0291 vs 0241
Intelligence Chief (USMC) vs Imagery Analysis Specialist (USMC)
Two Marine MOS codes that went through the same boot camp and have agreed on absolutely nothing since graduation day.
Here are two things that happen simultaneously in the same armed forces. Thing one (0291): managing an S-2 section means managing analysts at different skill levels, maintaining a SCIF that is never as well-resourced as you'd like, and advising commanders who range from fully intel-literate to "show me the picture with the red arrow. Thing two (0241): the analytical tools evolve continuously and the best analysts stay ahead of the software. Both of these fall under the same Defense Department. Both involve the same GI Bill. Everything between those two facts is different. Same joint force, different joint problems.
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.
“You'll be the senior intelligence professional that battalion and regimental commanders depend on for everything from threat assessments to SCIF management to intelligence training for the unit. As an 0291, you've spent a career developing the all-source expertise and analytical judgment that makes you the person in the room who can synthesize the picture. The senior IC and defense contractor market for your background is consistently strong.”
You've survived long enough in Marine intelligence to know what the job actually requires, which means you also know how often the system makes that harder than it needs to be. Managing an S-2 section means managing analysts at different skill levels, maintaining a SCIF that is never as well-resourced as you'd like, and advising commanders who range from fully intel-literate to "show me the picture with the red arrow." The post-military career is strong — DIA, CIA, NSA, and cleared defense contractors all have consistent demand for senior Marines with all-source intelligence backgrounds. Translation: keep your contacts, document your accomplishments in unclassified terms, and leave with a resume that doesn't just say "intelligence."
“You'll look at imagery that most people never know exists — satellite and aerial sensor products showing adversary positions, equipment, and activities — and extract intelligence that shapes Marine operations. Imagery analysts are foundational to the all-source intelligence process, and the TS/SCI clearance plus geospatial analysis skills make you immediately marketable to NGA, defense contractors, and the commercial geospatial industry.”
You'll spend a lot of time staring at imagery that requires pattern recognition developed over months and years — the difference between a weapon cache and a pile of lumber is something you learn by looking at thousands of piles of lumber. The analytical tools evolve continuously and the best analysts stay ahead of the software. NGA, DIA, and cleared geospatial intelligence contractors hire 0241s consistently; the commercial satellite imagery market is also growing, and companies like Planet and Maxar hire veterans with military IMINT experience. The challenge is that imagery analysis tradecraft is specific enough that civilian employers sometimes need it explained — a well-translated resume matters more in this community than most.
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