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25AO3-O4

Signal Operations

O-3 to O-4 (Field Grade) · Army

HEADS UP

Signal Company Command is the 25A captain's KD job — the only OER block the major's board and the centralized command board read with the same intensity the Signal Platoon Leader OER carried at LT. SCCC at Fort Eisenhower (renamed from Fort Gordon in 2023) is the bridge — roughly 22 weeks at the Cyber Center of Excellence under the 15th Signal Brigade. The cyber-convergence career fork (line Signal vs. FA26 designation vs. 17A transfer) becomes consequential at the 7-8 year mark; the decision shapes the next 15 years. The senior cert stack (CCNP-Security, CISSP, CASP+) is now the credential the contractor recruiter and the 255A warrant board both read.

The Honest MOS Read
Captain in the Signal Corps is where the math, the tactical proficiency, the small-branch institutional read, and the cyber-convergence career fork all compress into the company-grade KD tour. The visible pipeline: post-LT staff utilization (BCT S-6 staff, division G-6 deputy, NETCOM staff at Fort Huachuca, JFHQ-DODIN staff at Fort Meade, ARCYBER HQ at Fort Eisenhower — 18-30 months typical) → SCCC (Signal Captains Career Course at Fort Eisenhower, roughly 22 weeks under the Cyber Center of Excellence and the 15th Signal Brigade) → Signal Company Command. The slot is 18-24 months, slated by the BN CDR in coordination with the BCT S-6 / division G-6 / NETCOM senior signal officer and HRC. Whether you command a BCT Signal Company (organic under the BEB or BSTB, 100-150 soldiers running the brigade's tactical network), a Strategic Signal Company at NETCOM / 7th SIG (CONUS) / 311th SIG (Theater) at Fort Shafter, HI, or a Signal Network Company in a theater signal brigade — the OER weight is comparable but the experience and the senior-rater relationships are materially different. SCCC at Fort Eisenhower covers company-grade signal operations, BCT and division-level network architecture, DODIN-A operations at echelon, joint and cyber integration (the post-2018 USCYBERCOM / ARCYBER modernization that shapes the modern signal-cyber officer's mission set), the staff math that maneuver branches assume their signal officer already knows, and the targeting / IA governance conversations that signal captains carry into BCT S-6 / division G-6 / NETCOM senior captain slots. The course is also where the post-2018 cyber convergence is most visible in doctrine — JFHQ-DODIN as the operational arm of DODIN defense, ARCYBER's expanded mission set at Fort Eisenhower, the Cyber Mission Force teams under USCYBERCOM, and the joint Signal-Cyber-Intel architecture work that increasingly defines field-grade 25A and 17A careers. Signal Company Command is the OER. The BCT Signal Company is the most common path — 100-150 soldiers, organic to every BCT under the BEB or BSTB, running the brigade's tactical network, COMSEC accountability, signal sustainment, and the brigade's CCRI / CORA cyber-readiness posture. Strategic Signal Company at NETCOM (HQ Fort Huachuca) or one of the regional theater signal commands runs the fixed regional infrastructure under DODIN-A — less tactical CTC rotation, more enterprise architecture and joint coordination, the cyber-signal convergence visible at echelon. The 311th SIG in Hawaii (INDOPACOM regional signal) has become a career-distinguishing assignment post-2022 given the INDOPACOM deterrence posture; the 7th SIG (CONUS) at Fort Eisenhower covers the CONUS strategic infrastructure. A Signal Network Company in a theater signal brigade carries a hybrid mission set. The OER weight of each is comparable; the slot the senior signal officer assigns shapes the post-command staff utilization. The O-4 board math is no longer the LT-era rubber-stamp. The Army's published FY24 promotion board statistics for O-3 to O-4 selected approximately 84% overall across all branches per the HRC board release; combat-support and functional branches including Signal track near the Army-wide average with year-over-year variation tied to inventory-vs-requirement math. The IZ window runs roughly 9-10 years commissioned with 3-4 years TIG; the board considers candidates Below the Zone (BZ), In the Zone (IZ), and Above the Zone (AZ), and AZ pickups remain a meaningful share of selectees. Pull the current HRC promotion board release for the actual Signal-branch selection demographics — the rest of the math is on the slide. The signals that distinguish the field-grade-competitive captain from the time-served captain: the Signal Company Command OER, visible cyber / joint exposure (USCYBERCOM, JFHQ-DODIN, COCOM J-6 staff, the 780th MI Brigade cyber element at Fort Meade), the FA26 / 17A decision made honestly at the right window, and the senior cert stack (CCNP-Security or CCNP-Enterprise, CISSP, CASP+, GIAC family where ACA-funded) that signals technical depth alongside the OER profile. The cyber-convergence career fork at the 7-8 year mark is the most consequential career decision in the 25A field-grade arc. The FA26 (Information Network Engineer) Functional Area designation happens at this window — a meaningful share of 25A captains with engineering aptitude designate FA26 if the joint cyber-signal architecture work appeals more than the line Signal track. FA26 officers serve in NETCOM, ARCYBER, JFHQ-DODIN, USCYBERCOM, and the joint cyber engineering billets that build the field-grade cyber-engineer career. The 17A Cyber Operations branch transfer happens at the major's board window — captains can apply for branch transfer to 17A and a meaningful share are selected each cycle. The 25A line track continues through Signal Company Command, BN S-3 / XO at major, ILE / CGSC at Fort Leavenworth, and Signal battalion command at LTC. The decision is informed by talent, OER profile, post-command billet preference (NETCOM HQ vs ARCYBER vs joint cyber vs line Signal), the post-AD industry / IC market read, and the senior officer mentorship from the senior FA26 / 17A / 25A officers at Fort Eisenhower. None of these tracks is the obvious right answer — but the captain who treats the decision as 'I will figure it out at major' is the captain who lets the slate decide for him. Other Functional Area options that 25A captains commonly designate include FA40 Space (the Army space cadre, increasingly relevant given the SATCOM dependency of every modern signal operation), FA53 Information Systems Engineer (the historical IT-officer FA, distinct from FA26), and FA59 Strategist (Army strategist cadre, broader staff). FA51 Acquisition is the option for officers tracking toward the major program offices — signal and cyber acquisition has expanded since 2022, and the LRPF / cyber / joint communications program offices need captains with KD experience. The financial side at captain: under BRS the multiplier is 2.0% per year of service with the TSP match; continuation pay (governed by the current MILPER) lands around the 12-year point. The math of staying for O-5 vs. ETSing as a senior captain into the defense industry / IC / contractor world is now the real conversation. Leidos, Booz Allen, KBR, MITRE, SAIC, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, Lockheed Martin, and the long tail of cyber and defense contractors hire 25A captains with TS/SCI clearance + KD time + senior cert stack (CCNP / CISSP / CASP+) aggressively in the DC / NoVA / Tampa / Fort Meade / Augusta labor markets. The salary band at captain ETS with the right stack is structurally strong — meaningfully stronger than at LT, and the post-command captain with cyber / joint exposure has the strongest post-AD market of any 25A cohort.
Career Arc
  • 01Post-LT KD: BCT S-6 staff officer, division G-6 deputy, NETCOM staff at Fort Huachuca, JFHQ-DODIN staff at Fort Meade, ARCYBER HQ staff at Fort Eisenhower, or a Strategic Signal Battalion staff tour — 18-30 months typical.
  • 02SCCC (Signal Captains Career Course) — Fort Eisenhower, ~22 weeks under the Cyber Center of Excellence and the 15th Signal Brigade.
  • 03Functional Area designation at ~7-8 years commissioned: FA26 Information Network Engineer most natural for engineering-aptitude 25As; FA40 Space, FA51 Acquisition, FA53 IT Engineer, FA59 Strategist also common. The 17A Cyber Operations branch transfer is the cyber-track alternative at the major's board window.
  • 04Signal Company Command — BCT Signal Company (BEB/BSTB), Strategic Signal Company (NETCOM / 7th SIG / 311th SIG), or Signal Network Company in a theater signal brigade. 18-24 months. Slated by BN CDR / BCT S-6 / HRC. The load-bearing KD for O-4 and beyond.
  • 05Senior cert stack: CCNP-Security or CCNP-Enterprise, CISSP, CASP+, the GIAC family where ACA-funded. The credential the contractor recruiter, the 255A warrant board, and the joint cyber slate all read.
  • 06Post-command: BN S-3 or XO (senior captain), BCT S-6 senior captain, division G-6 senior staff, NETCOM HQ staff, ARCYBER staff, JFHQ-DODIN staff, or USCYBERCOM joint billet.
  • 07~Year 9-10 commissioned: O-4 IPZ window. FY24 ~84% overall per HRC release; Signal-specific rate per the most recent board demographics. ILE / CGSC (Fort Leavenworth, resident or non-resident) slate before the major's board.
Common Screwups
  • ×Coasting through SCCC. The small-group leaders are former Signal Company commanders, BCT S-6 senior captains, and FA26 / 17A officers evaluating you against your peers; the read travels back to your branch manager and shapes your post-SCCC KD slating. Class ranking and small-group performance matter — not because the school cares about the class rank, but because the senior signal officers at Fort Eisenhower talk.
  • ×Phoning the staff tour. The BCT S-6 OIC, the division G-6, the NETCOM senior signal officer, or the JFHQ-DODIN senior staff officer reads your S-3 / S-4 / staff signal officer work as the input to whether you get Signal-Company-Command-slated. The captain who treats the staff tour as 'time-served between SCCC and command' is the captain whose senior rater profile reads 'time-served' at the centralized command board.
  • ×Burning the company command tour. AR 15-6 investigations, lost-sensitive-item events (COMSEC, classified hardware, the brigade's tactical baseband stack), GO inquiries, IG complaints upheld, CCRI / CORA findings the company never closed — these don't kill the career immediately but they materially compress the O-4 board read and end the LTC battalion command consideration arc. Signal Company Command is small enough that one bad rotation surfaces inside a quarter.
  • ×DUI / Article 15 / unprofessional relationship — terminal for senior-leader trajectory under AR 600-20; the board sees the flag, the senior rater profile cannot defend the bullet, and the clearance reinvestigation cascade affects the post-AD market materially.
  • ×Treating the cyber-convergence career fork as 'I will figure it out at major.' The FA26 / 17A / line Signal decision at the 7-8 year window shapes the next 15 years. The captain who lets the slate decide for him is the captain who ends up on the post-command billet that does not match his talent — and the major's board reads the mismatch.

