0141 vs 2631
Postal Clerk (USMC) vs Signals Intelligence/Electronic Warfare Analyst (USMC)
Both went to Parris Island or San Diego. Everything since has been a choose-your-own-adventure book with no good options.
Time machine scenario: you're 18, the career counselor says "mail is morale, and you're the one who delivers it" or "collect and analyze electronic signals intelligence in support of Marine and joint operations." Here's what the time traveler from your future would say about 0141: accountable mail — registered, certified, express — requires chain-of-custody documentation that the Postal Inspection Service takes seriously. And about 2631: the work is classified well beyond what you can explain to anyone outside the community, which becomes its own kind of social skill to develop. The time traveler looks tired. Both options produce that look. The job fair after separation will go differently for these two. One will have lines at their booth. The other will have questions.
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.
“Mail is morale, and you're the one who delivers it. Postal clerks are among the most appreciated Marines in a deployed unit — the person who shows up with packages from home is never unpopular. You'll manage a postal operation that keeps Marines connected to their families across any environment.”
You are the most popular Marine on deployment and completely invisible in garrison, which is an interesting career dynamic. The work involves sorting, tracking, and distributing a volume of packages that grows every deployment as online shopping gets easier. Accountable mail — registered, certified, express — requires chain-of-custody documentation that the Postal Inspection Service takes seriously. Lost accountable mail is a very bad day. Civilian postal operations, package logistics, and mail management careers are accessible; USPS and private carriers like FedEx and UPS recognize military postal experience. The behind-the-scenes logistics knowledge is more transferable than the job title implies.
“You'll collect and analyze electronic signals intelligence in support of Marine and joint operations — intercepting radar emissions, weapons system signatures, and electronic order of battle data that helps the MAGTF understand the battlefield before it steps onto it. ELINT is among the most specialized and least talked about intelligence specialties. The TS/SCI clearance plus operational ELINT experience creates a post-military profile that NSA, NRO, and defense SIGINT contractors recruit from specifically.”
You'll work in a signals collection environment processing electronic signatures — radar emissions, weapons system electronic fingerprints, and technical intelligence that informs how the Marine Corps understands its adversaries' capabilities. The work is classified well beyond what you can explain to anyone outside the community, which becomes its own kind of social skill to develop. Deployed, the work is genuinely important. Garrison, the production requirements and collection system maintenance create a rhythm that is less thrilling. Shift work is endemic because signals don't keep business hours. The three-letter agencies and cleared defense ELINT contractors hire 2631s consistently; the key is being able to translate the experience without violating what you can't talk about — and the community has figured out how to do that.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 0141 on the left, 2631 on the right.
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Electronic intelligence (ELINT) collection, signals analysis, report writing, and database operations on classified systems. You intercept and analyze electronic signals to produce intelligence products. Good assignments put you alongside NSA analysts; fleet assignments have you in SIGINT vans or fixed facilities supporting the MEF.
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Training at Corry Station (Pensacola, FL) is 6+ months of SIGINT fundamentals and ELINT-specific training. The clearance investigation runs concurrently. Pensacola is a decent duty station for training — beach access on weekends and a reasonable quality of life.
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Low to moderate. The work is desk-based intelligence collection, but Marines still meet Corps physical standards. Field deployments with radio battalions involve carrying and operating SIGINT equipment.
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The 2631 is the Marine Corps' electronic intelligence specialist — you intercept and analyze electronic emissions to produce actionable intelligence. The recruiter probably can't explain this MOS in detail because it's classified. The reality: this is one of the best MOSs in the Marine Corps for post-military career potential. The TS/SCI clearance alone is worth a massive salary premium, and ELINT skills are in high demand at NSA, CIA, defense contractors, and cybersecurity firms. The work itself ranges from fascinating (operational SIGINT collection) to tedious (staring at signals for 12-hour shifts). Your experience varies enormously by assignment — agency billets are career-defining, fleet billets can be routine. Either way, the credentials you walk away with are more valuable than most graduate degrees.
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