Archive for the ‘Careers’ Category

A mouse can help you recruit – 194,350 recruiters cannot be wrong?

Sunday, March 27th, 2011

The flood gates opened, gallons of coffee and loads of doughnut later – the progressive (note the underline in progressive) bunch called an Engineering team with this job order:

An intelligent assistant is needed to fit resumes for a job order
Resumes should have relevant data – preferably multi dimensional (data, photo, voice, video – the works)
The intelligent assistant should be flexible to the job order and support fitment decision making
The assistant should be nice, easy and effective, reach global & local – and yes, we’ll pay the assistant for results
I don’t mind if the assistant can bring me some money, said someone, high on caffeine

So many lines of code, tweaks more coffees and doughnuts later www.GoRecroot.com

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A Medical Transcriptionist Resume Will Highlight Your Unique Skills And Qualifications

Saturday, March 12th, 2011

A Medical Transcriptionist in short MT positions, require a certification with training, specific skills like fast type writing, listening skills, and a specific field like Radiology, Operations report OR emergency reports handling etc.

Do make sure your mention your knowledge on industry standards like HIPPA requirements etc.

Below is a list of things that should appear in your resume.

Your knowledge history like training, certifications etc have to be highlighted.

The quality you can deliver in terms of % accuracy.
mention your type writing speed.

Your years of experience in the MT field, and if you could explain in detail which field you were transcribing: opthology, nephrology etc.

Give a brief description about the employer: what they are doing, if they are not well known.

Whether you prefer to work from home. If so, you have the required computer and other MT hardware at your home.
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A Medical Transcriptionist Career Could Be Just What The Doctor Ordered

Monday, February 28th, 2011

A Medical Transcriptionists career could pay off well for those seeking to update their career training. As thousands of jobs are being outsourced and sent overseas in every sector, for those fortunate enough to be within the employment ranks as medical transcriptionists, this sector is projected to grow faster than average for all jobs through 2013. Demand for medical transcription services will be fueled by a growing and aging population. Older age groups receive more medical tests, treatments, and procedures that require documentation. A high level of demand for transcription services also will be sustained by the continued need for electronic documentation that can easily be shared among providers, third-party payers, regulators, consumers, and health information systems.

Growing numbers of medical transcriptionists will be needed to and identify discrepancies in medical reports, amend patients’ records, and edit documents from speech recognition systems . An increasing demand for standardized records should result in rapid employment growth in physicians’ offices, especially in large group practices. Medical transcriptionists held strong employment representation with about 105,000 jobs in 2004. About 4 out of 10 worked in hospitals and another 3 out of 10 worked in offices of physicians. Others worked for business support services; medical and diagnostic laboratories; outpatient care centers; and offices of physical, occupational and speech therapists, and audiologists.Compensation methods for medical transcriptionists vary. Some are paid based on the number of hours they work or on the number of lines they transcribe. The higher earners can forseeably expect more than $20 an hour.
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A Little History About The Plumber Trade

Friday, February 11th, 2011

Plumbers specialize in the installation and maintenance of water systems. Like electricians, they are required to obtain a license from a trade or vocational school and have a background in various aspects of industrial, domestic, and communal pipe work, water heating (steam- and gas- fitters), water treatment (such as water cleaning and purification), drainage, sewer networking, dynamics of water flow, water storage, temperature adjustment, and dangers of water hazards.

Plumbers get their name from the Latin Plumbum, for “lead,” since the ancient Romans used pipes made from lead. The term therefore refers to the metallic element out of which their main building material is made.

Interestingly, Einstein, the father of modern mathematics, admired the plumber:

“If I would be a young man again and had to decide how to make my living, I would not try to become a scientist or scholar or teacher. I would rather choose to be a plumber in the hope to find that modest degree of independence still available under present circumstances.” – Albert Einstein, The Reporter, 18 November 1954
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