A Day in the Life

  • 0500Wake. PT uniform on. Phone check — overnight company emergencies. Signal Company on call for the BCT: a SIPR enclave at a BN TOC dropped, the brigade COMSEC custodian needs a captain signature before 0700, the night-shift senior NCO has a soldier in jail in town. You handle inside the company first; the BN CDR hears it as you walk into the company HQ.
  • 0530PT formation. Signal Company falls in. The 1SG takes accountability of the company; you take command of the formation and report to the BN S-3 or the BN CDR at BN PT. Wednesdays are brigade run; the Signal Company runs with the BCT.
  • 0545-0700Unit PT. The Signal Company runs the company plan; you set the cadence for the officer cohort and the senior NCOs. The captain who skips PT to "go check on the network" is the captain whose ACFT score the BN CSM brings up at the next senior officer slate.
  • 0700-0830Hygiene, breakfast, change to OCPs. Walk the company HQ on the way to the office — quick read on overnight tickets, the IAVA dashboard, the COMSEC sign-out log, the company's sub-hand-receipt audit status, the FLIPL/AR 15-6 backlog if any.
  • 0830-0900Battalion BUB. The BN CDR briefs the BN staff; you sit at the company commander table with the other company commanders. You provide the Signal Company's read on training, readiness, network status, IAVA compliance, COMSEC posture, and any ongoing incidents. The BN CDR may task you with a brigade-level brief later in the week.
  • 0900-1100Company work. The 1SG runs the formation; you run the calendar, the BN-level coordination, the OER cycles on your 3-5 LTs, the NCOER input on the senior NCOs the 1SG rates. RMF artifact work for the next ATO renewal with the brigade ISSO at 1000. The 255A warrant in the company walks the architecture conversation with you at 1030.
  • 1100-1300Chow. You eat with the other company commanders in the BN — the senior captain conversation is where the field-grade slate, the ILE rumors, the FA designation conversation, and the post-AD market gossip circulate.
  • 1300-1500Afternoon work — the piece of the job nobody else can do. Defending a CCRI closure milestone with the brigade ISSO, walking the BCT S-6 OIC through the company's training calendar, briefing the BN S-3 on the company's readiness for the next CTC rotation. Or LT counseling cycle — monthly under AR 623-3, with development objectives tied to the LT's OER cycle and the next school slot conversation.
  • 1500-1630Final formation. The 1SG runs accountability; you brief the next day to the company's officer and senior NCO cohort. End-of-day COMSEC sign-out log review with the company COMSEC custodian; the captain who walks the COMSEC log daily is the captain whose AR 380-40 audit comes back clean.
  • 1630-1730End-of-day walk. The company motor pool if the company has organic vehicles; the company S-6 shop / signal element if the company is the BCT Signal Company. Lock the office.
  • 1730-1900Personal time. Married captains: family. The post-AD market conversation is real at this rank — LinkedIn currency, the contractor recruiter at the Cyber Center of Excellence career fair, the cert stack pacing, the FA / 17A conversation with the senior FA26 / 17A officers in your network. If you are 12-18 months from the O-4 board, the OER support form for the rated period is on your kitchen table.
  • 1900-2100Study or after-hours coordination. CCNP-Security or CISSP study on Tuesday / Thursday. The SANS / GIAC podcast on the drive home. The senior signal officer who stops studying at captain is the senior signal officer whose post-AD salary stops compounding — and whose major's board read closes one cert stack short.
  • 2100-2200After-hours coordination. The company's on-call rotation includes you for after-hours brigade-level incidents. A SIPR outage at the BCT TOC at 2130 means you are on the phone with the senior NCO on duty, walking him through the troubleshooting, or you are driving back to the brigade HQ. The captain's after-hours job is real.
  • 2200Lights out.
  • Field rotation / CTCThe clock collapses. JRTC, NTC, JMRC, JPMRC, or a real-world deployment — you are running the Signal Company forward, walking the BCT TOC daily, validating the satellite uplink and the internal network before the OC/T's first pass, owning the rotation's IAVA / patch posture, running the IR cycle through the contested-network injects, briefing the BN CDR and the BCT S-6 daily. The OC/T signal cell writes the takehome AAR; the AAR is the OER. Sleep in 2-3 hour shifts; the captain who runs the company at hour 200 of the rotation is the captain the senior rater names at the next senior officer slate.

