Hah! I was commuting an hour one way for a 40k + job when I got an e-mail on my MBA college e-mail about a GS 9/11/12 program for 1102's. I looked at the salary, begged for the interview -- rest is history. Work life balance varies not only from agency, but departments within agencies. Even then, it's further dependent on your supervisor and typically the program office you support. If you have an agency that supports telework, but a supervisor that abhors it it's going to be tough to push for more telework. Contract Specialist is a great job for someone like me who looked at his hands at a young age, and knew that he was never going to do manual labor. It's glorified data entry some days. Some days it's critical analysis and application of clauses/law, and others it's fighting with much better resourced counterpart teams from large private businesses who will wear you down and use your superiors as leverage to award bad contracts. For 1102's, early in the career your work life balance will be what you make of it. Like most careers, putting more effort in earlier likely means less work later on. Frankly, I'm not sure what branch chiefs really do in my agency. They seem to have meetings about manpower, and don't really do anything 1102 related. There seems to be a sweet spot where as a Contracting Officer you are more technically sound than you will ever be, and as a branch chief with 3 supervisor reports you probably will never be less responsible and more paid. There is typically a personal decision on when you move up on whether to go into supervision to get that next grade around GS 13/14, but frankly -- I'm sitting on tech 14 interviews and they're not hard to find if you look. I want to say technically strong and work a part time 1102 Consulting-esque business on the side, so I'm staying tech side as long as possible. I'm almost ten years in and started as a GS-9, sitting for GS-14 interviews now. If you told me (even with inflation,) that your boy would be making a buck and a quarter thou ten years into my career where I work from home and genuinely am not busy 3 out of 5 days a week I would've never believed it. Given you only need a few business class credits and a generalist degree like an MBA, an 1102 is an easy career to slide into. You are given a pretty short leash the first 3-4 years, and if your program makes you rotate every 18 months or 3 years it feels like starting over again each time which can be stressful (1102's are infamous for internal politics). Idiots will tell you to just clock out and never do an ounce of more work, but if you want to truly be good as an 1102 you're going to spend time on your own researching/thinking of ways to improve your current standard operations -- which imo is a good thing. The sooner you master your craft, the sooner you realize whatever your workload is probably isn't that much and learn to coast. I worked harder at minimum wage jobs than I do now. There are jobs EVERYWHERE, CONUS/OCONUS, so there is great job security/flexibility in that if you don't like where you're at-- you can move. You have the ability to climb pretty easily by genuinely just doing your job and being above average in competence. Being in the right place, right program, right time helps (like all other careers,) but genuinely it is a career where you can safely decide if you want to push for those higher positions or are comfortable sitting on an 11/12 for your career.

Answer from IYIyTh on reddit.com
🌐
Opm
opm.gov › policy › classification & qualifications › general schedule qualification standards
Contracting Series, 1102
December 3, 1983 - To qualify for GS-1102 positions on the basis of graduate education, graduate education in one or a combination of the following fields is required: accounting, business, finance, law, contracts, purchasing, economics, industrial management, marketing, quantitative methods, or organization ...
🌐
Fai
fai.gov › sites › fai › files › 1102-Career-Field-Brochure.pdf pdf
1102-Career-Field-Brochure.pdf
An official website of the United States government · Official websites use .gov A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States
Discussions

What's a career as a Contract Specialist like?

🌐 r/1102
16
February 12, 2023

Hah! I was commuting an hour one way for a 40k + job when I got an e-mail on my MBA college e-mail about a GS 9/11/12 program for 1102's. I looked at the salary, begged for the interview -- rest is history.

Work life balance varies not only from agency, but departments within agencies. Even then, it's further dependent on your supervisor and typically the program office you support. If you have an agency that supports telework, but a supervisor that abhors it it's going to be tough to push for more telework.

Contract Specialist is a great job for someone like me who looked at his hands at a young age, and knew that he was never going to do manual labor. It's glorified data entry some days. Some days it's critical analysis and application of clauses/law, and others it's fighting with much better resourced counterpart teams from large private businesses who will wear you down and use your superiors as leverage to award bad contracts.

For 1102's, early in the career your work life balance will be what you make of it. Like most careers, putting more effort in earlier likely means less work later on. Frankly, I'm not sure what branch chiefs really do in my agency. They seem to have meetings about manpower, and don't really do anything 1102 related. There seems to be a sweet spot where as a Contracting Officer you are more technically sound than you will ever be, and as a branch chief with 3 supervisor reports you probably will never be less responsible and more paid.

