|
Transcription Jobs
As
soon as you are ready to find
medical transcription job
opportunities, volunteer your
time, effort and resources to
establish your professionalism.
Seek out and join a local
chapter of the
American
Association of Medical
Transcriptionists (AAMT) in your
area, and ask how you may be of
help to your local chapter.
Volunteers are always needed and
will be welcomed with open arms.
This is a terrific way to brand
yourself as a person who is
serious about the medical
transcription career. Veteran
medical transcriptionists will
take notice of you, and that
will open the doors to medical
transcription job opportunities
in the future.
When seeking
medical
transcription job opportunities,
market yourself to local medical
transcription agencies. Set up
an appointment or interview, if
possible. Expand your network by
talking to everyone you can in
the medical transcription field
and let them know that you are
willing to do whatever it takes,
including volunteer work, to get
your foot in the door. Do not
forget to thank those who have
helped you along the way.
Medical transcription job
opportunities are everywhere;
use some unique strategies to
find them. Look for a local
situation that may be of benefit
to you. For example, in the
1990s, the County of Orange in
California declared bankruptcy.
I contacted the
Sheriff-Coroner's Office only to
discover that all but one
full-time medical
transcriptionist had been laid
off and there was a nine month
backlog of autopsy reports. Nine
months! After interviewing there
and receiving a great reception,
I worked there every Saturday
for almost a year and received a
wonderful education in Pathology
terminology. This was the best
experience I ever had. Plus, the
sole medical transcriptionist
was nearing retirement which put
me in a great position if I were
offered the job.
In your search for
medical
transcription job opportunities,
ask your instructors if they
need some help with transcribing
classroom assignments. When I
was an MT student, I remember
how bad the assignment copies
were. After I completed the
medical transcription course, I
word processed the assignments,
corrected the mistakes that had
been in them, and then took them
to a print shop for reprinting
and binding. Then I sent these
to my medical transcription
instructor. It was a way to
thank her for all she had done
for me. I also helped my medical
terminology instructor, who was
writing a book. I word processed
the medical reports for her
medical terminology book. I was
working full time as a medical
transcription and word
processor, but I made the time
to pay back these wonderful
professionals who gave me a
great education.
Volunteering is a networking
strategy used to find
unadvertised medical
transcription job opportunities.
Not many people employ this
technique. Although you may not
get immediate results from your
efforts, people will see you as
a serious medical
transcriptionist and admire your
professional tenacity in your
job search. The word will get
out that you are looking for a
MT job, and soon you will find
what you are looking for:
medical transcription job
opportunities.
|