The 92A MOS keeps units running — property accountability, supply operations, ULLS-G, Class IX parts, the whole supply chain. But when it comes to writing NCOER bullets, a lot of NCOs describe what their 92A did without ever capturing the scale or impact of that work. Fix that, and you'll write bullets that actually move the needle at promotion boards.
The Formula That Works for 92A Bullets
Like any strong NCOER bullet, the format is Action — Task — Result. For logistical specialists, the action is usually a supply or property function (managed, maintained, accounted for, processed, coordinated), the task describes what was handled and at what scale, and the result ties it to a dollar value, accuracy rate, readiness metric, or mission impact. The Army talks about property in dollar amounts for a reason — use that language. A bullet without a dollar figure or accountability percentage is a missed opportunity.
The Best Metrics to Pull From for 92A Evaluations
When writing a 92A's NCOER, these are the data points that separate average bullets from standout ones:
- Property accountability: Total dollar value of property book managed, number of hand receipts maintained, FLIPL actions avoided or resolved
- Supply operations volume: Number of requisitions processed, fill rates achieved, turn-around times on Class IX requests
- Inventory accuracy: Results from command supply discipline programs (CSDP), cyclic and sensitive item inventories
- Readiness contribution: Equipment deadline rates reduced, critical parts sourced that directly enabled vehicle or weapons system availability
- Training and leadership: Soldiers trained on GCSS-Army, hand receipt holder mentorship, property accountability briefings conducted
Strong 92A NCOER Bullet Example
Here is a bullet that hits the right notes for a 92A at the team or squad level:
This bullet earns its place because it quantifies the dollar value at stake, shows the scope of responsibility (6 units), and delivers two concrete results — perfect inventory accuracy and a clean FLIPL record. A promotion board member reading this immediately understands the Soldier was trusted with serious accountability and delivered.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
The biggest mistake with 92A bullets is being vague about property value. "Maintained accountability of unit equipment" is invisible — add the dollar amount and it becomes real. A second common error is listing tasks without outcomes: "processed requisitions" tells the rater nothing. How many? What fill rate? What was the impact on vehicle readiness? Finally, do not skip GCSS-Army contributions — proficiency in the Army's enterprise resource planning system is increasingly valued and worth calling out by name if the Soldier demonstrated it.
Final Thoughts
The best time to gather 92A bullet data is throughout the rating period, not the week before the NCOER is due. Pull property book figures, inventory results, and requisition stats quarterly so you are working with real numbers when it counts. When you are ready to draft, NCO Kit's free NCOER bullet builder can generate 92A-specific bullets in seconds — give it your Soldier's key metrics and it will do the heavy lifting.