Weekly Cadence

Monday is the heaviest planning day. You read the BN CDR's Friday release, the BCT CO's Saturday calendar, the brigade S-6 OIC's Sunday-night architecture-board notes, and the BCT training plan for the week. By mid-morning you have the Signal Company's plan aligned to the BN's tasking: which platoon is supporting which BN's training event, which platoon is running the brigade-level IAVA closure cycle, which platoon is the COMSEC distribution rotation for the brigade, which OER cycles are due on your LTs. Brief the 1SG and your platoon leaders by 1000; lock the company calendar Friday afternoon for the following week. Tuesday and Wednesday are typically the work-heavy days. The company runs the daily ticket queue, the brigade-level patch cycle, the AD architecture work in the brigade's delegated OUs, the IAVA closure tracking, the CCRI / CORA artifact build for the next inspection cycle. As captain you supervise the senior-NCO and warrant-officer level execution and own the planning calendar for the next 60-90 days. You take one LT counseling session per day at minimum on Tuesday-Thursday so the monthly DA 4856 cadence does not pile up at the end of the month. Thursday is often the senior officer project day — the brigade S-6 working groups, the IA governance board with the brigade ISSO, the cyber-readiness brief preparation, the BCT CO BUB. Friday is the BN-level event (PT, BN CSM inspection, awards formation) and the release; the company clears the queue and you brief the BN CDR on the week's deliverables. The week's second rhythm is the OER cycle, the senior cert stack, and the field-grade slate conversation. The OER input cycle is annual for company-grade officers under AR 623-3; the rated period for company commanders typically closes 12 months into command. You draft your own OER support form 60-90 days before the rated period closes and walk it with your senior rater (the BN CDR). School slots — ILE / CGSC at Fort Leavenworth, the FA / 17A transfer school pipelines, joint cyber courses at Fort Eisenhower — come through the BN S-1 / BCT S-1 and HRC. The senior cert stack is your evening hours: CCNP-Security study on the long evenings, CISSP review on the weekend mornings, the SANS / GIAC podcast on the drive. The FA designation conversation at the 7-8 year window is the senior officer mentorship conversation at Fort Eisenhower, at NETCOM HQ, or at ARCYBER — start it at SCCC, complete it before the FA designation window closes. CTC train-ups collapse the week's rhythm — when the brigade is in a JRTC or NTC train-up cycle, the Signal Company is the brigade's critical-path element, garrison time becomes preparation time, and family time becomes the conversation you have with your spouse about why you were not home for dinner four nights this week.