There is typically a personal decision on when you move up on whether to go into supervision to get that next grade around GS 13/14, but frankly -- I'm sitting on tech 14 interviews and they're not hard to find if you look. I want to say technically strong and work a part time 1102 Consulting-esque business on the side, so I'm staying tech side as long as possible.

I'm almost ten years in and started as a GS-9, sitting for GS-14 interviews now. If you told me (even with inflation,) that your boy would be making a buck and a quarter thou ten years into my career where I work from home and genuinely am not busy 3 out of 5 days a week I would've never believed it. Given you only need a few business class credits and a generalist degree like an MBA, an 1102 is an easy career to slide into. You are given a pretty short leash the first 3-4 years, and if your program makes you rotate every 18 months or 3 years it feels like starting over again each time which can be stressful (1102's are infamous for internal politics). Idiots will tell you to just clock out and never do an ounce of more work, but if you want to truly be good as an 1102 you're going to spend time on your own researching/thinking of ways to improve your current standard operations -- which imo is a good thing. The sooner you master your craft, the sooner you realize whatever your workload is probably isn't that much and learn to coast. I worked harder at minimum wage jobs than I do now.

There are jobs EVERYWHERE, CONUS/OCONUS, so there is great job security/flexibility in that if you don't like where you're at-- you can move.

You have the ability to climb pretty easily by genuinely just doing your job and being above average in competence. Being in the right place, right program, right time helps (like all other careers,) but genuinely it is a career where you can safely decide if you want to push for those higher positions or are comfortable sitting on an 11/12 for your career.

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I used to love being a contracting officer (1102), but now I HATE it.

🌐 r/fednews
41
June 9, 2021

I was an 1102 for a decade before moving to a program area about 6 years ago. I ran into the same frustrations and thought making the jump would re-energize me. It did for awhile but here is what i found out the frustrations are still there they are just different. Being a federal employee, one that actually works, isn’t easy. Frustrations and roadblocks and incompetence everywhere. I try to make a difference where i can and then cash that paycheck every other week as i count down to retirement (or the lottery).

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1102 ???

🌐 r/fednews
8
67% Upvoted
August 21, 2021

Personally, 1102 series is just like any other that most of the job satisfaction comes from your supervisor. I've always maintained people more often leave crappy bosses, not crappy jobs.

FAI did a study on this exact topic a couple years ago. https://www.fai.gov/sites/default/files/GS-1102-Workforce-Mobility-Study-17-03-23.pdf

FAI sought to provide insight into the trends and drivers of GS-1102 transfers.

Additionally, this study explored the potential benefits and challenges to having a transferable, and highly mobile government-wide GS-1102 workforce.

It's only 14 pages and I highly recommend you go through it.

TL;DR conclusion is below:

The members of the GS-1102 workforce are uniquely positioned to transfer across civilian agencies, and are

doing so at a rate higher than the government-wide population. The GS-1102 Workforce Mobility Study helps government-wide and agency leaders better understand the movement of GS-1102s across the civilian CFO Act agencies. The study looked at five potential areas related to GS-1102 movement, including (1) the transferability of the Federal Acquisition Certification in Contracting (FAC-C), (2) the scope of GS1102 transfers, (3) the relationship between GS-1102s and employee engagement, employee satisfaction, and workload, (4) the characteristics of the GS-1102s that have recently transferred, and (5) the factors causing workforce members to leave one agency for another. Looking across all five potential areas for GS-1102 movement mentioned above, there was only a small positive correlation between an agency’s employee engagement scores and their net gains through GS-1102 transfers.

The analyses in this study can help government-wide and agency leaders determine if GS-1102 mobility across agencies is a challenge or an opportunity. One result of this mobility is a relatively low level of attrition out of government service. That, in conjunction with the higher than average transfer rates demonstrated by GS-1102s, may suggest that the workforce values the ability to move between agencies.

Good Luck with whatever direction you decide to go!

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Considering Job Change to 1102, Looking for Advice

🌐 r/fednews
7
August 30, 2021

Some of your skills would transfer. Getting familiar with FAR, DFARS, NMCARS, and CFR is a must.

Typical day is juggling multiple projects, which may be pre-award or post-award, or a mixture of both depending on the agency and the office you work at.

It depends. At the end of fiscal year you expect to work a lot of overtime. Throughout the year it really depends on you and your ability to keep projects moving. What I can do in 4 hours takes the average CS needs 8 hours to complete. The job is not one I would choose to do voluntarily if I knew I didn’t move every three years with my active duty spouse.

Telework friendly depends again on type of contracts, but I was doing 100% telework during COVID and not missing a beat.

