Administrative Assistant: Hard Skills
Administrative Assistant: Hard Skills
Administrative Assistant: Hard Skills
Administrative assistants are some of the most versatile professionals out there. From handling
personalities to keeping everything organized to running office operations, it’s a job that requires
a lot of different skills at any given time. If you’re thinking about becoming an administrative
assistant for the next phase of your career, let’s look at some of the most important skills you’ll
need to succeed.
Hard Skills
First and foremost, you should make sure that your hard skills are in order for a job as an
administrative assistant. What are hard skills? They’re the skills that require technical or specific
ability. These are easy to list because you can use very specific points. For example:
Technology Skills
Administrative assistants need to be pretty tech savvy in today’s world. It’s not enough to be
familiar with using computers in general. Your boss may depend on you to be a technical ninja in
areas he or she is not. An administrative assistant should have a good grasp on software or apps
in these areas:
Email. Microsoft Outlook is the most common, but many companies are turning to
Gmail and Slack to manage interoffice email.
Maintaining a calendar. Again, Outlook’s calendar is the gold standard, but you should
be able to schedule meetings, create invitations, and manage calendars. And with a growing
focus in the workplace on connecting people remotely via technology, programs like
WebEx or GoToMeeting help you set up videoconferences.
Word processing. Microsoft Word and Google Docs are most typical, but you should be
skilled in using document creation programs to create different kinds of formatted
documents (like correspondence or reports).
Presentations. Whether you’ll be making presentations or the people you support will be
making them, chances are you’ll be expected to either organize information into
presentations or create them from scratch. Programs like Microsoft PowerPoint have built-in
tools and templates for creating down-and-dirty presentations, but if you want to bump your
skills to the next level, you can also learn shortcuts and design elements to create ones that
stand out more.
Digital databases/filing systems. Part of just about every administrative assistant’s job is
maintaining orderly files, whether those are old-fashioned hard copies or digital records.
Digital editing. Many administrative assistants are tasked with creating or editing
manuals, newsletters, invitations, marketing materials, or other materials for public
consumption or within the company. Having expertise in programs like Adobe Acrobat or
Photoshop can make you even more valuable and add some designer cred to your resume.
Productivity/project management. From project management systems like JIRA to
personal organizational tools like Asana, experience using productivity software can be
essential to planning, executing, and organizing projects.
Administrative Support Skills
Administrative support skills are also hard skills that help an admin support his or her team.
These can include:
Communication Skills
Communicating well in person and in writing is a key element of the administrative assistant’s
job. It’s a service role, which means that you need to be able to talk, email, or otherwise
communicate on behalf and/or your boss. Coordination is a huge part of the job, so that means
not only getting along with everyone (or fake it if you can’t quite muster genuine “like” or
enthusiasm in dealing with someone), but also making sure everyone has the information they
need. Clear and efficient communication, complete with good grammar, is essential.
Customer service
Managing client relationships
Writing email or other correspondence with the whole audience in mind
Time Management Skills
As an admin, you’re likely going to be responsible for other people’s time as much as your own,
so being able to coordinate schedules, set reminders, and make sure things are staying on task is
a crucial part of the job.
Setting deadlines
Meeting deadlines
Managing calendars (potentially multiple ones)
Coordinating meeting times among large groups
Sending reminders to stakeholders to keep projects or tasks on schedule
Organizational Skills
Administrative assistants are usually responsible for not only keeping themselves organized, but
also those around them. The admin’s desk should be a calm oasis of order even when everything
else is chaotic. These skills are essential, but they can be developed as well, with care and
attention to both the tasks at hand and the bigger picture of what needs to be done.
Attention to detail
Billing/bookkeeping
Managing calendars and appointments
Preparing for meetings, including making room, technology, or logistics arrangements
Filing
Taking inventory
Multitasking
Making travel arrangements
Coordinating and planning events
Prioritizing tasks and projects
Problem Solving Skills
Admins are also fixers. That may mean helping your boss troubleshoot issues or helping to solve
problems around the office to make sure things are running smoothly. Being able to think calmly
and critically about how to approach a situation (even when things are overwhelmingly busy or
going wrong) is a skill set highly valued by just about every employer, no matter what industry.
Supportive Services
The admin office manager often coordinates a variety of supportive services for the entire
office. She might oversee or manage clerical or administrative staff, plan budgets, coordinate
special events, manage travel arrangements or oversee the maintenance of office equipment.
These duties require her to interface with multiple internal customers or suppliers outside the
organization. Her savvy and perceptive communication skills help her transmit her needs and
ideas to all these people when needed. Because of her responsibilities, her good
communication skills are at the heart of what she does.
Listening Skills
The office manager is the go-to person to help solve issues that arise. While it's important for
her to know how to talk to workers at all levels, her ability to listen and interpret others' needs
is paramount. Her listening skills help her ask the right questions to get clarification. Because
she might assign tasks or duties to clerical or administrative staff, she must first understand the
parameters of what needs to be done to communicate this effectively to her staff. Her excellent
communication skills help her provide the appropriate instructions so the staff can successfully
complete their duties.
