1. Search for a role, such as "tax accountant"
2. Choose your State
3. Click Search
Does your prowess in typing bring you to the proverbial heights because you are able to turn over at least 30 to 50 words per minute? Are you a listener type of person? Are you meticulous with your work and pay careful attention to every little detail of what you do? If so, then it is highly advisable for you to try out applying for stenographer jobs, particularly as an audio typist.
The stenographer is basically also a secretary, or one of those jobs under the secretarial type of jobs. But what distinguishes a stenographer job from all other secretarial jobs is, the stenographer usually makes use of short hand techniques when taking or jotting in stuff. Short hand refers to a certain writing technique that does not utilise the whole word but only a few letters from the word or sentence or symbols as a representation of the whole text that you wanted to write. While a stenographer may make use of the conventional pen and paper at his initial point of contact with the information, like all other modern-day secretaries, he has to translate his notes into reader friendly text through a computer or a typewriting machine.
Managers, or other company administration bosses for that matter, are sometimes fond of simply telling their secretaries what they want achieved. For example, "Write an invitation to Dr. Scufford, tell him it's for our new department's inauguration, that the time will be at 9 in the morning and reception is at our plush cafeteria," and so on and so forth. This is where an audio typist can come in handy. An audio typist is a combination typical secretary and stenographer in the sense that it does all the paper work in the office and does most of this in short hand to ensure efficiency.