by guestivusMaximus » Wed Feb 20, 2013 11:04 am
Last year it took four months to get officially hired by my SF. Some SMART students started before their official hire and were told they would get reimbursed for their time. They didn't. The payback time or Phase II does not officially start until your SF-50 is finalized. Start days only occur at the beginning of pay periods, which creates about a three to five week gap until you receive your first pay check. The process is further complicated as you will be dealing with three to four individuals to process your hire; SMART SPO, virtual HR, your branch ADMIN, and your Branch Manager. I had to send three official transcripts to the SPO, virtual HR, and branch ADMIN. Even though you know SMART has certain paperwork, I can guarantee that your facility does not have it nor have access to it. You will need to submit an updated resume or CV, course and degree summaries, transcripts, and anything you can think of to justify your entry level pay, before hire. Most everyone I have talked to has been treated the same way concerning pay. "You're a SMART student and you have to take what we offer" is the standard retort to anything you say in contract "negotiations". Whatever your civilian counterparts are making take $20k off of that figure and come to terms with the amount. Take an additional $10k off before you look at your offer, this will help prepare you for the slap in the face you are about to receive. GS, DB, Lab Demo, whatever pay scale, whatever your level of education, whatever school you went to, it doesn't matter. Your pay will be equivalent to the pay of other incoming interns. Some program managers actually see SMART as the ultimate sign-on bonus and will offer you less than participants in other internship programs. Once you have your SF-50 you forward that to the SPO and they issue a Phase II letter that outlines your 'contract'. I will say this, at my facility SMART students have been fired and some have left early. I have yet to hear anyone mention that they received a notice for "prompt repayment". I have heard that it becomes a federal debt, similar to student loans, and will be written off to a typical student loan collection company (eg: 'Fedloan Servicing'). If that is the case, "prompt repayment" actually means "payment over time lumped together into your student loan debt". One thing all participants should realize is that as a new employee you will most likely be engaged in training or administrative functions. Many of the SMART student with Engineering degrees are having issues with professional development because they are not doing PE level duties. Most of the SMART participants that I have encountered have been fairly disappointed with their experience. There are exceptions, one guy I know absolutely loves it. But for participants with mid-level project management experience and most advanced degree holders it will be quite a shock. Most participants leverage the SMART experience to better opportunities, but getting to that point is often frustrating. Either way I wish incoming participants the best of luck.
Last year it took four months to get officially hired by my SF. Some SMART students started before their official hire and were told they would get reimbursed for their time. They didn't. The payback time or Phase II does not officially start until your SF-50 is finalized. Start days only occur at the beginning of pay periods, which creates about a three to five week gap until you receive your first pay check. The process is further complicated as you will be dealing with three to four individuals to process your hire; SMART SPO, virtual HR, your branch ADMIN, and your Branch Manager. I had to send three official transcripts to the SPO, virtual HR, and branch ADMIN. Even though you know SMART has certain paperwork, I can guarantee that your facility does not have it nor have access to it. You will need to submit an updated resume or CV, course and degree summaries, transcripts, and anything you can think of to justify your entry level pay, before hire. Most everyone I have talked to has been treated the same way concerning pay. "You're a SMART student and you have to take what we offer" is the standard retort to anything you say in contract "negotiations". Whatever your civilian counterparts are making take $20k off of that figure and come to terms with the amount. Take an additional $10k off before you look at your offer, this will help prepare you for the slap in the face you are about to receive. GS, DB, Lab Demo, whatever pay scale, whatever your level of education, whatever school you went to, it doesn't matter. Your pay will be equivalent to the pay of other incoming interns. Some program managers actually see SMART as the ultimate sign-on bonus and will offer you less than participants in other internship programs. Once you have your SF-50 you forward that to the SPO and they issue a Phase II letter that outlines your 'contract'. I will say this, at my facility SMART students have been fired and some have left early. I have yet to hear anyone mention that they received a notice for "prompt repayment". I have heard that it becomes a federal debt, similar to student loans, and will be written off to a typical student loan collection company (eg: 'Fedloan Servicing'). If that is the case, "prompt repayment" actually means "payment over time lumped together into your student loan debt". One thing all participants should realize is that as a new employee you will most likely be engaged in training or administrative functions. Many of the SMART student with Engineering degrees are having issues with professional development because they are not doing PE level duties. Most of the SMART participants that I have encountered have been fairly disappointed with their experience. There are exceptions, one guy I know absolutely loves it. But for participants with mid-level project management experience and most advanced degree holders it will be quite a shock. Most participants leverage the SMART experience to better opportunities, but getting to that point is often frustrating. Either way I wish incoming participants the best of luck.