There are many non-sup GS13 positions; however, if you want to stay with NAVFAC there are very few and it’s highly competitive to receive a 13. People stay 12s for 10+ years there. NAVSEA on the other hand almost every CS is a 13 equivalent. PE isn’t a requirement to be a CS anywhere, it could come in handy if you continue to do construction contracting.

Bottom line, it will be hard to switch from CM to CS outside of NAVFAC unless you apply and receive and internship, but then you might have to go down to a GS-7. 1102 is highly competitive and nobody will hire a non 1102 at a GS-12 level that isn’t already DAWAII certified.

If you can get a lateral with NAVFAC to an 1102 it will open up opportunities at other SYSCOMS.

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🌐
Opm
opm.gov › policy-data-oversight › classification-qualifications › classifying-general-schedule-positions › standards › 1100 › gs1102.pdf pdf
Position Classification Standard for Contracting Series, GS- ...
December 3, 1983 - An official website of the United States government · Official websites use .gov A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States
🌐
Osd
cool.osd.mil › dciv › moc › index.html
DOD Civilian COOL - 1102 - Contracting Series Occupation
July 1, 2024 - We're sorry but DOD Civilian COOL doesn't work properly without JavaScript enabled. Please enable it to continue · MOC Credential Print Area
🌐
Reddit
reddit.com › r/1102 › what's a career as a contract specialist like?
r/1102 on Reddit: What's a career as a Contract Specialist like?

Hah! I was commuting an hour one way for a 40k + job when I got an e-mail on my MBA college e-mail about a GS 9/11/12 program for 1102's. I looked at the salary, begged for the interview -- rest is history.

Work life balance varies not only from agency, but departments within agencies. Even then, it's further dependent on your supervisor and typically the program office you support. If you have an agency that supports telework, but a supervisor that abhors it it's going to be tough to push for more telework.

Contract Specialist is a great job for someone like me who looked at his hands at a young age, and knew that he was never going to do manual labor. It's glorified data entry some days. Some days it's critical analysis and application of clauses/law, and others it's fighting with much better resourced counterpart teams from large private businesses who will wear you down and use your superiors as leverage to award bad contracts.

For 1102's, early in the career your work life balance will be what you make of it. Like most careers, putting more effort in earlier likely means less work later on. Frankly, I'm not sure what branch chiefs really do in my agency. They seem to have meetings about manpower, and don't really do anything 1102 related. There seems to be a sweet spot where as a Contracting Officer you are more technically sound than you will ever be, and as a branch chief with 3 supervisor reports you probably will never be less responsible and more paid.

There is typically a personal decision on when you move up on whether to go into supervision to get that next grade around GS 13/14, but frankly -- I'm sitting on tech 14 interviews and they're not hard to find if you look. I want to say technically strong and work a part time 1102 Consulting-esque business on the side, so I'm staying tech side as long as possible.

I'm almost ten years in and started as a GS-9, sitting for GS-14 interviews now. If you told me (even with inflation,) that your boy would be making a buck and a quarter thou ten years into my career where I work from home and genuinely am not busy 3 out of 5 days a week I would've never believed it. Given you only need a few business class credits and a generalist degree like an MBA, an 1102 is an easy career to slide into. You are given a pretty short leash the first 3-4 years, and if your program makes you rotate every 18 months or 3 years it feels like starting over again each time which can be stressful (1102's are infamous for internal politics). Idiots will tell you to just clock out and never do an ounce of more work, but if you want to truly be good as an 1102 you're going to spend time on your own researching/thinking of ways to improve your current standard operations -- which imo is a good thing. The sooner you master your craft, the sooner you realize whatever your workload is probably isn't that much and learn to coast. I worked harder at minimum wage jobs than I do now.

There are jobs EVERYWHERE, CONUS/OCONUS, so there is great job security/flexibility in that if you don't like where you're at-- you can move.

You have the ability to climb pretty easily by genuinely just doing your job and being above average in competence. Being in the right place, right program, right time helps (like all other careers,) but genuinely it is a career where you can safely decide if you want to push for those higher positions or are comfortable sitting on an 11/12 for your career.

