Archive for May, 2009

3 Critical Things That Will Move You To The Front Of The Line To Get The Nursing Job

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

We recently had the opportunity to talk with a hospital decision maker about what makes one RN candidate stand out over another during the candidate selection process. We asked “Help us look through your eyes when you review the RN candidates that have been submitted to your open jobs from agencies”. Here is what we were told:

First, in today’s environment, having at least 3-5 years current experience in a specialty is just a ticket in for consideration. If nurses don’t have that, they will likely move to the bottom of the stack of profiles. Attention gets focused on 3 critical points:

1) The Nurses Resume. Nurses need to remember that a resume does the talking for them. Unit Managers don’t have the time to call and pre-screen candidates. The resume is what speaks on the nurse’s behalf. Many resumes that we receive from agencies are outdated, lack dates (we like to see month’s and years…not just years), and often do not contain all the necessary data such as the patient population the nurse has worked with, equipment used and procedures familiar to the nurse. The nurse needs to be able to summarize in her resume the reasons we would want her to work at our hospital.
2) Skills Checklist. A nurse’s skills checklist should be current up to the date of submission. Nurses typically update their skills checklist annually. However, we like to see skills checklist that are a true reflection of the nurse we are going to get. What a nurse can and can’t do is a determining factor if we are going to select them or pass on them.
3) References. We like to see references from supervisors. While our hospital policy does allow references from fellow nurses, we still prefer supervisor references. The reason being is that it is too easy for a nurse to have a couple of her friends give her a glowing reference based on their friendship vs. what the nurse is capable of clinically. If it comes down to two like candidates and one has supervisory references and the other has references from co-workers…well the supervisory references will get the advantage. That being said, we also realize that some nurses don’t want their supervisor to know that they may be moving on and that is why we don’t rule them out.

Well, there we have it…straight from the person who selects agency / travel nurses for her hospital. Whether you agree or disagree…it was an honest dialog and we appreciate her sharing her selection practices with us. What do you think?

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Travel Nursing…Is It Dead?

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

Travel nursing has certainly been contracted by the economy. But is it fair to say that it is dead?…on life support? Our opinion is that travel nursing is very much alive, but the rules of the travel nursing jobs have changed. Not too long ago, travel nursing jobs out numbered the available travel nurses. Travel nurses could be selective and move at their own pace and the travel nursing job, more often than not, would still be there when the nurse was ready. This is no longer the case. Now, travel nurses outnumber the available travel nursing jobs. Let’s be clear though, travel nursing jobs continue to open everyday, just not in the volume they did in the past. The difference today is that the jobs tend to close minutes after they open because tens to hundreds of travel nursing candidates get submitted that quickly. Good or bad, that is the way it is today. It is probably a short lived scenerio that is tied to the economy. But, nonetheless, it is a scenerio that we all have to adapt to if we want to succeed. So what should a travel nurse do to put the odds in his/her favor for a travel job? First, the nurse should work towards getting speciality specific credentials. For example; An emergency room nurse should strive to acquire TNCC, CEN, and PALS in addition to having BLS and ACLS. Secondly, the nurse should discuss geographic locations with their recruiter and give permission for submission to any jobs that open in those predetermined areas. Thirdly, the nurse needs to be fully compliant with his/her agency’s submission policy. This is usually the basics: resume, skills checklist, two professional references, and copies of the nurse’s professional license(s). Travel nurses that follow these 3 tips will increase their odds of landing a travel nursing job. Happy travels!

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