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All That You Need To Know If You Are Aiming To Become A Secretary

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Nature of the Work

Secretarial work continues to evolve along with new office automation and organizational restructuring. In many cases, secretaries have assumed new responsibilities and learned to operate different office equipment. In the midst of these changes, though. Their central responsibilities remain much as they were. Most organizations still employ secretaries to perform and coordinate office activities and to ensure that information gets disseminated to staff and clients. Managers, professionals, and other support staff still rely on them to keep administrative operations under control.

Secretaries are responsible for a variety of administrative and clerical duties that are necessary to run and maintain organizations efficiently. They schedule appointments, give information to callers, organize and maintain files, and complete forms. They may also type letters, make travel arrangements, or contact clients. In addition, secretaries operate office equipment like facsimile machines, photocopiers, and telephones with voice mail capabilities.



Secretaries increasingly use personal computers to run spreadsheet, word processing, data base management, desktop publishing and graphics programs-tasks previously handled by managers and professionals. Because they are often relieved from dictation and typing, they can support several members of the professional staff. Secretaries sometimes work in clusters of three four so that they can work more flexibly and share their expertise.

Working Conditions

Secretaries' work often involve sitting for long periods. If they spend a lot of time typing, particularly at a video display terminal, they may encounter problems of eyestrain, stress, and repetitive motion problems such as carpal tunnel syndrome.

Office work lends itself to alternative or flexible working arrangements, like telecommuting, and one secretary in six works part-time. In addition, a significant number of secretaries work as temporaries. A few participate in job sharing arrangements in which two people divide responsibility for a single job. The majority of secretaries, however, are full-time employees who work a standard 40-hour week.

Employment

Secretaries are employed in organizations of every description. About one-half of all secretaries are employed in firms providing services, ranging from education and health to legal and business services. Others work for firms that engage in manufacturing, construction, wholesale and retail trade, transportation, and communications. Banks, insurance companies, investment firms, and real estate firms are important employers, as are federal, state, and local government agencies.

Training, Other Qualifications, and Advancement

High school graduates may qualify for secretarial positions provided they have basic office skills. Secretaries should be proficient in keyboarding and good at spelling, punctuation, grammar, and oral communication. Shorthand is necessary for some positions.

Knowledge of word processing, spreadsheet, and database management programs is becoming increasingly important to most employers. Because secretaries must be tactful in their dealings with many different people, employers also look for good interpersonal skills. Discretion, judgment, organizational ability, and initiative are especially important for higher level secretarial positions.

As office automation continues to evolve, retraining and continuing education will remain an integral part of many jobs. Continuing changes in the office environment have increased the demand for secretaries who are adaptable and versatile. Secretaries may have to attend classes to learn to operate new office equipment such as word processing equipment, information storage systems, personal computers, or new updated software packages. The skills needed for a secretarial job can be acquired in various ways. Secretarial training ranges from high school vocational education programs that teach office practices, shorthand, and keyboarding skills to one- to two-year programs in secretarial science offered by business schools, vocational-technical institutes, and community colleges. Many temporary help agencies provide formal training in computer and keyboarding skills.

These skills are most often acquired, however, through instruction offered at the workplace by other employees or by equipment and software vendors. Specialized training programs are available for students planning to become medical or legal secretaries or office automation specialists.

Testing and certification for entry-level office skills is available through the Office Proficiency Assessment and Certification (OPAC) program offered by Professional Secretaries International (PSI). As secretaries gain experience, they can earn the designation Certified Professional Secretary (CPS) by passing a series of examinations given by the Institute for Certifying Secretaries, a department of PSI. This designation is recognized by many employers as the mark of excellence for senior level office professionals. Similarly, those without experience who want to be certified as a legal support professional may be certified as an Accredited Legal Secretary (ALS) by the Certifying Board of the National Association of Legal Secretaries. They also administer an examination to certify a legal secretary with three years of experience as a Professional Legal Secretary (PLS).

Advancement for secretaries generally comes about by promotion to a secretarial position with more responsibilities. Qualified secretaries who broaden their knowledge of the company's operations and enhance their skills may be promoted to other positions such as senior or executive secretary, clerical supervisor, or office manager.

Secretaries with word processing experience can advance to jobs as word processing trainers, supervisors, or managers within their own firms or in a secretarial or word processing service bureau. Their experience as a secretary can lead to jobs such as instructor or sales representative with manufacturers of word processing or computer equipment. With additional training, many legal secretaries become legal assistants and paralegals.

Job Outlook

The major factor limiting employment growth for most secretaries is the widespread application of new office automation. Secretaries have become more productive with the help of word processing machines, personal computers, electronic mail, scanners, facsimile machines, and voice message systems. These technologies will continue to be purchased by firms, ensuring that employment growth for secretaries will lag behind the rapidly growing amount of office work.

The use of automated equipment is also changing the work flow in many offices. Administrative duties are being reassigned and the functions of entire departments are being restructured. In some cases, such traditional secretarial duties as typing or key-boarding, filing, copying, and accounting are being assigned to workers in other units or departments. In some law offices and physicians' offices, for example, paralegals and medical assistants are assuming some tasks formerly done by secretaries.

Professionals and managers increasingly do their own word processing rather than submit the work to secretaries and other support staff. In addition, there is a trend in many offices for groups of professionals and managers to "share" secretaries. The traditional arrangement of one secretary per manager is becoming less prevalent; instead, secretaries increasingly support systems or units. This approach often means that secretaries assume added responsibilities and are seen as valuable members of a team, but it also contributes to slower rates of employment growth.

Related Occupations

A number of other workers type, record information, a process paperwork. Among these are bookkeepers, receptionist stenographers, personnel clerks, typists and word processors, gal assistants, medical assistants, and medical record technicians. A growing number of secretaries share in managerial and human resource responsibilities. Occupations requiring these skills include clerical supervisor, systems manager, office manager, a human resource officer.
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