6842 vs 0111
METOC Analyst Forecaster (USMC) vs Administrative Specialist (USMC)
Two Marine MOS codes that went through the same boot camp and have agreed on absolutely nothing since graduation day.
If both of these MOS codes had to write an honest shift report, the 6842's would read: you'll likely rotate between a handful of locations — METOC detachments are at MAG/MAW level, not battalion. And the 0111's would read: nobody respects admin until something they care about requires admin to fix it — then you are briefly the most important person in the building. Same form, different ink, completely different energy. Same military. Same rank structure. Same level of confusion when either tries to explain their job at Thanksgiving.
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 weather expert for an entire Marine Air Ground Task Force. Commanders rely on your forecasts to plan operations — when to launch aircraft, when to send amphibious craft through surf zones, whether conditions support a mission or scrub it. It's a highly technical MOS with direct operational impact. You'll work with cutting-edge satellite systems and weather models. The schooling is long but thorough, and the skills transfer directly to civilian meteorology careers with NOAA, the National Weather Service, or private sector forecasting.”
This is one of the most niche MOSs in the entire Marine Corps — the community is tiny, maybe 200-300 Marines total. That's both a strength and a weakness. Strength: you are genuinely important to every operation. A bad forecast can get people killed or strand an amphibious assault in impossible surf. Commanders actually listen to you. Weakness: there are so few billets that your duty station options are extremely limited. You'll likely rotate between a handful of locations — METOC detachments are at MAG/MAW level, not battalion. Training is at Keesler AFB in Biloxi, Mississippi alongside Air Force and Navy weather students. The course is demanding — heavy math, atmospheric physics, and oceanography. If you can't do calculus-level weather dynamics, you will struggle. The civilian transferability is real — NWS, NOAA, private forecasting firms, and aviation weather services all want people with operational METOC experience. But getting the degree to back up the experience matters. Many 6842s pursue their meteorology degree while serving using TA. The daily job varies wildly: some days you're in an air-conditioned ops center staring at satellite imagery, other days you're on a beach with a Kestrel weather meter measuring surf conditions for an amphibious landing. It's one of the few MOSs where being wrong has immediate, visible consequences — if you say the weather is good to fly and it isn't, everyone knows.
“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.
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