2. What is secretary?
• A secretary shall be defined as an executive
assistant who possesses a mastery of office
skills, demonstrates the ability to assume
responsibility without direction or
supervision, exercises initiative and
judgment, and makes decisions within the
scope of assigned authority
3. The Classification of a Secretary
•
Secretary level B
Performs a limited range of secretarial duties
in a small company or for a supervisor in a
large firm. May take dictation and transcribe
from notes and dictaphone with speed and
accuracy. Screen calls, make
appointment, handles travel
arrangement, answer routine
correspondence, and maintains filling
system.
4. •
Secretary level A
Performs an unlimited range of secretarial
duties for middle management personnel or
more than individual. Composes and/or
takes and transcribes correspondence of a
complex and confidential nature. Position
requires a knowledge of company
policy, procedures, and above average
secretarial and administrative skills.
5. •
Executive Secretary/Administrative
Assistant
Performs a full range of secretarial and
administrative duties for high level members
of executive staff. Handles project oriented
duties and maybe held accountable for the
timely completion of this tasks. Relieves
executive of routine administrative detail.
Position requires an in depth knowledge of
company practice, structure, and high
degree of technical skill.
6. Types of secretary
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Administrative Secretary
Executive Secretary
Legal Secretary
Office Secretary
School Secretary
Litigation Secretary
Medical Secretary
Real Estate Secretary
Unit Secretary
7. SECRETARIAL JOB DESCRIPTIONS
1. Schedules appointment and maintains calendar
2. Receives and assists visitors and telephone
callers.
3. Arranges business itineraries and coordinates
executive’s travel requirement.
4. Take action authorized during executive’s
absence.
5. Take manual shorthands and transcribes from it
or transcribes from machine dictation.
8. 6. Types material from longhand or rough copy
7. Sorts, reads, and annotates incoming mail and
document and attaches appropriate file to
facilitate necessary action
8. Determines routing, signatures required, and
maintains follow up.
9. Composes correspondences and reports.
10. Prepares communications outlined by
executive in oral or written directions.
9. 11. Researches and abstracts information and
supporting data in preparation for meeting, work
projects, and reports.
12. Correlates and edits material submitted by others.
13. Organizes material which may be presented to
executive in draft format.
14. Maintains fillings and records management systems
and other office flow procedures.
15. Makes arrangements for and coordinates
conferences and meetings.
10. 16. May serve as recorder of minutes with
responsibility for transcription and distribution to
participants.
17. May supervise or hire other employees
18. Select and/or make recommendations for
purchase of supplies and equipment, maintain
budget and expense account records, financial
records, and confidential files.
19. Maintains up-to-date procedures manual for the
specific duties handled on the job.
20. Performs other duties as assigned or as
judgment or necessity dictates.
11. There are four scopes or area of
secretarial duties :
1. Technical skills
2. An understanding of business functions and
interlocking functions
3. Skill in human relation
4. Facility in oral and written communication
12. DIVISION OF THE SECRETARIAL FUNCTION
•
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
TYPING ACTIVITIES
Correspondence
Reports
Business forms
Machine transcriptions
Files
• NONTYPING ACTIVITIES
1. Handling mail
2. Scheduling appointments
3. Making travel
arrangements
4. Researching information
5. Other secretarial services
16. •
1.
2.
3.
Divisions of a company
Production
Purchasing
Marketing :
a. Sales department
b. Advertising department
c. Market research department
17. 4. Finance division
5. Research and development division
6. Administrative services division :
a. Personnel department
b. Information services
18. Why are you needed?
• Every businessperson dreams of having the
perfect administrative assistant, and every
administrative assistant dreams of having the
perfect boss
19. What do employers want?
Few of the most important qualities:
1. Punctuality
2. Dependability
3. Ability to learn
4. Willingness to follow instruction
5. Loyalty and confidentiality
6. And something else
20. COMMUNICATION
Communication is important in all situations and in
particular the situations where you can build first
impressions:
• meetings;
• on the phone;
• networking;
• giving presentations;
• business conferences;
• e-mails;
• social occasions.
21. Visual, auditory and kinaesthetic
• You can tell whether people are
visual, auditory or kinaesthetic by their body
language and the language they use, as
outlined below:
22. VISUAL
• Visual people process their world by means of
pictures and what they see, including the use
of pictures in their decision making.
23. AUDITORY
• Auditory people process their world and arrive
at their decisions by means of the words that
are used and what they hear.
24. KINAESTHETIC
• Kinaesthetic people base their decisions on how
they feel.
• They drop their eyes down towards the ground
when you talk to them, and talk about how they
feel:
‘That feels right’, ‘That makes me feel sad’, ‘That
makes me feel good’, ‘I understand how you
feel’, ‘I feel you are worried about…’, ‘I feel as if
you are uncomfortable…’, ‘I sense you’re thinking
about…’ and so on.