Key Skills — How to Drill Each

  1. 01
    Command a Signal Company — train, certify, deploy, sustain a 100-150 soldier formation with COMSEC accountability, transport, baseband, NETOPS, and tactical / strategic equipment stack — through a CTC rotation or a real-world deployment without losing the network.
    Signal Company Command is the OER. The slot is 18-24 months; the BN CDR is your senior rater; the BCT CO (for BCT Signal Companies) is the brigade-level read on your formation. Run the company's METL-aligned training plan at the eight-step training model standard per AR 350-1. Own the property book and the sub-hand-receipt accountability — the company's tactical baseband, SATCOM terminals, COMSEC keying material, and Cisco / Juniper transport stack are all on your signature. The CTC rotation (JRTC / NTC / JMRC / JPMRC) is the OER moment — the OC/T signal cell writes the takehome AAR, the BCT S-6 OIC defends the AAR at the BCT after-action, and your senior rater bullets read from the AAR. The captain whose network survives the force-on-force without a flag is the captain the BN CDR names primary zone for ILE and the LTC slate.
  2. 02
    Run a brigade S-6 staff as the senior captain (or as the BCT S-6 OIC in some manning slates) — the architecture, the IAVA cycle, the COMSEC posture, the CCRI / CORA inspection prep, the maneuver-commander brief — at the level the BCT CO names 'S-6 is solid' in the division slide.
    The brigade S-6 is the senior signal officer in the BCT. The OIC may be a senior captain or junior major depending on manning; the staff includes the brigade signal lieutenants, the senior 255A warrant, the senior 25-series NCO, and the brigade ISSO (often a GS-13 civilian). Walk the brigade architecture quarterly with the brigade S2, the brigade ISSO, and the senior warrant. Defend the brigade's CCRI / CORA posture months in advance — build the artifact binder, brief the closure plan, walk the inspector through the shop. Brief the BCT CO on network status at the BUB in five slides; the CO reads the dashboard, asks three questions, and decides. The captain who runs the brigade S-6 at the level the division G-6 names 'BCT-X has the strongest signal program' is the captain the division CSM names in the senior captain slate.
  3. 03
    Defend a brigade-level Command Cyber Readiness Inspection (CCRI) or Command Cyber Operational Readiness Inspection (CORA) — months of preparation, defensible CAT-1 closure plan, zero surprises in the readout.
    CCRI and CORA are the DISA-led / ARCYBER-led inspections that audit the brigade against DoD 8500 / 8510 / 8140 controls and the relevant DISA STIGs. The signal captain in the BCT S-6 or commanding the BCT Signal Company is the officer the brigade S-6 OIC sends to the in-brief and the out-brief. Build the artifact binder 60-90 days out: STIG checklist evidence, IAVA closure documentation, RMF authorization-to-operate (ATO) packets, vulnerability scan reports from ACAS, mitigations for any CAT-1 / CAT-2 findings. Run a mock inspection with the brigade ISSO 30 days out. Brief the closure plan, own the milestones, and have the inspector's name correct when you walk them through the shop. The brigade CO defends the inspection at the division level; the captain the brigade CO names is the captain who carries the inspection.
  4. 04
    Mentor a platoon of LTs and a bench of warrants (255A / 255N / 255S / 170A in mixed cyber-signal formations) through KD time, schools, and OER cycles — your OERs on them shape the next Signal Corps cohort.
    As the company commander or the senior staff signal captain, you write OERs on 3-5 LTs and provide rated input on the 255-series warrants in your formation. AR 623-3 governs the OER process; the senior rater profile at brigade is what the captain's board reads on your LTs. Write to the reg — action-result-impact bullets tied to measurable outcomes (uptime, IAVA closure rate, CTC rotation execution, soldiers certified, warrants accessed, CCRI / CORA findings closed). Defend the LT's school slate at the BN/BCT slate. Sponsor the 255A warrant packet — the senior captain who endorses the warrant packet with technical specificity and command credibility is the senior captain the warrant community remembers. The captain who graduates two LTs to early command consideration and one warrant to selection in a 24-month command tour is the captain the senior signal officer slate names for early major-board consideration.
  5. 05
    Translate cyber and network risk to a maneuver commander or a one-star in language they will repeat correctly to the next echelon — and translate the maneuver commander's intent back into a network plan the warrants and NCOs can execute.
    The BCT CO, the division CG, the CORPS G-6 senior officer — they are operational commanders, not cyber operators. They need the network risk read in 60 seconds, in language they can use at the next higher echelon's BUB. Build the analogy library: 'an unpatched workstation is a TOC tent with the canvas open'; 'a CAT-1 STIG finding is a sensitive item not signed for'; 'a phishing campaign is the enemy IO line of effort against the brigade's command-and-control'. Brief in 5 slides; rehearse with the BCT S-6 OIC before the BCT CO sees it. The captain who can make the BCT CO say it back correctly to division is the captain the BCT CO names in the senior captain slate. The reverse skill — translating the maneuver commander's intent into a network plan the warrants and NCOs can execute — is the planning discipline that separates the captain who runs the staff signal cell from the captain who is run by it.
  6. 06
    Make the FA / branch-transfer decision honestly — FA26 Information Network Engineer, FA40 Space, FA51 Acquisition, FA53 IT Engineer, FA59 Strategist, or 17A Cyber Operations transfer — based on talent, market, and the post-command billets that match the trajectory.
    DA PAM 600-3 (Officer Professional Development) is the Army's official career development doctrine; the Signal Corps chapter names the FA designation timeline (typically 7-8 years commissioned) and the 17A transfer windows. Talk to the senior FA26 officers at NETCOM / ARCYBER / JFHQ-DODIN; talk to the senior 17A officers at ARCYBER / USCYBERCOM / the joint cyber mission force; talk to your branch manager at HRC. Read the post-command billet structures honestly — FA26 officers serve in joint cyber engineering billets, 17A officers serve in cyber operations and cyber mission force billets, line 25A officers continue through Signal battalion command and senior signal-officer billets. The honest test: which mission set draws you in the morning when you read the inbox? The decision is yours; the OER profile you have built is the data the slate reads.

Manuals & References — What Chapters Matter

  • FM 6-02 — Signal Support to Operations; ATP 6-02.71 — DODIN-A Operations; ATP 6-02.40 — Visual Information Operations.
    FM 6-02 is the branch's umbrella doctrine and the spine the senior signal officer references when teaching SCCC. ATP 6-02.71 (DODIN-A operations) is the techniques manual every Signal Company commander defends his shop against — read the chapters on brigade and division network operations cover-to-cover. ATP 6-02.40 (visual information operations) covers VTC and visual information systems where the brigade depends on them. At captain, you are now expected to teach signal doctrine down, not just consume it.
  • ATP 6-02.53 — Techniques for Tactical Radio Operations; ATP 6-02.54 — Techniques for Satellite Communications; ATP 6-02.75 — Techniques for Communications Security.
    The tactical-signal techniques trilogy. ATP 6-02.53 (tactical radio) covers SINCGARS, HF, MUOS, AN/PRC family; ATP 6-02.54 (SATCOM) covers JNN/CPN-class and follow-on SATCOM systems; ATP 6-02.75 (COMSEC) is the techniques translation of AR 380-40. Re-read the relevant chapters before every CTC rotation and every IA governance board.
  • AR 25-1 — Army Information Technology; AR 25-2 — Army Cybersecurity; AR 380-40 — Safeguarding and Controlling COMSEC Material; AR 380-5 — Army Information Security Program.
    AR 25-1 is the IT policy roof; AR 25-2 is the cybersecurity reg the brigade signs against; AR 380-40 is the COMSEC reg the company commander owns at the property-book level; AR 380-5 is the information security reg covering classification, handling, and storage. The company commander signs unit compliance reports against all four; the IG and the brigade S-6 inspection cycle both read against these regs.
  • DoDI 8510.01 — Risk Management Framework (RMF) for DoD Information Technology; DoDM 8140 — Cyberspace Workforce Qualification; NIST SP 800-53 — Security and Privacy Controls.
    DoDI 8510.01 is the RMF instruction driving every Authorization to Operate (ATO) and continuous ATO (cATO) packet. DoDM 8140 is the IAT / IAM workforce qualification framework. NIST SP 800-53 is the control catalog every Army cyber program inherits — know the control families (AC, AU, CM, IA, IR, RA, SC, SI) by name and reference the specific controls by number in CCRI / CORA closure plans. At captain, you are the senior signal officer in the conversation; the brigade ISSO produces the artifacts but you defend them.
  • AR 600-20 — Army Command Policy; AR 623-3 — Evaluation Reporting; AR 350-1 — Army Training; AR 600-8-29 — Officer Promotions.
    AR 600-20 is the command policy reg — the SHARP / EO / climate / good order and discipline framework the company commander signs against. AR 623-3 governs the OER process — re-read it before every rated period closes. AR 350-1 is the Army's training doctrine umbrella; AR 600-8-29 governs officer promotions. The company commander is in the room when each of these regs is invoked at the BN or brigade level.
  • DA PAM 600-3 — Officer Professional Development (Signal Corps / FA24 / FA26 / FA40 / FA51 / FA53 / FA59 chapters); JP 6-0 — Joint Communications System.
    DA PAM 600-3 is the officer professional development pamphlet — the Signal Corps chapter names the KD timeline, the SCCC slate, the FA designation options, and the 17A transfer path. Read the Signal chapter before SCCC; read the FA chapters before the 7-8 year FA designation window; read the 17A chapter if the cyber-track is on your map. JP 6-0 is the joint communications system doctrine — the joint cyber-signal officer at COCOM J-6 levels reads JP 6-0 routinely.