Writing Skills
In addition to her excellent verbal communication skills, an administrative office manager
communicates just as clearly through emails, memos or letters. She has developed clarity in her
written communications and doesn't ramble or provide unneeded information. Her written
communication is open and direct. She avoids using terminology that people will
misunderstand and knows all the protocols of written communications, including formats and
styles, and whom to include on written notes.
Forms of Communications
Communication includes writing and talking, as well as non-verbal communication (such as
facial expressions, body language or gestures), visual communication (i.e. the use of images or
pictures, such as painting, photography, video or film), and electronic communication (i.e.
telephone calls, electronic mail, cable television or satellite broadcasts). These forms of
communication are conveyed as messages to be received and understood by the listener or
receiver to elicit an action or otherwise.
Communication Tools in Administration
Communication is a vital part of personal life and is also important in business, education, and
any other situation where people encounter each other. Businesses are concerned with
communication in several special ways. Some businesses build and install communication
equipment such as fax (facsimile) machines, video cameras, compact disk (CD) players, printing
presses, persona lcomputers, and telephone to aid the smooth flow of communication. Other
Departments/Agencies/Companies create some of the messages or contents that those
technologies carry, such as movies, books and software. These
Departments/Agencies/Companies are part of the media or telecommunications industries.
THE IMPORTANCE OF COMMUNICATION IN ADMINISTRATION
Communication in administration is very important in every business. People in organizations
need to communicate to co-ordinate their work and to inform other soutside the business about
their products and services.
The ability to communicate effectively with others is a top attribute of a successful business
person. Communication skills are vital to the success of the workplace. The ability to
communicate effectively with customers, co-workers, subordinates, and supervisor is a sine qua
non in career advancement. It is important to state that job skills alone do not ensure success in
business. The ability to communicate well with supervisors, customers, and co-workers are very
important in all administration. Communication skills in the form of a written document o ra
conversation reflect on the staff and the organization. The impression customers and business
associates from about the staff and organization are important and lasting. Many of these
impressions are based solely on the communication which is done.
Communication with others determines their opinion of the overall competence and integrity of
the staff and the organization. If the communication skills of the staff are poor, others may
question your abilities. Therefore, if you are extremely intelligent, talented, and knowledgeable
but lack communication skills it could adversely affect your organization by putting away
customers and potential ones.
In a further development, it is very important to ensure that we communicate well in writing.
This is because many people judge the abilities and intelligence of staff specifically by the
quality of their writhing, which includes the accuracy of spelling, punctuation, and grammar. The
memorandum, letters, and reports written demonstrate the ability to communicate.
Being ethical in your communications, oral or written is also very important because people may
use it to evaluate your competence and judge your integrity. If one promises to do things but fails
to do so, if one makes statements that are not factual, ifone makes untruthful comments about
others, or if one is careless in his/her writing, others will not trust him/her and people would
become hesitant to work with him/her.
Written communications are a permanent record of one’s ability to write. People who read these
communications form an opinion of both the staff and the organization. To present oneself very
well in writing means that ‘one would project a favourable image of the organization as well as
promote successful business operations both internally and externally.
COMMUNICATION OF IDEAS
Despite one’s education or talent, if he/she cannot get his /him ideas across to others, he/she may
not be able to apply his/her knowledge and skills. Ideas are common place, but the ability to
communicate ideas clearly to others is very important.
Learning to communicate one’s ideas should be every administrator’s thrust and concern. As we
communicate, we try to inform, or request, or persuade, or to build good will.
Apart from using communication to share and exchange information, we also put across ideas,
facts, recommendation and proposals. These make administrative communication functional and
effectively. Without this, administrative communication could hardly exist.
ADVANTAGE OF COMMUNICATION IN ADMINISTRATION
ADVANTAGE OF COMMUNICATION IN ADMINISTRATION
Communication has tremendous advantages and can be done in several ways including the
following:
Written communication – (i.e. letters, memos, reports, e-mails, faxes etc.)
Oral communications – (i.e. one-on-one meetings, phone conversations, speeches, video
conferencing, group meetings etc.)
Non-verbal communications-(i.e. eye contact, facial expressions, body language, and physical
appearance etc.)
Active Listening -(i.e. listening with a high level of concentration; and listening for
information)
All the above methods apply tremendously in carrying out effective communication. In
contributing to how to carry out effective communication, T.S. N‟yel (2006) indicates that
communication is an instrument for social interaction, a tool for understanding others, and a
means by keeping in touch with people. It also assists in establishing, extending and maintaining
relationships, by giving orientation to staff and spelling out the goals of an organization. They
maintain that communication is the lubricant that keeps the machinery of an organization going,
and the means through which roles are identified and assigned. No organization can survive
without communication.