3043 vs 0111
Supply Chain Specialist (USMC) vs Administrative Specialist (USMC)
Two MOS codes that share nothing except a fierce, eternal argument about who's more "Marine." Spoiler: neither will concede.
What 3043 calls "another day at the office": every unit thinks supply is the problem. What 0111 calls "another day at the office": 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. The word "office" is doing a lot of heavy lifting in one of these sentences. Same DOD, different DOD experiences, same DOD bureaucracy.
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.
“Supply chain management is the civilian world's hottest career field, and you'll learn it the hard way — managing millions of dollars in Marine Corps equipment and parts through a logistics system that requires speed, accuracy, and the organizational discipline that only a Marine can bring. Amazon, Walmart, and every defense contractor have supply chain operations. The Marine Corps teaches you what those jobs actually require.”
You will become deeply familiar with GCSS-MC — the Marine Corps supply system that replaced the systems it replaced — and all of the workarounds that experienced supply Marines have developed to make it do what it should do automatically. Every unit thinks supply is the problem. When equipment is missing, supply did it. When parts are backordered, supply did it. When the count doesn't match at inventory, supply definitely did it. The work is important, detail-intensive, and chronically underappreciated until something goes wrong. The good news: civilian supply chain operations — particularly SAP-based environments — are directly analogous, and the Marine Corps supply experience plus an APICS certification is a combination that operations managers at manufacturing and logistics companies specifically look for.
“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.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 3043 on the left, 0111 on the right.
Processing supply requests, managing inventory records, operating logistics information systems (GCSS-MC), conducting inventories, and maintaining financial accounts. You are the administrative engine of the supply system. The work is detail-oriented and repetitive but essential — every piece of gear a Marine uses came through the supply system you manage.
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The Basic Supply Course at Camp Johnson (Jacksonville, NC) covers supply procedures, inventory management, financial records, and logistics information systems. The training is classroom-based and focused on Marine Corps supply processes. Camp Johnson is part of Camp Lejeune and has decent facilities.
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Low. This is a desk-based administrative MOS. Standard Marine Corps physical standards apply, but the job itself is office work.
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Supply administration is the most unglamorous MOS in the Marine Corps and also one of the most practical. Nobody joins the Marines to do paperwork, but someone has to manage the billions of dollars in equipment and supplies that keep the force running. The recruiter will gloss over this MOS entirely. The honest truth: the work is administrative, the pace is steady, the hours are predictable, and the civilian translation is direct. Procurement specialists, inventory managers, and logistics coordinators are in demand in every industry. You won't have war stories to tell, but you'll have a transferable skill set and a stable career path. The Marines who thrive in supply admin are detail-oriented and organized. If that's you, this MOS quietly sets you up for success.
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