11A vs 37A
Infantry (USA) vs Psychological Operations (USA)
Two MOS codes that share a branch, a PT test, and an unshakeable belief that their job is the reason the Army functions.
After-action review of two careers served simultaneously in the same military. 11A reports: the actual leadership part is real — your platoon will watch everything you do and judge you mercilessly and correctly. The hardest part of being a butter bar Infantry officer is accepting that your SFC knows ten times what you know and learning from him instead of pretending otherwise. 37A reports: psychological Operations is influence at scale — you design, produce, and disseminate information campaigns that persuade target audiences to take actions favorable to U. Your deployments put you in small teams embedded with indigenous forces, embassy country teams, or special operations task forces where your influence campaign is the main effort, not a supporting function. Lessons learned: the military contains multitudes, and most of them were not in the brief. The same government that runs both of these also landed on the moon. Institutional range is real.
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 command a rifle platoon — 35-40 of the most capable warriors in the world — before your mid-20s. Infantry officers go to IBOLC, Airborne school, and Ranger School. The Ranger Tab is the most respected piece of cloth in the Army and it's yours to earn. You'll lead Soldiers in combat, shape careers, and build a record that puts you on the fast track to battalion command and beyond. This is the most demanding and most respected officer branch. Everything else is staff.”
ROTC or OCS will tell you that you're going to lead men in combat and carry on a tradition stretching back to Valley Forge. The first six months at your first duty station will teach you that you're going to manage PowerPoint presentations about training schedules, sit in meetings where the XO talks about the battalion's METL for ninety minutes, and spend Friday afternoons at Health and Welfare inspections. The actual leadership part is real — your platoon will watch everything you do and judge you mercilessly and correctly. The hardest part of being a butter bar Infantry officer is accepting that your SFC knows ten times what you know and learning from him instead of pretending otherwise. Company command is genuinely meaningful. Battalion staff is where Infantry officers go to die a slow death of OER bullets and staff sync briefs. The combat part, if it happens, will be nothing like Ranger School. Ranger School is still worth doing. Do the job right and your NCOs will follow you anywhere.
“As a Psychological Operations Officer, you'll lead influence campaigns that shape the information environment in support of military objectives. You'll master behavioral science, media strategy, and cross-cultural communication — developing strategic communication skills valued at the highest levels of government, defense, and corporate leadership.”
You are a PSYOP officer, which means you spend half your career explaining that you don't brainwash people and the other half doing things that sound exactly like brainwashing when you describe them wrong at parties. Psychological Operations is influence at scale — you design, produce, and disseminate information campaigns that persuade target audiences to take actions favorable to U.S. objectives. Your products include leaflets, radio broadcasts, social media operations, and face-to-face engagement, all backed by target audience analysis that would make a marketing firm jealous. The Fort Liberty pipeline is where conventional officers become special operations officers, and the training is equal parts academic rigor and creative thinking that the conventional Army finds deeply suspicious. Your deployments put you in small teams embedded with indigenous forces, embassy country teams, or special operations task forces where your influence campaign is the main effort, not a supporting function. The 'hearts and minds' cliché is reductive — you're studying psychology, culture, politics, and communication theory to change behavior in populations that may or may not want to be changed. Civilian marketing, strategic communications, political consulting, tech industry influence/trust & safety teams, and federal information operations positions recruit PSYOP officers at $85-140K.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 11A on the left, 37A on the right.
Platoon leader (LT): leading 30-40 soldiers in training, ranges, and field exercises. Company commander (CPT): responsible for 120-200 soldiers, equipment worth millions, and the readiness of an infantry company. The job is leadership — planning, deciding, and being accountable for everything your unit does or fails to do.
Planning and leading psychological operations — developing influence campaigns, managing PSYOP teams, and integrating information operations with conventional military plans. You work at the intersection of military operations and strategic communications. The work is intellectually challenging and requires understanding human behavior, culture, and messaging.
Infantry Basic Officer Leader Course (IBOLC) at Fort Moore (GA) is about 17 weeks. Covers infantry tactics, land navigation, weapons employment, and platoon operations. Ranger School is expected — nearly all infantry officers attend, and not having a Ranger Tab is a career disadvantage.
Psychological Operations Officer Qualification Course at Fort Liberty (NC) includes airborne school and PSYOP-specific training. The total pipeline is several months. The training covers influence theory, campaign planning, cultural analysis, and media production at the officer level.
Extremely high. Infantry officers are expected to exceed the physical standards of their soldiers. Rucking, running, and leading from the front in all conditions. Your fitness is constantly evaluated by your subordinates.
Moderate. PSYOP officers serve with supported units in the field. Airborne-qualified units require jump school. Physical demands match the supported unit.
Infantry officer is the most traditional leadership path in the Army. You will lead soldiers in the most demanding conditions the military has to offer, and the weight of that responsibility is both the best and hardest part of the job. What nobody tells you at commissioning: the career path is brutally competitive. Everyone has a Ranger Tab, everyone has deployments, and the selection for battalion command (the make-or-break career gate) rejects the majority of qualified officers. The peacetime infantry experience is heavy on administrative burden — PowerPoint, mandatory training trackers, and risk assessments consume time that you want to spend training. The leadership experience is genuinely transformative, and infantry officers are highly recruited by corporate America (management consulting, tech leadership, finance). But the Army will take everything you give it and ask for more.
Psychological operations officer is one of the most intellectually stimulating and least understood branches in the Army. You plan and execute influence campaigns that shape the information environment — essentially, you are a military strategist for the battle of ideas. What the branch briefer won't tell you: PSYOP is a niche community and career management can be unpredictable. The work is brilliant when you are deployed and executing real influence operations against real targets. Garrison can feel disconnected — planning hypothetical campaigns and justifying your unit's existence to conventional commanders who don't understand information operations. The civilian career translation is excellent but not obvious: marketing leadership, corporate communications, political consulting, and think tanks all use the same analytical and strategic communication skills. PSYOP officers who can translate their military experience into civilian terms are highly competitive.
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