When Asked Whether You Have Experience...

Many new medical assistant school graduates seeking their first job wonder, how do you get experience when no one wants to hire you? If you graduated successfully from a medical assistant training program, then you are a trained worker with job specific skills, you are well prepared and able to learn; a valuable asset to any potential employer. As part of the curriculum you already are trained in clinical and administrative medical office routines, medical terminology, common laboratory tasks, the proper techniques and safety measures involved, as well as venipuncture.  If you did an externship as part of this training, then you even have direct medical office job experience. Even previous jobs, such as truck driving, customer services or cashier is experience. Why do people forget that during an interview when asked? KNOW that customer services, punctuality, accuracy, honesty, as well as planning, or multitasking is VERY important in a medical office! I don't care, even if it was "just a McDonald's cashier job! If your cash in your cash drawer was always correct at closing, that is valuable experience that can play a major role in a medical office (accuracy, honesty, detail to attention, courteous customer interaction). Learn what doctors expect of medical assistants Remember, that the medical assistant is the FIRST point of contact patients see when they come and go for their appointments, or call the office, and...
Source: Medical Assistant Net Blog - Category: Nurses Authors: Source Type: blogs