Clerical Jobs Keep The Company Running But Who
Cares?
Clerical jobs may get you respect to start with. They are often the entry level job in the workplace, and they
don’t pay very well, but ironically, they are the jobs that knit a whole company together. Often theirs is the
first voice a caller hears, representing the whole company. They also take messages, and are responsible for not
only getting the number right, but the name spelled right and the message right. Any one of these missing, and the
hapless clerk will get yelled at by just about anybody. Even if you are an 18-year old who has never been in an
office before.
Sometimes employers will ask for various kinds of skills, especially computer skills, even though they might not
need them. Television comedy series are full of people in clerical jobs who seem to not do anything but talk about
the other employees. If you don’t have any formal training, but seem eager to learn, you might also get hired
because the boss likes your attitude or energy. They think you’ll pick up the skills of the job just by sitting in
the chair.
Because a clerical job seems so general, there is a huge array of differences in responsibilities. Typically, a
clerk would answer phones, take messages, receive the mail and sort it, write letters when asked, keep track of
various things the company does, and here’s a biggie, keep their desk orderly. If you are the kind of person who
likes everything out on your desk where you can keep track of it, it will look like chaos to others. There is also
getting coffee for others, or preparing a room for a meeting, or going to the bank. If you have Attention Deficit
Disorder, there’s a clerical job for you. Except for the part where you are supposed to remember things, which may
be a wee bit of a problem. But keeping all the balls in the air is the job.
You will probably serve a whole bunch of different bosses. Everybody in the company will ask you for help.
Unless one boss tells you to do his work first, this must be worked out or you will be lost, behind, and making
people mad. If you are the only clerical person in a small company, although you may be called clerical, you will
become the office manager. Most people consider anything administrative to be clerical: payroll, human relations,
insurance, building maintenance, and the like.
Even though clerical jobs have differences in specific responsibilities, there are the same expectations for
them: you are there on time, everyday, and leave on time every day, and take the exact amount of lunch time you are
supposed to. You are always cheerful and perky, no matter what’s happening at home. You can find everything,
remember everything, and produce any quantity of letters, reports, or messages without breaking a sweat. Do this
and all the other employees will love you.
Clerical Jobs Keep The Company
Running But Who Cares?
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