Standards — How to Hit Each

  • SCCC graduate; ILE / CGSC slate at Fort Leavenworth (resident or non-resident) before the major's board.
    SCCC at Fort Eisenhower is ~22 weeks under the Cyber Center of Excellence and the 15th Signal Brigade. The class ranking and small-group performance shape branch-manager slating into the Signal Company Command slot you actually want. ILE / CGSC at Fort Leavenworth (Command and General Staff College) is the field-grade institutional credential — resident is the visible signal, non-resident keeps the career moving for officers with operational assignments. Talk to your branch manager about the slate; the ILE selection is competitive and AZ pickups happen.
  • Successful KD OER — Signal Company Command or BCT S-6 senior captain — with a senior rater profile and bullets tied to measurable outcomes (CTC rotation, CCRI / CORA result, IAVA closure %, soldiers certified, warrants accessed).
    AR 623-3 and DA PAM 623-3 govern the OER process. Bullets follow action-result-impact format; senior raters defend specific outcomes, not generic 'demonstrated outstanding performance' filler. Build the OER support form 60-90 days before the rated period closes; walk it with your senior rater (the BN CDR for Signal Company commanders, the BCT S-6 OIC or the division G-6 for BCT-S-6-senior-captain billets). The OER that surprises the senior rater is the OER that gets rewritten; the OER the senior rater can defend at the centralized command board is the OER that selects.
  • IAT / IAM credential currency where the billet codes it under AR 25-2 / DoDM 8140 — Security+ at minimum for IAT-II coded seats; CCNP-Security / CISSP / CASP+ for IAT-III; CISSP / CISM for IAM II/III.
    DoDM 8140 maps every cyber-workforce billet to an IAT or IAM level and credentialing requirement. At captain, your billet typically codes IAT-III or IAM-II/III — CCNP-Security, CISSP, or CASP+ for IAT-III; CISSP or CISM for IAM II/III. CISSP requires 5 years of cumulative security work experience (your 25A time counts) and the ISC2 exam (250 questions, adaptive, ~4 hours). CASP+ is the CompTIA alternative. ACA-funded vouchers are available for select credentials per the current ACA MILPER message; pace the stack across multiple fiscal years.
  • JDAL (Joint Duty Assignment List) credit on the path to O-4 / O-5 — the Signal / cyber field-grade slate values joint exposure honestly more than many maneuver branches.
    Joint Duty Assignment List credit is governed by the Goldwater-Nichols Act and the DoD joint qualification system; it is a DOPMA-mandated input to O-7 consideration and the value compounds at every field-grade board for cyber-leaning Signal officers. Eligible billets include USCYBERCOM, JFHQ-DODIN, COCOM J-6 staff (CENTCOM, EUCOM, INDOPACOM J-6 directorates), DIA, NSA-attached joint cyber billets, and the joint cyber mission force. Pursue the joint slot at captain or junior major; the field-grade slate reads the JDAL credit.
  • Senior cert stack — CCNP-Security or CCNP-Enterprise + CISSP or CASP+ + the GIAC family where ACA-funded — that signals technical depth alongside the OER profile and opens the post-AD market.
    The CCNP family runs through Cisco's certification track — CCNA prerequisite, then the CCNP core (350-701 ENCOR for Enterprise, 350-701 SCOR for Security) plus a concentration exam. Plan 6-9 months of self-study with ACA-funded boot camps. CISSP requires 5 years of cumulative security work experience and the ISC2 exam. The GIAC family (SANS Institute — GSEC, GCIH, GCIA, GCFA, GREM) is expensive but ACA-funded for select roles. The captain with CCNP-Security + CISSP + TS/SCI + KD time is the captain the contractor recruiter (Leidos, Booz, KBR, MITRE, SAIC) calls back inside 48 hours of an ETS conversation.

Technical Mistakes — Concrete Consequences

  • Treating Signal Company Command as a network problem.
    The KD is a soldier problem and a property-accountability problem — the network is what you brief, but the formation is what the brigade and the division CSM are watching. The captain who lives in the S-6 shelter solving network problems is the captain whose company SHARP / EO / climate / accountability findings surface at brigade level — and the senior rater bullet reads 'technically competent, command climate inconsistent' instead of 'top block, select to battalion command.' Run the formation; defend the network; do not invert the priorities.
  • Hiding a CAT-1 cybersecurity finding from the BCT CO to 'fix it before the report.'
    It surfaces. The brigade ISSO, the CCRI / CORA inspector, the ARCYBER incident-response cell — one of them finds the discrepancy and the timeline does not match the captain's report. The relief-for-cause is at brigade level, the OER is at senior rater level, the major's board reads the relief, and the LTC battalion command consideration arc closes. The fix is one private conversation with the BCT CO and an honest closure plan; the captain who briefs the finding honestly is the captain the BCT CO defends, while the captain who hides it is the captain the BCT CO cannot.
  • Letting a 255A warrant carry the brigade's technical depth without sponsoring his career honestly.
    The warrants are the highest-impact technical career in the Army; the captains who treat warrants as equipment lose the formation. The 255A senior warrant in the brigade talks; the warrant community at Fort Eisenhower talks; the senior signal officer at the brigade hears about the captain who took the warrant's technical work and signed it as his own without endorsing the warrant's packet, his school slot, his post-KD assignment. The fix is one quarter of visible sponsorship — the warrant's name on the brigade S-6's slide, the warrant's packet on the senior signal officer's desk, the warrant's NCOER / WO evaluation written with technical specificity. The captain who sponsors the warrant honestly is the captain the warrant community endorses for command; the captain who does not is the captain the slate quietly moves around.
  • Confusing tactical-signal expertise with strategic / DODIN / cyber expertise.
    The post-KD slate (NETCOM, ARCYBER, JFHQ-DODIN, USCYBERCOM, the joint cyber mission force) requires honest self-assessment about which lane you can carry; faking depth at the field-grade table is visible inside a meeting. The senior signal officer at ARCYBER reads the captain who walks into the joint cyber operations brief and pretends to understand the COCOM J-6 cyber posture without having done the work. The fix is honest self-assessment — the captain who says 'my depth is tactical signal, I need 18 months of joint cyber exposure before I can carry that staff' is the captain the senior officer respects; the captain who fakes the depth is the captain whose OER reads 'overextended' at the next senior rater review.
  • Skipping the FA / branch-transfer conversation because 'I am a Signal officer.'
    DA PAM 600-3 names FA24 / FA26 / FA40 / FA51 / FA53 / FA59 and the 17A transfer path for a reason; the captains who slate themselves honestly are the majors who get the post-command billets that match their talent. The captain who refuses to engage the FA designation conversation at the 7-8 year window is the captain whose FA gets assigned by default — usually the FA the slate needed to fill, not the FA that matches the captain's aptitude. The major board reads the FA designation as a career-signal; the mismatched FA designation is a senior-rater conversation the captain did not want to have. The fix is the honest conversation with the branch manager at HRC and the senior FA / 17A officers at Fort Eisenhower — start it at SCCC, complete it before the FA designation window closes.

