The Army publishes promotion 'scores' for each grade and specialty
monthly. Soldiers earn points for
schools, time in grade, efficiency reports, and a few other things.
There is no such thing as using
a promotion as an incentive to stay in. If a specialty is hurting for
soldiers at a particular
grade, the published promotion score is lowered to get more soldiers
in the right grade for that
specialty. If a specialty is overstrength in a particular grade, the
score for that grade is made
very high so few people will qualify.
Pretty much the same as the Navy, at least back in my time when ships
had sails.Â* :-)
This conversation made me remember something. When I left the Navy my
father-in-law was giving me hell for not sticking it out after 9 years
so I'd get a pension. He *was* my wife's father after all. :-)
So, after a couple of months of being discharged I went to see a
recruiter about joining the reserves. If I joined within a certain time
frame, the reserve status could convert back to active duty with no time
lost for retirement benefits. Since I wasn't sure about a civilian
career and to get my father-in-law off my back, I signed up for the
reserves for 2 years.
I asked the recruiter or whoever I was talking to what the chances of
getting advanced to E-7 if I signed up. The original "art of the deal"
negotiator. Ha!
He just laughed at me. Said if I signed up right away they wouldn't
reduce me in rank.