0631 vs 0141
Network Administrator (USMC) vs Postal Clerk (USMC)
Two Marines in the chow hall: one smells like the field, the other like hydraulic fluid. Both think they have it worse. Both are right.
0630. Two service members. Same PT formation. Then the 0631 goes here: in the field, you're building tactical networks from scratch — setting up a COC's entire data backbone with military networking gear that is not Cisco no matter how much the recruiter implied it was. And the 0141 goes here: accountable mail — registered, certified, express — requires chain-of-custody documentation that the Postal Inspection Service takes seriously. They'll meet again at the PX. Neither will understand what the other did all day. Two career fields that share a country and a commitment and absolutely nothing else that matters on a Tuesday.
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 build and maintain the network backbone that connects every Marine in the fight. Routers, switches, firewalls, tactical data links — you own the infrastructure that makes command and control possible. CCNA-level networking skills are in massive civilian demand, and the cleared network engineers the Marine Corps produces are exactly what defense contractors and enterprise IT shops are hiring. This used to be lumped together with systems administration under 0651 — now you get to specialize in what matters: the network itself.”
You are the plumber of Marine Corps IT — you own the pipes. Switches, routers, firewalls, cable runs, IP schemes, VLANs, and whatever tactical network gear the Corps is fielding this year. When the 0651 split happened, 31s got the network infrastructure and 71s got the servers and systems. In practice, especially in smaller units, you still end up doing some of both because there aren't enough bodies. In garrison, your life is managing network closets, running cable, configuring switches, and troubleshooting why building 4200 can't reach the print server. In the field, you're building tactical networks from scratch — setting up a COC's entire data backbone with military networking gear that is not Cisco no matter how much the recruiter implied it was. Training at MCCESS covers the fundamentals but you'll learn the real stuff on the job. Get your CCNA on your own time — the military courses don't go deep enough for the civilian market. The good news: networking is one of the most transferable military IT skills. Companies need people who can troubleshoot at the packet level under pressure, and that's exactly what deployed Marine network admins do every day.
“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.
Recent Reviews
Community Takes
Be the first to share your take on 0631 vs 0141
Compare Other MOS
Search by code or title, or browse by branch