35T vs 350G
Military Intelligence (MI) Systems Maintainer/Integrator (USA) vs Geospatial Intelligence Imagery Technician (USA)
Both recruiters said this was "the best job in the Army." Statistically, they can't both be right.
If 35T had a warning label: when SIGINT collection systems, ISR ground stations, or intelligence processing infrastructure needs repair, configuration, or integration, you're the person who makes it happen. If 350G had one: the tools are real — SOCET GXP, ENVI, ArcGIS, DCGS-A imagery modules — and the learning curve is genuine. Neither job comes with a warning label. Both probably should. The recruiter who can explain both of these in one breath deserves the Meritorious Civilian Service Award.
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 IT specialist inside the intelligence community — maintaining, troubleshooting, and integrating the classified systems that analysts depend on to do their jobs. It's a specialty that combines IT skills with intelligence domain knowledge and a TS/SCI clearance. The result is a civilian market position that combines three of the most valuable credentials a veteran can carry: clearance, IT skills, and intelligence community familiarity. Defense contractors managing cleared IT infrastructure — Leidos, Booz Allen, SAIC — consistently hire 35T veterans and pay accordingly.”
You maintain the technical systems that military intelligence depends on — collection platforms, processing equipment, analysis workstations, and the integration between them. When SIGINT collection systems, ISR ground stations, or intelligence processing infrastructure needs repair, configuration, or integration, you're the person who makes it happen. The technical breadth is genuine: you're not a specialist in one system but a generalist for the intelligence systems ecosystem, which means your troubleshooting has to be broader and your documentation skills have to be thorough. The work is in high demand because intelligence systems are complex, the Army's maintenance pipeline for this specific category of equipment is chronically understaffed, and the tech is constantly evolving in ways that create integration challenges. Defense contractors who build, field, and sustain intelligence systems need people who understand both the technical specifications and the operational context — maintainers who've worked the systems under actual field conditions are more valuable than technicians who've only seen them in a lab. Your clearance plus your systems maintenance background is a combination that opens doors in the defense intelligence support industry.
“You'll be the Army's imagery and geospatial intelligence expert — the warrant officer who turns satellite imagery, aerial photography, and terrain data into actionable intelligence products. As a 350G, you operate DCGS-A and NGA-provided exploitation tools, produce GEOINT products that support targeting and route planning, and brief commanders on the geographic and spatial picture. The civilian GEOINT market is strong: NGA contractors, defense firms, and commercial satellite imagery companies actively recruit imagery analysts with real operational experience.”
GEOINT is one of the more technically specialized intelligence disciplines, and the 350G warrant is the Army's practitioner. You'll exploit imagery, build terrain products, run feature extraction, and produce the spatial overlays that planners use to understand the battlespace. The tools are real — SOCET GXP, ENVI, ArcGIS, DCGS-A imagery modules — and the learning curve is genuine. The collection-to-product timeline is always shorter than you'd like. The targeting community lives and dies by your products and will let you know when the imagery isn't current or the resolution isn't sufficient. Deployment means operating in degraded connectivity environments where the data pipelines you depend on at home station become unreliable. The NGA and cleared defense contractor ecosystem actively recruits 350Gs with operational credibility.
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