Healthcare-Bound Careers
As economic growth remains at a standstill for most industries, job seekers are increasingly pursuing industries that have stabilized, or those that appear to offer greater employment security. The healthcare industry has experienced the greatest increase in employment, and, according to newly released employment projections from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), it will add the most jobs through 2012.
Although the majority of positions within the healthcare sector are, in fact, clinical positions, I’m not suggesting you enroll in medical or nursing school to pursue a clinical career! There are many non-clinical, management, and administrative support roles, such as in finance, marketing, human resources, and IT, among others.
One of the biggest challenges in breaking into healthcare is a lack of direct industry experience. By incorporating some advanced research and applying a strategy of networking, you will significantly improve your potential for getting noticed by recruiters and hiring managers, even though they may prefer candidates with industry experience.
Assess Your Transferable Skills
Take a step back and review your work history, experiences, technical skills, and professional core competencies. To determine which are transferable and valuable to the healthcare industry, review and study the job descriptions (relative to your discipline—finance, HR, marketing, etc.) that are posted online.
1. Use a job lead aggregator, such as www.indeed.com, to review many job posting sites at the same time.
2. Start with your typical search for jobs based on your discipline and level, then search nationwide to broaden your research results. Require specific industry-identifying words in the description, such as HEALTHCARE, “HEALTH CARE,” or HOSPITAL.
3. Copy the content of 10 to 15 “best match” job descriptions into a Word document. Carefully review the content and identify the requirements that “mirror” your experience and skills. Document those that are most common among all the postings. These are your core transferable skills.
4. Finally, determine how to articulate these transferable skills to healthcare recruiters and hiring managers.
Industry Research
Become familiar with the “biggest players” in the local healthcare community (independent hospitals, healthcare systems, managed care, medical schools, residential care, etc.). Use tools like www.indeed.com and www.simplyhired.com to determine those with the most employment activity. Cross-reference what you find with LinkedIn to determine who you may know within these organizations to provide further insight and assist you in your new career goal.
People Research
Using similar search keywords as those above, use LinkedIn to find people currently employed within healthcare related to your area of expertise (finance, HR, etc.). Furthermore, if you connect with people who have recently (1-3 years) transitioned their career into healthcare, you will gain an insider’s viewpoint of the challenges and learning curves when navigating this new environment.
By incorporating this process, you will discover ways to minimize the perceived gap of your experience relative to the healthcare community. This process will naturally improve your visibility within influential circles of professionals and executives in the industry. And, as I’ve told my clients for over two decades: It’s NOT who you know…it’s who knows YOU!