The civilian airport operations and airfield services industry has roles that are analogous; FAA airfield operations certifications and related credentials add civilian structure to the military experience. Airport operations management is a realistic second career for experienced expeditionary airfield Marines.
Recent Reviews
Community Takes
Be the first to share your take on 0111 vs 7011
Compare Other MOS
Search by code or title, or browse by branch