Defense contractor
and U.S. Navy veteran

The Importance of Certifications (and Which Ones Actually Help)

When I first transitioned from the military to federal contracting, I kept hearing the same advice:

“Get certified—it’ll open doors.”

It’s good advice… kind of. Because while certifications can definitely boost your resume, not all carry the same weight—especially in government contracts.

So let’s talk about what I’ve learned:

  • Which certifications matter
  • How to choose the right ones for your role
  • And how to make sure they help, not just hang on the wall

 

🧰 Why Certifications Matter in Contracting

In the world of federal contracts, certifications serve three key purposes:

  1. Qualification: Some contracts require certain certifications for you to legally or officially perform a role. (Think OSHA, HAZMAT, or DoD IT roles.)
  2. Credibility: Certifications show your team, your government customer, and your company that you know your stuff.
  3. Career mobility: When contracts end, certifications help you pivot faster—whether to a new billet, a new program, or a new company.

Bottom line? Certifications are currency. And the more strategic you are about them, the more valuable that currency becomes.

 

📋 Which Certifications Actually Help?

Here’s a breakdown by category—based on what I’ve seen first-hand in defense-related contractor roles:

 

🔧 Technical & Trade Certifications (Ordnance, Inventory, Safety)

These are essential if you’re hands-on with systems, equipment, or logistics.

  • AMMO-18-DL / AMMO-49-DL (Naval Explosives Safety)
    Required and respected for anyone handling munitions or supporting ordnance projects.
  • OSHA Certifications
    Especially relevant for HAZMAT custodians, inventory techs, or anyone working around potentially dangerous materials.
  • Forklift & Material Handling
    May seem minor, but this shows you’re authorized and trained for real-world logistics tasks.

These are often required to stay on the job—no certification, no access.

 

💻 Cybersecurity & IT (Growing Importance)

If you’re anywhere near systems, data, or defense networks, these are gold:

  • CompTIA Security+
    Required for many DoD 8570/8140 roles. Recognized across all branches and agencies.
  • Google Cybersecurity Certificate / Google IT Support
    Great for building foundational skills. Not DoD-compliant yet—but a good start if you’re pivoting into tech.
  • CISSP / CEH / Network+
    More advanced, but highly respected in cybersecurity contracting roles.

⚠️ These aren’t needed for all jobs—but they open doors to higher-paying, more technical billets.

 

🧭 Project & Program Management

As you move up or into more planning-based roles, these matter:

  • Google Project Management Certificate
    Solid introduction for newer professionals. Shows you understand planning, execution, and Agile basics.
  • PMP (Project Management Professional)
    The gold standard. Especially valuable for program leads, site managers, or logistics planners.
  • Agile / Scrum Master Certifications
    Increasingly important as DoD projects adopt Agile methodology—especially in software, systems, and R&D support.

💡 If you ever coordinate people, schedules, or deliverables—these make you more promotable.

 

🧠 General Upskilling & Lifelong Learning

Some certs don’t come with letters after your name, but they still signal value:

  • LinkedIn Learning / Coursera / edX Courses
    Topics like leadership, time management, or specialized equipment knowledge
  • Military-to-Civilian Transition Programs
    (e.g., SkillBridge, Onward to Opportunity)

These help you stay relevant, even if the course isn’t formally required by your contract.

🎣 In my case, I enjoy building—both at work and at home. Learning new tools, systems, and safety practices helps in both places.

 

🧠 How to Choose the Right Certs

Ask yourself these questions:

  • Does the job require it?
  • Will it help me qualify for a different (or better) billet?
  • Does it align with where I want to go—tech, logistics, leadership?
  • Is my company willing to pay for it? (Many will, if you ask.)

Then make a short list. Prioritize the ones that add immediate and long-term value. Don’t get 10 certifications you’ll never use. Get 2–3 that make you indispensable.

 

📈 How to Get the Most Out of a Certification

Getting the cert is just the first step. Here’s how to maximize it:

  • 📄 Add it to your resume and LinkedIn immediately
  • 🗣️ Let your manager or PM know you’re certified—it could lead to new responsibilities
  • 🧪 Use your new skills on the job (don’t just file the cert away)
  • 💬 Offer to mentor others who are studying for it
  • 🔁 Revisit and refresh when needed—some certs expire

 

Final Thoughts

In federal contracting, certifications don’t guarantee success—but they unlock it. They show initiative, competence, and professionalism. They help you pivot between contracts, rise within your company, and build a career that evolves with you.

I’m not just a believer in certifications—I’m a product of them. And I’m constantly on the lookout for the next one that will make me better at what I do.

Because in this line of work, learning never stops.

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NSWC PC Hammerhead Team Lead & Mechanical Engineer

As for Jesse, he did a great job no doubt about it. To list a few highlights: He was very task-oriented, helping to maintain direction of the goals for the day, staying on top of tools for the next step, and oversight of the assembly which he became well acquainted with to the point of being able to recognize and check the procedures when unconventional assemblies occurred. He became well acquainted with a number of procedures to the point of being trusted to oversee other personnel  being trained and doing sub-assemblies with little to no supervision. His organizational skills were unmatched on our team. While an adjustment for some of us with a bit more of a hodge-podge tool organization we had grown to and occasionally spent time looking for tools, his systematic organization really came in handy with each item now having a lot more specific of a location aiding in the ease of locating tools effectively. While this had been an idea in our minds at times Jesse put it in to action in an effective manner. He was timely with our morning debriefs and other related meetings as well. Last but not least, he got along well with the team and I can say I think we all enjoyed having him out there.

NSWC PC Hammerhead Team Lead & Mechanical Engineer

Matthew J. Reynolds

NSWC PC Quickstrike ER Project Management

Assessing Official Comments:  QUALITY: Contractor has provided very good quality in support of projects on this contract. In support of QS-ER, the contract required mine/ordnance handling personnel to travel and provide on-site All-Up-Round (AUR) assembly support for all QS-ER flight and laboratory tests. During the QS-ER Captive Carriage Environmental Quantification (CCEQ) Flight Test, ordnance handling personnel and manpower were abnormally low from 307th Maintenance Group (at Barksdale Air Force Base) due to unforeseen simultaneous efforts (i.e., other programs) needing B-52H maintenance support the days prior to test. The lack of manpower from the 307th put the CCEQ Flight Test at risk of delay due to the lack of certified/qualified ordnance handling personnel capable of assembling QS-ER AURs. The Contractor was able to supplement Barksdales manpower deficiency to provide ordnance handling support and supervision. In addition, the Contractor aided the 307th weapons loaders requests during weapons tie-down and transportation steps. The Contractors proactive efforts eliminated the risk of delaying the flight test. If the test were to have been delayed, QS-ER wouldve had to absorb funding losses due to flight cancellation, as well forego valuable data collection of an entire flight sortie needed to certify QS-ER on B-52H. Regarding In-Service-Mine support, high quality work was delivered on multiple technical assist visit to fleet units.

NSWC PC Quickstrike ER Project Management  

JESSE CAREY

Defense contractor and U.S. Navy veteran

Phone

(954) 770-2827

Email

Jessecarey20@yahoo.com

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