🌐
Usajobs
usajobs.gov › Search › Results
1102 Contracting
Minimum salary (min GS<1) - Maximum salary (max GS>15) Reset · Grade · < GS1 · GS 1 · GS 2 · GS 3 · GS 4 · GS 5 · GS 6 · GS 7 · GS 8 · GS 9 · GS 10 · GS 11 · GS 12 · GS 13 · GS 14 · GS 15 · > GS15 · General Schedule (GS) equivalent · Position sensitivity and risk ·
🌐
Nsf
nsf.gov › pubs › 2001 › c20010019 › c20010019.pdf pdf
Contract Specialist GS-1102-12/13 (BFA)
December 11, 2000 - NSF's mission is to advance the progress of science, a mission accomplished by funding proposals for research and education made by scientists, engineers, and educators from across the country.
🌐
ZipRecruiter
ziprecruiter.com › all salaries › gs 1102 12 salary
Salary: Gs 1102 12 (December, 2024) United States
The average GS 1102 12 SALARY in the United States as of November 2024 is $39.09 an hour or $81,298 per year. Get paid what you're worth!
🌐
Usajobs
usajobs.gov › Search › Results
Contract Specialist GS-1102-12
Minimum salary (min GS<1) - Maximum salary (max GS>15) Reset · Grade · < GS1 · GS 1 · GS 2 · GS 3 · GS 4 · GS 5 · GS 6 · GS 7 · GS 8 · GS 9 · GS 10 · GS 11 · GS 12 · GS 13 · GS 14 · GS 15 · > GS15 · General Schedule (GS) equivalent · Position sensitivity and risk ·
🌐
Indeed
indeed.com › q-contract-specialist-gs-1102-jobs.html
Contract Specialist Gs 1102 Jobs, Employment | Indeed
14 Contract Specialist Gs 1102 jobs available on Indeed.com. Apply to Contract Specialist, Administrative Specialist, Procurement Analyst and more!
🌐
State
fam.state.gov › fam › 14fah03 › 14fah030330.html
14 FAH-3 H-330 REQUIRED TRAINING COURSES AND DOMESTIC CONTRACTING ...
Level I: encompasses GS-1102, grade GS-5 through GS-8 employees who normally manage simplified acquisitions not exceeding $ 150,000 and orders issued against existing contracts up to the maximum order threshold or limitation.
🌐
Nih
hr.nih.gov › working-nih › competencies › occupation-specific › suggested-contracting-gs-1102-competency-model
Suggested Contracting (GS-1102) Competency Model | Office of Human ...
January 26, 2022 - This suggested competency model is designed to help you select the most applicable competencies to your position. Every position has unique requirements; most positions in a job series have similar technical competencies, but the general competencies will vary.
🌐
Gsa
gsa.gov › system › files › SPE-2023-03_0.pdf pdf
SPE Memo SPE-2023-03 MEMORANDUM FOR ALL ...
January 26, 2023 - Our mission is to deliver the best customer experience and value in real estate, acquisition, and technology services to government and the American people.
🌐
CDC
jobs.cdc.gov › pdfs › dha › 1102-Contract-Specialist-GS11-13.pdf pdf
1102 Contract Specialist GS 11-13
Learn about CDC opportunities for students,veterans,USPH Commissioned Corps,and overseas.
🌐
GovLoop
govloop.com › community › how to: obtain a contracting job in the federal government (gs-1102 series)
How To: Obtain a Contracting Job in the Federal Government (GS-1102 ...
October 27, 2010 - Times have never been worse, yet never better for obtaining a position in the Federal Government as a “contract specialist” commonly referred to as a GS-1102. My name is Robert Knauer. I am a certified professional contracts manager, certified professional purchasing official, and federally ...
🌐
Navy
secnav.navy.mil › donhr › Documents › CivilianJobs › DoD_Qualification_Standard_For_GS-1102.pdf
DoD Qualification Standard For GS-1102 Contracting ...
August 2, 2020 - ​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ · Discover Your Impact with the Department of the Navy
🌐
Usgs
usgs.gov › human-capital › contract-specialist-contract-negotiator-contract-administrator-or-procurement-analyst
Contract Specialist, Contract Negotiator, Contract Administrator, ...
EXCEPTION: Employees in GS-1102 positions will be considered to have met the education requirement for positions they occupy on January 1, 2000, and will be considered to meet the basic education requirement for other GS-1102 positions up to and including those classified at GS-12.
🌐
Nih
hr.nih.gov › working-nih › competencies › occupation-specific › contracting-gs-1102-proficiency-map
Contracting (GS-1102) Proficiency Map | Office of Human Resources
December 9, 2021 - Below is a proficiency map for the Contracting (GS-1102) Competency Model. This map links GS grade levels for each competency and serves as a guide to understanding the expected proficiency level of top performers at each grade level.
🌐
State
fam.state.gov › fam › 14fah03 › 14fah030320.html
14 FAH-3 H-320 MANDATORY EDUCATION REQUIREMENTS
The Office of Federal Procurement ... Contracting Series, 1102 general schedule qualification standards. The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) approved these standards. The requirements under the standard follow. 14 FAH-3 H-322 BASIC REQUIREMENTS FOR GS-1102-5 THROUGH ...