New Zealand announces NZ Special Service Medal for personnel deployed to assist Ukraine
The New Zealand government has announced it will award a New Zealand Special Service Medal to Defence personnel who have deployed ...
New Panther S firefighting vehicles arrive to protect defence bases across Australia
Eight new Rosenbauer Panther “S” 6x6 firefighting vehicles have been delivered from Europe three months ahead of schedule to p...
Aussie space firm Spiral Blue secures UK defence LiDAR export to boost bilateral ‘space bridge’
Australian space technology company Spiral Blue has secured its first international export of a space-grade LiDAR system, deliveri...
Rheinmetall, Boeing partner on MQ-28A Ghost Bat in potential export deal
German defence giant Rheinmetall AG has joined forces with Boeing Australia to offer the MQ-28 Ghost Bat as a ready-made solution ...

Combat and support troops make the best post-military project managers: Moore

Joint-capabilities
|
By: Reporter
tom moore

Drawing on a key experience in the Defence Force and being a well-known figure in the Australian workplace transitioning sector for military staff, WithYouWithMe co-founder Tom Moore has claimed that combat-focused personnel make the best civilian project managers.

Drawing on a key experience in the Defence Force and being a well-known figure in the Australian workplace transitioning sector for military staff, WithYouWithMe co-founder Tom Moore has claimed that combat-focused personnel make the best civilian project managers.

While he accepted the large number of issues faced by military staff making this shift, Moore said that “on the other side of the equation, there are a lot of hard skills that are transferrable that we haven't recognised because we haven't sat down and worked it out”.

“For example, if I look at project managers, the best project managers I've found, are junior and senior non-commissioned officers from combat and combat support corps,” said Moore. “Why? We've worked out the science behind it.”

 
 

Moore said that because they love to get things done, they know how to work within different teams and different levels of politics.

“And if you give them a box, they build a box more effectively than you could ever give them,” he added.

Moore concluded that his own start-up had by now succeeded in a number of industries to convince companies to look at hard skills of people that wouldn't be considered to suit specific roles.

“If you take a junior combat soldier, they're fantastic problem solvers, they're resilient and they have a will to win,” he explained.

“They are fantastic at sales and business development, and the reason they never start a job in it is because generally there's a university entry degree within a tech company or within recruitment.”

Moore also noted that “Australians are a little bit laid back, we don't like to push the envelope as much and we don't have that hunter sort of aspect”.

“If we break down the hunter aspect of acquisitions sales, it's problem solving and systems thinking. It's resilience, so the ability to continue to pick up the phone, and to look at a problem differently. Finally, it's the will to win,” said Moore.

He said that while these three traits were taught to every single military member as part of their recruitment, combat soldiers, who tend to be around 18 years old and even younger, leave Defence at the age of about 22-23.

“They’re exceptional. If you hang up on a combat soldier he's probably just going to laugh about it and try and get you the next day or just rock up at your office to convince you to do it,” Moore said.

“If you've ever been in a bar on Anzac Day, they don't stop talking.”

To hear more from the WithYouWithMe co-founder, tune in to our podcast here.

Want to see more stories from trusted news sources?
Make Defence Connect a preferred news source on Google.
Click here to add Defence Connect as a preferred news source.

Tags: