The Three Words That Cost Nothing and Change Nothing
"Thank you for your service."
It is said with genuine warmth, in airports and gas stations and grocery stores, by people who mean it sincerely and have no idea what else to say. And veterans — most of them — accept it graciously, because they understand where it comes from and because the alternative is an awkward conversation most people aren't equipped for.
But here is the honest truth that most veterans will only say to each other: the phrase does almost nothing. Not because gratitude is wrong. But because gratitude that costs nothing and requires nothing is not investment. It is absolution. It lets the person saying it feel good about the transaction without having to engage with the actual complexity of what veterans are navigating after service.
Veterans don't need you to feel grateful. They need you to understand, hire, fund, mentor, and advocate. Those things are harder than three words — and they are the only things that actually move the needle.
Veterans don't need your gratitude. They need your investment.
— Zack A. Knight, MBA, Founder, ATLVets Inc.
What Veterans Actually Need
To understand what actually helps, you have to understand what veterans are actually dealing with after separation. Not the Hollywood version — the real one.
The military is a total institution. It provides identity, community, mission, development, housing, healthcare, and a clear standard of performance. When you separate, all of that ends simultaneously. Veterans don't just lose a job. They lose an entire operating system for their life. And they're expected to rebuild it from scratch in a civilian environment that speaks a different language, operates on different values, and has no framework for translating military experience into civilian currency.
The result, for many veterans, is underemployment, social isolation, identity disruption, and a persistent feeling that civilian life never quite fits. None of that is solved by a handshake and three words at an airport. It's solved by structural support — employment, development, community, and investment.
If You're an Individual
Hire Veterans — and Actually Advocate for Them
If you have any influence over hiring in your organization, use it. Not as a charity gesture but as a strategic decision. Veterans bring operational discipline, leadership under pressure, cross-functional communication skills, and a zero-defect mindset that most civilian hires take years to develop — if they develop it at all. The challenge is that most civilian hiring managers don't know how to read a military resume and don't know the right questions to ask.
If your company has a veteran hiring initiative, actually participate in it. If it doesn't, advocate for one. And when a veteran is hired into your organization, be the person who helps them translate — who explains the unwritten rules of civilian workplace culture, advocates for their promotion, and treats their military leadership experience as the asset it actually is.
Fund Organizations Doing the Real Work
There are thousands of veteran nonprofits in the United States. Most of them do awareness. A small number do development — the structural work of building employment pathways, leadership programs, community, and accountability systems. Those are the ones worth funding. $22 a month to an organization like ATLVets — the same number we lose every day — funds the programs that give veterans purpose, community, and a next mission. That is a more useful act of gratitude than anything you can say in an airport.
Show Up
Attend veteran events. Volunteer at veteran organizations. Bring veterans into your professional and social networks — not to check a box but because isolation is one of the primary drivers of veteran crisis. Veterans who are connected to strong civilian communities fare dramatically better than those who are not. You do not have to have served to be part of that community. You just have to show up consistently and treat veterans like the leaders they are.
The Same Number We're Fighting.
If You're a Company or Organization
Build a Real Veteran Hiring Pipeline — Not a PR Program
The difference between a veteran hiring initiative that works and one that doesn't is simple: one is built around veterans' actual needs, and the other is built around the company's PR calendar. Real veteran hiring pipelines involve partnerships with veteran organizations that do pre-credentialing and skills translation work, structured onboarding that bridges the military-to-civilian culture gap, and mentorship programs that connect veteran hires to senior leaders who understand their background.
Programs like ATLVets' Manufacturing Pathway (AMP) exist precisely to close this gap — pre-credentialing veterans with OSHA certification, LSS Yellow Belt foundation, and manufacturing-specific resume work, then connecting them directly to employer partners who have committed to meaningful hiring. If you're a manufacturer, you can sponsor an AMP cohort and solve your workforce problem and advance a mission simultaneously.
Sponsor Veteran Development Programs
Corporate sponsorship of veteran leadership development organizations is one of the highest-leverage philanthropic investments available. It is tax-deductible as a donation to a 501(c)(3). It generates genuine employee pride and community goodwill — not the manufactured kind, the real kind that comes from being visibly associated with something that matters. And it provides direct access to a talent pipeline of highly capable, pre-screened veterans who are ready to contribute from day one.
Create Internal Veteran Networks
If your company is large enough to have employee resource groups, a veteran ERG is one of the most impactful you can create. It provides community for veteran employees, a structured pathway for their voices to reach leadership, and a cultural signal that the organization takes veteran talent seriously. It also creates a natural recruitment pipeline — veterans recruit veterans, and a strong internal veteran community is one of the most effective tools for veteran talent acquisition.
What Not to Do
A few patterns that are common and mostly counterproductive:
Don't treat veterans as broken. The dominant cultural narrative around veterans leads with trauma, struggle, and crisis. That narrative exists because those things are real for some veterans. But it is not the whole story — and when it becomes the default lens, it shapes how civilians interact with veterans in ways that are condescending, limiting, and often deeply frustrating to veterans themselves. The veteran in front of you is most likely not primarily defined by their wounds. They are defined by their leadership, their discipline, their operational experience, and their capability.
Don't confuse awareness with action. Sharing a social post, wearing a pin, or participating in a one-time event is not the same as sustained investment. Veterans' challenges are structural and long-term. They require structural and long-term responses. Awareness campaigns are valuable for reaching new audiences — but if awareness never converts to action, it is noise with good intentions.
Don't assume free is better. One of the counterintuitive truths of veteran service delivery is that free programs are often valued less than earned ones. Veterans come from a culture where everything is earned — rank, respect, resources. Programs that require veterans to earn their participation through service activities are valued more, completed at higher rates, and generate better outcomes than programs that hand everything over at no cost.
The next time you're in an airport and you see a veteran, you can still say thank you. But if you want to do something that actually changes their life — and changes the number — join the Hero Tree for $22/month, sponsor an AMP cohort, or connect a veteran you know to ATLVets programs. That's what moves the needle. That's what changes the number. That's what "thank you" actually looks like in action.
