4 Skills You Can Transfer to a Health-Care Career

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An older veteran in a wheelchair talks with service members.
An older veteran in a wheelchair talks with service members. (Courtesy photo)

If you're a newcomer to health care or are considering entering it, you may think your job history and experiences outside the field are irrelevant. You're wrong. Many of your strengths and skills -- whether they include customer-service expertise or the ability to multitask under pressure -- are probably more relevant and transferable to health care than you realize. A health-care professional and two recruiters offer a rundown on some valuable transferable skills, as well as advice on how to showcase such attributes during your job search.

Common Transferable Skills and Strengths

Compassion and empathy

Tony Rush, a nurse in the orthopedic trauma unit at a major medical center in Rochester, Minnesota, was in the seminary for several years after high school but ultimately decided not to enter the priesthood. He then worked as a counselor for troubled and refugee youth before entering nursing.

Rush says his seminary training and counseling experiences sharpened some of the strengths -- empathy and compassion for the poor and troubled, good listening skills, an understanding of different cultures and a respect for teamwork -- that make him a good nurse. "If I [had] gone into nursing right out of high school, I wouldn't be the RN [registered nurse] I am now," he says.

Strong communication skills

Speaking clearly and listening carefully are other transferable skills that are indispensable for people who hope to be at the bedside providing quality health care, says Gabriel Heckt, a vice president at Martin Fletcher, a health-care recruiting firm. Clinicians must communicate effectively not only with patients, but also with physicians, managers, colleagues and patients' families.

The ability to provide accurate and concise documentation is also very important in health care, Heckt notes. A new clinician's communication skills could have been tested and improved in many non-health-care job situations, such as speaking up in meetings, writing stellar memos and understanding the verbal and nonverbal language of the 2-year-old child she nannied.

Customer-service know-how

Rush jokes that every nurse should have worked as a waitperson before entering nursing (although he never waited tables himself). Good servers must be organized and able to multitask, as must good nurses, Rush says. More importantly, good wait staff, such as good front-line, health-care workers, must provide satisfactory customer service.

"Hospitals are judged on patient satisfaction," Heckt says, noting that outgoing hospital patients evaluate workers on whether they were "friendly/not friendly," "helpful/not helpful" and other measures. Candidates for clinical positions often set themselves apart if they can demonstrate that they provided good customer service in a restaurant or "in an office when seven phones were ringing and you had to greet people," Heckt says.

Grace under pressure

Health-care organizations are usually overjoyed to employ people with military backgrounds. Veterans who have been on the front lines of a war or conflict have undoubtedly accumulated skills transferable to a fast-paced, high-stakes health-care job. "Obviously, time is of the essence, and they've had to quickly think on their feet," said Douglas C. Ansary, Arizona regional director of recruiting for Banner Health's Talent Acquisition Group.

The consequences are far less dramatic in most jobs than in the life-or-death setting of the battlefield -- or emergency department. However, people with experience working in other pressure-cooker settings where their adrenaline is regularly pumping -- such as the stock trading floor -- probably have a leg up when it comes to managing the stress of a health-care environment.

How to Showcase Your Transferable Skills

Once you've identified your transferable skills, you still need to impress potential employers with them. You'll catch the eye (and prevent an employer's online application system from weeding you out) if you use keywords on your resume that showcase your transferable skills and that match the keywords in the employer's job posting (such as "effective listening skills").

Then expect open-ended behavioral questions in an interview, since health-care employers today generally identify behaviors important to a specific job and then try to ascertain through interviewing where and how job candidates have applied those behaviors in other jobs or through past experiences. Take advantage of the opportunity to give thoughtful answers referencing the skills and strengths you gained through previous jobs, volunteer work and life experiences that will help you in your new line of work.

Health-care hiring managers know that if job candidates have "demonstrated behaviors in the past, they will do it again in the future, and their behaviors would be applicable from one industry to the other," Ansary says. "It doesn't matter where they've come from, as long as they've shown the same aptitudes they're going to use in health care."

Find the Right Veteran Job

Whether you want to polish your resume, find veteran job fairs in your area or connect with employers looking to hire veterans, Military.com can help. Sign up for a free Military.com membership to have job postings, guides and advice, and more delivered directly to your inbox.

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