Career Decisions at This Rank

  • Functional Area designation at the 7-8 year window — FA26 (Information Network Engineer) vs. FA40 (Space) vs. FA51 (Acquisition) vs. FA53 (IT Engineer) vs. FA59 (Strategist) vs. staying line 25A.
    DA PAM 600-3 (Signal Corps chapter, FA chapters) is the official doctrine; the FA designation board is one of the most consequential career events in the Army officer corps. FA26 is the most natural continuation for engineering-aptitude 25As — joint cyber-signal architecture, NETCOM / ARCYBER / JFHQ-DODIN engineering billets, the field-grade cyber-engineer career. FA40 is the space-cadre track — increasingly relevant given the SATCOM dependency of every modern signal operation and the post-Space Force standup. FA51 is the acquisition track — the major program offices (LRPF, cyber, joint communications) need captains with KD experience. FA53 is the historical IT-engineer FA, distinct from FA26. FA59 is the strategist track — broader staff, war college pipeline. Staying line 25A continues through Signal battalion command at LTC and senior signal-officer billets. Talk to senior FA / line officers at Fort Eisenhower and your branch manager at HRC. The honest test: which mission set draws you when you read the inbox? The decision shapes the next 15 years.
  • 17A Cyber Operations branch transfer at the major's board window.
    The 17A Cyber Operations branch was established in 2014 as the Army's dedicated cyber-officer track. Captains can apply for branch transfer to 17A at the major's board window; a meaningful share of 17A field-grade officers started as 25A LTs / captains and transferred. The transfer requires command and brigade endorsement, a strong OER profile, the right cert stack (CCNP-Security / CISSP / CASP+ at minimum, GIAC family preferred), TS/SCI clearance, and demonstrated cyber-operations interest. Post-transfer, 17A majors serve in Cyber Mission Force teams under USCYBERCOM, ARCYBER operational units, the 780th MI Brigade (Cyber), the Cyber Protection Brigade, and the joint cyber mission force. The post-AD market for 17A field-grade officers is structurally the strongest in the cyber-officer community. The decision is informed by talent (cyber operations is a different mission set from signal architecture), OER profile, and the senior 17A officer mentorship from your network at Fort Eisenhower. None of this is decided at SCCC — but the captain who builds the OER profile and the cert stack for the option is the captain who has the option.
  • Signal Company Command slot type — BCT Signal Company vs. Strategic Signal Company vs. Signal Network Company.
    The Signal Company Command slot is the OER, but the type of slot shapes the experience and the post-command staff utilization. BCT Signal Company (organic to every BCT under the BEB / BSTB) is the most common and the most tactical — 100-150 soldiers, the BCT's tactical network, the CTC rotation cadence. Strategic Signal Company at NETCOM (Fort Huachuca), 7th SIG (CONUS, Fort Eisenhower), 311th SIG (Theater, Fort Shafter HI), or 5th SIG (historical Europe footprint, now reorganized) — runs the fixed regional infrastructure under DODIN-A, less tactical CTC, more enterprise architecture and joint coordination. Signal Network Company in a theater signal brigade carries a hybrid mission set. The 311th SIG in Hawaii has become a career-distinguishing assignment post-2022 given the INDOPACOM deterrence posture. The slot is the senior signal officer's slate; lobby for the slot that matches your career intent and the post-command billet you want.
  • Post-command staff utilization — BN S-3 / XO line track vs. joint cyber (USCYBERCOM / JFHQ-DODIN / COCOM J-6) vs. ARCYBER vs. NETCOM HQ vs. branch staff (HRC Signal branch desk, TRADOC instructor).
    After Signal Company Command, the post-command staff tour is the captain's second consequential OER block. BN S-3 / XO at major is the line-track continuation — primary path to Signal battalion command at LTC. Joint cyber billet (USCYBERCOM, JFHQ-DODIN, COCOM J-6 staff at CENTCOM / EUCOM / INDOPACOM) provides JDAL credit that the field-grade boards reward — especially important for officers tracking 17A transfer or FA26 designation. ARCYBER HQ at Fort Eisenhower is the operational cyber-command staff — visible to the senior cyber officer cohort. NETCOM HQ at Fort Huachuca is the strategic signal command staff — the field-grade pipeline for FA26 officers. Branch staff (HRC Signal branch desk, TRADOC instructor at the Signal School) is the in-MOS option — the senior signal officer at the BCT slate reads the branch-staff tour as legitimate but career-narrowing if not paired with operational utilization. The decision is the senior signal officer's slate and your career intent; the OER you build now is what the post-command slate reads.
  • ETS at senior captain vs. major's board competition vs. ILE / CGSC route.
    The captain-to-major decision point is real at the 8-10 year window. ETS at senior captain into the defense industry / IC / contractor world is structurally strong for 25A captains with TS/SCI clearance + KD time + senior cert stack — Leidos, Booz Allen, KBR, MITRE, SAIC, Northrop Grumman, Lockheed Martin, and the long tail of cyber and defense contractors hire 25A captains aggressively in the DC / NoVA / Tampa / Fort Meade / Augusta labor markets. Major's board competition requires the Signal Company Command OER, the visible joint / cyber exposure, the FA / 17A decision, and the senior cert stack — the FY24 selection was ~84% overall but the Signal-branch-specific rate varies year over year per the HRC release. ILE / CGSC at Fort Leavenworth is the field-grade institutional credential — resident is the visible signal, non-resident keeps the career moving. The decision involves your spouse, your post-AD market read, your appetite for the LTC / battalion command competition, and the financial math (BRS 2.0% multiplier, continuation pay at 12 years per current MILPER, 20-year retirement at 40% of base under BRS with TSP match). Talk to the career counselor, the senior signal officers in your network, and your spouse honestly. The math is real on both sides.

