Shaping Senior Leader Officer Talent: Using a Multi-Dimensional Model of Talent to Analyze the Effect of Personnel Management Decisions and Attrition on the Flow of Army Officer Talent Throughout the Officer Career Model

Abstract

Army Officer requirements for operational talent decline precipitously with increasing rank. While 80 percent of Junior Officers serve in operational billets, only 20 percent of Senior Leaders serve in operational billets. Yet despite this operational talent requirement inversion, Army development efforts tend to focus disproportionately on building operational talent. Moreover, career progression through the rank of General Officer tends to excessively favor officers who have spent most of their career in operational billets. By opening additional opportunities for officers who serve outside of operational billets to reach senior leader ranks, and by exposing more officers to opportunities that develop non-operational talents, the Army can mitigate against talent gaps at senior ranks. This analysis employs discrete event simulation to quantify the extent to which attrition, promotion, and the dynamically changing need for two types of talent (operational and non-operational) impact the distribution of talent available across the Army's officer ranks.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Dec 01, 2011
Accession Number
ADA558491

Entities

People

  • David S. Lyle
  • Matthew F. Dabkowski
  • Paul Kucik
  • Samuel H. Huddleston

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Attrition
  • Education
  • Engineering
  • General Officers
  • Knowledge Management
  • Military Education
  • Military Training
  • Operations Research
  • Personnel Management
  • Simulations
  • Standards
  • Students
  • Systems Engineering
  • Training
  • United States
  • United States Military Academy
  • War Colleges

Readers

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