From time to time I would come back here and reminisce. I was a 92Y, enlisted in 2008, and left in 2016. It's a great job with skills that is highly transferrable outside the military.
@@robert907 This won't be all-inclusive because there are many. I learned purchasing, inventory control, ERP, supply management, scheduling, logistics, compliance, vendor scorecard, supplier management, contract management, inventory management, and so many more that are interrelated with Supply Chain Management. When it comes to soft skills, I learned and developed communication, teamwork, collaboration, project management, critical thinking, time management, etc. Also, this job works with other Quartermaster MOS' in the 92 fields like the 92A, 92G, 92F, 92S. etc. and other support MOS'. Being exposed to those other MOS' will further develop your hard and soft skills. Overall, if you take this job seriously and try to learn from your Supply Sergeant(s), and other Supply Specialists and from S4 (Supply Battalion support). You will emerge from the US Army very confident, and all those skills you've learned applies in the private sector, assuming Supply Chain Management is your passion. SCM/Logistics in the Military and private sector are not far off, it doesn't matter where you go, Supply Chain concepts are the same. The main difference I've seen from Military Logistics and Private Sector is obviously the bureaucracy of the military. A 92Y can go anywhere in any specialty of Supply Chain Management like Inventory Control, Logistics/Transportation, Buyer/Purchasing Manager, Inventory Analyst, Supply Chain Manager, etc. so many! When I got out of the US Army, I landed a job as an Inventory Control Manager for a Logistics company in 2016, fast forward to now, I'm a Director of Procurement for an Aerospace/Defense company. Good luck!
@@yungwest8311 It’s good! You’ll do well...if you don’t know something just ask. They’ll make sure that you understand what you’re doing. 92Ys we have a very important role within the Army so they make sure that we are on point
I didn't mind the job. A lot goes into this position most people either don't know or don't see. What I thought sucked the most was during deployment settings where if you don't have the fortunate privilege of working in a space where all your basic supplies are in the office where you work, they will be in a connex which may or may not be on the other end of your work site and you can believe you'll be making multiple trips a day opening and closing those things.
My husband is considering reclassing from 31B to 92Y. Do they treat you different if your a reclass? Also will he be able to visit with me and kids on weekends?
He will get the benefits of a MOS-T ALSO, he has the possibility of receiving a gold pass if his company is well behaved or whatever the commander or 1st sgt decides
@@brrberrymerry 92A is the mechanical supply unlike other 92 series mos they work in the motorpool with mechanics its not a fun place its where they service vehicles you will be moving large part like tires and and batteries or even engines to the mechanics lots of physical work!
This commercial is a lie. You won't be doing anything with guns, there's a different MOS that does that. You'll be handing out office supplies and picking up chow.
@@marlonmoncrieffe0728 Generally the unit will have it's own armorer that is the same MOS as everybody else. It's just an E4/E5 that the command trusts to sign weapons in and out and do layouts. 91F Small Arms Repair will have an office somewhere in the footprint and they'll fix guns that are broken to a level that they can't be repaired by anybody with the TM.
Ya I especially love how they show all this other B roll footage of soldiers doing stuff. Ya you’ll probably rappel in basic one day but the reality of your job is hanging out in the supply cage like some sort of cave dwelling goblin that comes out for inventories or when someone needs batteries, which you 90% of the time won’t even have or you’ll give the absolute minimum amount out because the Army supply system sucks. The next day you’ll spend like 20min explaining to the 1SG that you ordered copy toner and toilet paper 7 weeks ago and you don’t know why it’s not in yet. That my friends is the real Army.
@@marlonmoncrieffe0728 I heard there was an Army drill sergeant who was so sleep deprived he backed up with one of tjeir small trucks and hit a trainee behind him, but maybe it didnt happen i think it sounds too good to be true. Those Army commercials only show the cool stuff.
From time to time I would come back here and reminisce. I was a 92Y, enlisted in 2008, and left in 2016. It's a great job with skills that is highly transferrable outside the military.
Thanks Nedball
Please explain the transferable stuff
@@robert907 This won't be all-inclusive because there are many. I learned purchasing, inventory control, ERP, supply management, scheduling, logistics, compliance, vendor scorecard, supplier management, contract management, inventory management, and so many more that are interrelated with Supply Chain Management. When it comes to soft skills, I learned and developed communication, teamwork, collaboration, project management, critical thinking, time management, etc.
Also, this job works with other Quartermaster MOS' in the 92 fields like the 92A, 92G, 92F, 92S. etc. and other support MOS'. Being exposed to those other MOS' will further develop your hard and soft skills.
Overall, if you take this job seriously and try to learn from your Supply Sergeant(s), and other Supply Specialists and from S4 (Supply Battalion support). You will emerge from the US Army very confident, and all those skills you've learned applies in the private sector, assuming Supply Chain Management is your passion. SCM/Logistics in the Military and private sector are not far off, it doesn't matter where you go, Supply Chain concepts are the same. The main difference I've seen from Military Logistics and Private Sector is obviously the bureaucracy of the military. A 92Y can go anywhere in any specialty of Supply Chain Management like Inventory Control, Logistics/Transportation, Buyer/Purchasing Manager, Inventory Analyst, Supply Chain Manager, etc. so many!
When I got out of the US Army, I landed a job as an Inventory Control Manager for a Logistics company in 2016, fast forward to now, I'm a Director of Procurement for an Aerospace/Defense company.
Good luck!
@@robert907it would help you get a job in supply chain management
Wow these are my soldiers!!! I’m so proud!!!
92Y: WE ARE THE PLUG OF THE ARMY!
Delvin W I’m going to meps on Monday hopefully this MOS is available
Without supplies bullets don't fly.
Delvin W I’m leaving to AIT soon how is the school? Is it hard ?? I’m not really the best academically...
@@yungwest8311 It’s good! You’ll do well...if you don’t know something just ask. They’ll make sure that you understand what you’re doing. 92Ys we have a very important role within the Army so they make sure that we are on point
Awesome!! Thank you Delvin!! Sir!! I’m leaving soon !! God bless you!!
92Y: Home of “Acquisition”. Don’t ask where it came from just be happy you got it!
Who remembers the old ULLS S4 before PBUSE. Yea I’m THAT old
Ayeee all the instructors in this video the real OG!! 💪🏾 I remember them back when I joined
Samee
76Y that was in when we were moved to 92Y
I didn't mind the job. A lot goes into this position most people either don't know or don't see. What I thought sucked the most was during deployment settings where if you don't have the fortunate privilege of working in a space where all your basic supplies are in the office where you work, they will be in a connex which may or may not be on the other end of your work site and you can believe you'll be making multiple trips a day opening and closing those things.
I worked in our actual Connex as a Unit Armorer with little to no help, in that heat overseas!
My husband is considering reclassing from 31B to 92Y. Do they treat you different if your a reclass? Also will he be able to visit with me and kids on weekends?
He will get the benefits of a MOS-T ALSO, he has the possibility of receiving a gold pass if his company is well behaved or whatever the commander or 1st sgt decides
Why am I getting so many new videos on my recommended
how is 92 Y a high pressured job???
I take it you've not worked in supply chain before. They may be getting shot at, but they're taking serious heat all the time.
@@TheHaiku2 i was in 88M AIT and worked at Amazon. And currently in 92Y AIT and still wonder how is this a hig pressured Job?
@@nathanracher2911 can you tell me what you’ve been doing in AIT?
Sometimes people are just really mad that you don't have any rank patches left.
The Sword and Key!
I came here from shorts about PFC Crafton xD
So what is the difference btw automated logistics specialist and this
I know right, I want to know the same thing.
Automated or 92A are the clerks working on the motor pool ordering repair parts
Don’t pick 92A it’s the worst!!
@@bigby7712 Can you elaborate a little bit. Now I'm concerned 😅
@@brrberrymerry 92A is the mechanical supply unlike other 92 series mos they work in the motorpool with mechanics its not a fun place its where they service vehicles you will be moving large part like tires and and batteries or even engines to the mechanics lots of physical work!
Is there a US Army reserve Unit Supply seat available in Florida?
Yes there is
@@pierreguny4635 which station and how do one get in?
Yes
Go talk to your local recruiter or retention to find out!
92Y can work on any station as far as I know.
Basically a warehouse job.
Not for me,
Thanks for the video
If you think you are too good for it, what sort of job DO you want?
This commercial is a lie.
You won't be doing anything with guns, there's a different MOS that does that.
You'll be handing out office supplies and picking up chow.
What MOS is that? Automated Logistics Specialist (92A)?
@@marlonmoncrieffe0728 Generally the unit will have it's own armorer that is the same MOS as everybody else.
It's just an E4/E5 that the command trusts to sign weapons in and out and do layouts.
91F Small Arms Repair will have an office somewhere in the footprint and they'll fix guns that are broken to a level that they can't be repaired by anybody with the TM.
This is the GD truth.
I've done some minor operator-level maintenance while the rest of my Battery was out firing Cannons. 91Fs do the more in-depth stuff
Ya I especially love how they show all this other B roll footage of soldiers doing stuff. Ya you’ll probably rappel in basic one day but the reality of your job is hanging out in the supply cage like some sort of cave dwelling goblin that comes out for inventories or when someone needs batteries, which you 90% of the time won’t even have or you’ll give the absolute minimum amount out because the Army supply system sucks. The next day you’ll spend like 20min explaining to the 1SG that you ordered copy toner and toilet paper 7 weeks ago and you don’t know why it’s not in yet.
That my friends is the real Army.
Ayo papa!!
Yes
Papa Pirates
Whiskey Warriors 💪
@@juanmiranda7399 🙌🙌
92a or 92Y??? Someone
92Y 💯
Is this MOS actual good?
YES!!!
It's 'aite
Uh lol sure..
Favorite part is u can be put in any unit, meet all types of soldiers and learn all types of jobs the army has to offer
@@miguelsaldana2964 well that last part... that depends on where you’re stationed at lol
If only I didn’t have a mastoidectomy in high school...
TMI?
😂😂😂
DUKEEEEE
@2:30 was cringe asf
Lol least he's in the Army is what matters citizen
you have done nothing with your life my guy keep being a internet tough guy
#92leadtheway
Worst mistake I ever made in my life. Overworked and underappreciated. 10/10 would not recommend.
....YIKES!
May I ask, what is your day-to-day like?
P.S. I am a Transportation Management Coordinator (88N) and I trained at Fort Lee, Virginia too.
I heard theres no easy job in active duty army except maybe being a cook.
I heard that being a cook is BRUTAL due to the crazy amount of hours, @@Punisher1830 .
@@marlonmoncrieffe0728 I heard there was an Army drill sergeant who was so sleep deprived he backed up with one of tjeir small trucks and hit a trainee behind him, but maybe it didnt happen i think it sounds too good to be true.
Those Army commercials only show the cool stuff.
Indian navy ko nojor rokho.