How the Seat Varies by Unit Type

  • BCT Signal Company Commander (IBCT / SBCT / ABCT / Airborne / Air Assault)
    The most common 25A captain KD. The Signal Company is organic to every BCT under the BEB or BSTB; you command 100-150 soldiers running the brigade's tactical network, COMSEC accountability, signal sustainment, and the brigade's CCRI / CORA posture. The BN CDR (BEB CDR or BSTB CDR) is your senior rater; the BCT CO is the brigade-level read on your formation. The CTC rotation cadence is the brigade's — JRTC for light infantry BCTs, NTC for ABCTs, JMRC for the Europe-based BCTs, JPMRC for the Pacific-based BCTs. The brigade type shapes the OPTEMPO and the gear stack — IBCT light dismounted, SBCT Stryker-mounted, ABCT armored ruggedized, Airborne (82nd ABN, 173rd ABCT) deployable.
  • Strategic Signal Company Commander (NETCOM / 7th SIG / 311th SIG / 5th SIG)
    A different OER experience. Strategic Signal Companies sit under NETCOM (HQ Fort Huachuca, AZ) and the regional theater signal commands — 7th Signal Command (CONUS) at Fort Eisenhower, 311th Signal Command (Theater) at Fort Shafter HI. The OPTEMPO is enterprise / strategic, not tactical CTC — fixed regional infrastructure, DODIN-A architecture, joint and combined-arms exposure. The 311th SIG in Hawaii covers INDOPACOM regional signal infrastructure — a career-distinguishing assignment post-2022 given the INDOPACOM deterrence posture. The 7th SIG (CONUS) at Fort Eisenhower covers the CONUS strategic infrastructure and is the most accessible strategic command path. The senior raters at NETCOM / theater signal commands talk to the senior signal officer cohort across the Army; the OER weight is comparable to BCT Signal Company command but the career signal is different (strategic / joint vs. tactical / maneuver).
  • BCT S-6 senior captain (or BCT S-6 OIC in some manning slates)
    The brigade S-6 is the senior signal officer in the BCT. In larger BCTs the S-6 OIC is a major; in smaller BCTs and in some specialized formations the S-6 OIC is a senior captain. As the BCT S-6 senior captain, you run the brigade's architecture, the IAVA cycle, the COMSEC posture, the CCRI / CORA prep, and the BCT CO's signal-readiness brief. The OER is the BCT CO's directly (in OIC slates) or the senior staff signal officer's (in non-OIC slates). The OER weight of a successful BCT S-6 senior captain tour is materially comparable to a Signal Company Command tour and in some senior signal officer reads is preferred — particularly for captains tracking FA26 / 17A transfer. The slot is the senior signal officer's slate; lobby for it if architecture and staff signal officer work calls you more than company command does.
  • ARCYBER / USCYBERCOM / JFHQ-DODIN / 780th MI Brigade staff captain or company command
    The cyber-operations-focused captain track. ARCYBER HQ at Fort Eisenhower, USCYBERCOM at Fort Meade, JFHQ-DODIN at Fort Meade, the 780th MI Brigade (Cyber) at Fort Meade, the Cyber Protection Brigade (CPB) at Fort Eisenhower — these are the cyber-operations units where the 17A transfer track is most visible. As a captain in these formations you run small cyber-mission-force elements with TS/SCI clearance and offensive / defensive cyber operations as the mission, or you serve on the senior staff supporting the cyber-operations mission set. The career math is different — these captains are on the 17A transfer track or the FA26 designation track. Post-AD market for cyber-operations captains is structurally the strongest in the 25A community.
  • Joint billet at COCOM J-6 (CENTCOM, EUCOM, INDOPACOM, NORTHCOM, SOUTHCOM, AFRICOM, SOCOM) or DIA / NSA-attached joint cyber-signal billet
    The joint duty assignment list (JDAL)-credit-earning captain tour. CENTCOM J-6 has been operationally hot since the 2024-2026 Iran ops cycles; EUCOM J-6 since the 2022 Ukraine war; INDOPACOM J-6 for the China deterrence posture build-out; NORTHCOM / SOUTHCOM / AFRICOM J-6 for the regional missions. As a captain in a COCOM J-6 you serve on the joint communications staff at the operational headquarters — visible to the senior joint signal officer cohort, JDAL credit on file, joint cyber-signal exposure that compounds at every senior board. DIA and NSA-attached joint billets carry similar weight. The slot is uncommon at captain but possible for the captain with the right OER, cert stack, clearance, and senior officer endorsement. The JDAL credit is the field-grade slate signal.

What Good Looks Like at This Rank

The good 25A captain commanded a Signal Company that did not lose the network at NTC / JRTC / JMRC / JPMRC, accessed at least one 255A warrant during command, closed the CCRI / CORA findings ahead of the published timeline, and turned over a formation the next CO did not have to repair. As a senior captain or junior major he is on a battalion S-3 / XO slate at NETCOM, ARCYBER, JFHQ-DODIN, a division G-6 staff, or a joint cyber billet at USCYBERCOM / COCOM J-6; his ILE is complete (resident if the slate ran, non-resident if the operational assignments did not allow); his FA / branch decision is made honestly with the senior officers at Fort Eisenhower and the branch manager at HRC; and the centralized command board reads his OER profile and selects him for Signal battalion command without a long debate. His Signal Company OER reads action-result-impact across every block — 'led 142-soldier Signal Company through 28-day JRTC rotation with 99.4% network uptime supporting 4,500-soldier BCT across 32 nets,' 'closed 14 CAT-1 CCRI findings 30 days ahead of the published timeline,' 'sponsored 2 LTs to early major-board consideration and 1 SSG to 255A warrant officer accession board selection,' 'mentored 4 LTs and 2 warrants through company command and KD certifications with zero relief-for-cause findings.' The senior rater can defend every bullet with a specific incident and a specific outcome. His senior cert stack reads CCNP-Security + CISSP + Sec+ currency under DoDM 8140 for the IAT-III / IAM-II billet he holds, with the post-AD market conversation already started — the Leidos / Booz / KBR / MITRE / SAIC recruiters at the Cyber Center of Excellence career fairs know his name. His FA designation (FA26 if the cyber-engineering track called him, FA40 if Space called him, FA53 if the IT engineer track called him, FA59 if the strategist track called him) or his 17A transfer is on file with HRC; the senior officer in his post-command billet at NETCOM / ARCYBER / JFHQ-DODIN / USCYBERCOM knows him from the SCCC small-group conversation or the warrant-officer mentorship he provided as a senior LT. The captain who is being groomed for early battalion command looks different from the captain who is comfortable at the time-served captain mark. The grooming captain is the one whose Signal Company OER reads top block from a senior rater who can defend it, whose JDAL credit is on file from a USCYBERCOM or COCOM J-6 tour, whose FA / 17A decision was made honestly at the 7-8 year window, and whose senior signal-officer mentorship at Fort Eisenhower or NETCOM HQ produced a written endorsement on the next senior officer's record brief. The comfortable captain commanded the company cleanly but his CCRI closure ran to the published timeline (not ahead), his cert stack stalled at Sec+ and CCNA, his FA designation was the slate's default, and his joint exposure stopped at the BCT S-6 staff tour. The branch is small enough that both reads propagate inside a year; the centralized command board sees the difference at the LTC slate ten years later.

