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The interview was pretty brief: what's your availability, are you a normal person who can interact in a professional manner, are you aware of the requirements (vocab and learning wise) and are prepared to meet them, etc.So I just got invited to interview with ScribeAmerica (yay!) and I was wondering if anyone here who's worked for them has any feedback/tips/advice. What was it like, how long was it, did they grill you on that list of vocab, etc.? Thanks in advance.
The interview was pretty brief: what's your availability, are you a normal person who can interact in a professional manner, are you aware of the requirements (vocab and learning wise) and are prepared to meet them, etc.
However, this is very much left up to the discretion of the hiring manager at each location, so ymmv.
So I just got invited to interview with ScribeAmerica (yay!) and I was wondering if anyone here who's worked for them has any feedback/tips/advice. What was it like, how long was it, did they grill you on that list of vocab, etc.? Thanks in advance.
At the same time, I think they can seize onto your discomfort if they mention them and you get the 'oh crap here it comes' deer-in-headlights look. Even if they don't quiz you on them, giving them to you ahead of time lets them see how you react when they remind you that you need to know all of those things.They did not even ask me any of the words at my interview lol. I was kind of sad because I had memorized all of them haha! It's a great job though. YOu are essentially getting paid to shadow. Great application boost
They did not even ask me any of the words at my interview lol. I was kind of sad because I had memorized all of them haha! It's a great job though. YOu are essentially getting paid to shadow. Great application boost
At the same time, I think they can seize onto your discomfort if they mention them and you get the 'oh crap here it comes' deer-in-headlights look. Even if they don't quiz you on them, giving them to you ahead of time lets them see how you react when they remind you that you need to know all of those things.
Awesome, thanks to you too. 🙂
Okay, good to know, thanks. I'm planning on looking at them and being familiar with them, but not devoting large amounts of time to memorizing them yet.
They did not even ask me any of the words at my interview lol. I was kind of sad because I had memorized all of them haha! It's a great job though. YOu are essentially getting paid to shadow. Great application boost
I applied for a position a couple of days ago so I don't know if I'm going to get it yet, but I was curious: how hard is scribing? How long does it take, roughly, to be comfortable with it? I know it depends per person but just wanted a general idea.
I've seen on other threads related to scribing that fast and accurate typing speed is highly preferred, if not crucial. I type 89-91 wpm without making mistakes. Would I be all right for the job?
Mine was individual.was it an individual or group interview? I have 1 tomorrow and just want to be prepared
It seemed overwhelming at first, but by my second day of floor training (after all the classroom stuff), I felt pretty comfortable with it, and didn't really need supervision for the rest of my "training" shifts.I applied for a position a couple of days ago so I don't know if I'm going to get it yet, but I was curious: how hard is scribing? How long does it take, roughly, to be comfortable with it? I know it depends per person but just wanted a general idea.
You'll be fine. 🙂I've seen on other threads related to scribing that fast and accurate typing speed is highly preferred, if not crucial. I type 89-91 wpm without making mistakes. Would I be all right for the job?