If you’re a nurse who is thinking about a career change, you’re not alone. There’s a recent ANM Health Care survey that says over 40% of nurses are seeking a career change. Job satisfaction for nurses is low, for a lot of reasons: the hours, the pay, and a lack of respect from doctors are a few of ‘em. Or maybe you just need a change. That’s not unusual. Many people make several leading career changes over their lifetimes, just because their current job no longer fits into the life they want.
But if you got into nursing because you like science and you love helping people by making a difference in one of the most important areas of their lives and you’re not willing to make a 180-degree turn into show business or basket-weaving, what will you do? How can you transition the skills you’ve learned as a nurse into another career? What kinds of careers can utilize your particular skill set? Medical sales. Pharmaceutical sales reps often have high job satisfaction, generous pay and benefits, and a more varied wardrobe (no more scrubs for you).
Nurses can often make a smooth, natural transition into laboratory sales jobs: clinical device sales, hospital equipment revenue, imaging sales, pharma revenue, pathology revenue, biotech sales, medical revenue, or clinical diagnostics. Why?
- You’ve a science background–a must for anyone getting into laboratory sales. You got to understand what you’re selling and how it can meet the needs of your customers.
- You probably have practical, on-the-job experience with the products you’d sell. What better way to be able to demonstrate how your customer can benefit from your product than by having been in their shoes?
- You already know how to deal with difficult doctors. (Enough told.)
However, landing a job in medical sales can be difficult because there’s a lot of competition–because it’s a awesome career. So what do you need to do to place yourself in the best possible career opportunity as a candidate? Even though you have an advantage because of your background, you’re not in the clear yet. You got to do some research on how to land a clinical laboratory sales job, and make sure you can present yourself as a strong job candidate. Here’s a quick outline of steps you can take:
- Read sales books and get some sales training…there are pharmaceutical sales training programs, but they’re only one option.
- Job shadow someone in the specific product area you’re interested in. That way, you’ll get a feel for a typical day, and furnish yourself with a resource for your 30/60/90-day plan and your interview conversation.
- Conduct informational interviews with medical sales reps and medical sales managers. It will give you tremendous insight into the job, and make you a more informed candidate.
- Establish a LinkedIn profile that will introduce you as a professional, and discover sales-related groups to join so that you can network–get your name out there, and gather industry information.
- Write a killer RESUME. Hire it out if you got to, and include your job shadowing and revenue training on it.
- Polish your interview skills. This is critical. Interviews for sales candidates are difficult, so you must be prepared.
- Learn how to write a 30/60/90-day revenue plan to present to the hiring manager. It’s a written outline of what you’ll do in the first 3 months on the job. A 30/60/90-day plan shows the hiring manager that you understand the career opportunity, and aren’t going in cold. Plus, it spotlights your initiative, drive, and energy (all desirable qualities for a revenue rep).
- Submit your resume to a pharmaceutical sales recruiter.
- Consider getting custom coaching. A recruiter doesn’t have time to really help you get the position, but a career coach can show you what you need, role play interview queries, fine-tune your resume, and guide you through all the details.
Article courtesy of Peggy McKee - Owner / Senior Recruiter at the nationally
recognized pharma and clinical sales recruiting team of PHC Consulting.
© Copyright 2008 PHC Consulting | All rights reserved
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If you are a sales professional or want to become one, or if you are looking for a new sales job, you will face one of the toughest interview processes of any job seeker.
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