Preview — The Next Rank

Major (O-4) is when the field-grade arc starts in earnest. The visible pipeline: post-company-command staff utilization (BN S-3 / XO line track, joint cyber billet at USCYBERCOM / JFHQ-DODIN / COCOM J-6, ARCYBER HQ staff, NETCOM HQ staff, branch staff at HRC or TRADOC) → ILE / CGSC at Fort Leavenworth (resident or non-resident under the Command and General Staff College banner) → field-grade KD slate. The field-grade KD for line 25As is Signal Battalion S-3 or XO (the major-level KD that gates Signal Battalion Command at LTC); for FA26 / 17A officers the field-grade KD looks different — joint cyber engineering billets, Cyber Mission Force team leads, ARCYBER operational staff. The O-5 board math is published per board cycle by HRC; pull the current release for the actual selection demographics. The senior cert stack at major-board competition is the credential the contractor recruiter, the joint cyber slate, the 255A warrant community, and the senior signal officer at Fort Eisenhower all read. CCNP-Security or CCNP-Enterprise, CISSP, CASP+, the GIAC family where ACA-funded, and the FA26 / 17A school pipeline credentials if the transfer is in motion. The post-AD market for majors with TS/SCI clearance + KD time + senior cert stack + JDAL credit is structurally the strongest in the 25A community — the DC / NoVA / Tampa / Fort Meade / Augusta labor markets pay the field-grade ETS captain or major aggressively, and the senior contractor / IC roles (PM, technical director, joint cyber engineering lead) are the post-AD destinations the senior officers in your network have already taken. The career-defining conversation at major is the LTC / battalion command competition. Signal Battalion Command at LTC is the senior signal officer's apex KD — the slot that gates O-6 brigade-equivalent command consideration and the senior cyber / signal joint staff billets. The competition is real and the slate is competitive — pull the current HRC senior officer slate release for the actual demographics. The field-grade officer who built the OER profile honestly at company command, made the FA / 17A decision deliberately at the 7-8 year window, accumulated JDAL credit at the post-command staff tour, completed ILE / CGSC on schedule, and stacked the senior cert credentials is the field-grade officer the senior signal slate names primary zone for battalion command. The financial math is the same DOPMA / BRS structure across the field-grade cohort — the math of staying for O-5 vs. ETSing at major into the contractor / IC / industry world is the conversation at 12-15 years commissioned, and the math is real on both sides.
FAQ

25A O3-O4 — Frequently Asked Questions

Q01What does a O3-O4 25A (Signal Operations) actually do?
You return to Fort Eisenhower for the Signal Captains Career Course (SCCC) — roughly 6 months at the Signal School, focused on company-grade signal operations, BCT/DIV-level network architecture, DODIN-A operations, joint and cyber integration, and the staff math that maneuver branches assume their signal officer already knows.
Q02What's the most important thing to know as a O3-O4 25A?
Signal Company Command is the 25A captain's KD job — the only OER block the major's board and the centralized command board read with the same intensity the Signal Platoon Leader OER carried at LT. SCCC at Fort Eisenhower (renamed from Fort Gordon in 2023) is the bridge — roughly 22 weeks at the Cyber Center of Excellence under the 15th Signal Brigade.
Q03What does a typical day look like for a O3-O4 25A?
Time-blocked day at the O3-O4 25A rank tier: 0500 Wake. PT uniform on. Phone check — overnight company emergencies. Signal Company on call for the BCT: a SIPR enclave at a BN TOC dropped, the brigade COMSEC custodian needs a captain signature before 0700, the night-shift senior NCO has a soldier in jail in town. You handle inside the company first; the BN CDR hears it as you walk into the company HQ, 0530 PT formation. Signal Company falls in. The 1SG takes accountability of the company; you take command of the formation and report to the BN S-3 or the BN CDR at BN PT.…
Q04What mistakes get O3-O4 25A soldiers fired or relieved?
Coasting through SCCC. The small-group leaders are former Signal Company commanders, BCT S-6 senior captains, and FA26 / 17A officers evaluating you against your peers; the read travels back to your branch manager and shapes your post-SCCC KD slating. Class ranking and small-group performance matter — not because the school cares about the class rank, but because the senior signal officers at Fort Eisenhower talk; Phoning the staff tour. The BCT S-6 OIC, the division G-6,…
Q05What career decisions matter most at the O3-O4 25A rank tier?
Functional Area designation at the 7-8 year window — FA26 (Information Network Engineer) vs. FA40 (Space) vs. FA51 (Acquisition) vs. FA53 (IT Engineer) vs. FA59 (Strategist) vs. staying line 25A — DA PAM 600-3 (Signal Corps chapter, FA chapters) is the official doctrine; the FA designation board is one of the most consequential career events in the Army officer corps. FA26 is the most natural continuation for engineering-aptitude 25As — joint cyber-signal architecture, NETCOM / ARCYBER / JFHQ-DODIN engineering billets, the field-grade cyber-engineer career.…
Q06What's next after O3-O4 for a 25A (Signal Operations) in the Army?
Major (O-4) is when the field-grade arc starts in earnest.
Q07What manuals and regulations does a O3-O4 25A need to know cold?
FM 6-02 — Signal Support to Operations; ATP 6-02.71 — DODIN-A Operations; ATP 6-02.40 — Visual Information Operations.; ATP 6-02.53 / .54 / .75 — Tactical Radio / SATCOM / COMSEC Techniques.; AR 25-1 — Army IT; AR 25-2 — Army Cybersecurity; AR 380-40 — COMSEC Material; AR 380-5 — Information Security.

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Published by the Honest MOS Editorial DeskVerified against DoD/.gov sourcesUpdated May 2026Editorial standards