AllAboutMedicalSales.com Where Medical Sales
Professionals...Click
How do I arrange to 'shadow' a Medical
Representative?
Jeremy Tromans AllAboutMedicalSales.com
jt@rpmuk.co.uk
Every day at AllAboutMedicalSales.com
we receive countless requests for us to organise field visits. Whilst it would
be easy for us to do so, if you're asking us this question, you are probably
missing the point. 80% of the time, shadowing is considered to be a vital step
in the recruitment process and you would be well advised not to miss it.
If you have already been in contact with pharmaceutical recruitment
agencies, you may have already discovered that in their initial telephone
screening of you - their potential candidate - that they will ask you if you
have shadowed. Many will not invite you for an agency interview if you answer
no and you may well have missed an important opportunity. Take a moment
to consider this step from the eyes of the Recruitment Consultant. Your
relationship with them is one of mutual gain i.e. they are your ticket to your
chosen career and their ability to earn a salary is directly linked to you
gaining a job offer. Therefore, it is logical that any Recruitment Consultant
is looking for the best-prepared, motivated and qualified candidates. Can they
take you seriously if you have not experienced, first-hand, elements of your
chosen career? In view of the overwhelming competition to secure jobs within
the pharmaceutical industry, the answer is...probably not! One also
has to consider that the role of a Medical Sales Professional is not a soft
option. You will need levels of business acumen, resilience, flexibility and
drive that are well above those required in other sales professions. Many
would-be candidates, having spent a few days on the road, decide that a career
in medical sales is not the glamorous role that they had imagined and is not
suited to them! Taking the time to shadow an existing Medical
Representative demonstrates that you are serious and perhaps, more importantly,
offers you the chance to be sure that you have made a well-informed
decision. As with your future sales role, it is highly likely that you
will face a number of challenges in attempting to secure some time on the road
with a Medical Representative. For example, many pharmaceutical companies do
not allow their representatives to take non-employees on the road! Your ability
to overcome these minor hurdles will further serve as evidence that you have
the necessary tenacity to excel in the medical sales arena. Unless you
have the luxury of personally knowing an accommodating Medical Representative,
without doubt, you will face some obstacles. Below, you will find a
number of ways to gain contact with a helpful Medical Representative:
- Via your local Doctors Surgery
You
may wish to approach your own GP or talk with the Practice Manager at your
local surgery. Explain that you are planning a career in the Pharmaceutical
Industry and that you need to shadow a Medical Representative. Ask them for
some personal introductions or for some contact details of the representatives
that they know. Another approach would be to ask the Practice Manager
for work experience. Offer your services, free of charge, for a few days. In
doing so, it is likely that you will have several opportunities to meet with
Medical Representatives as well as the opportunity to talk with your future NHS
customers. Look for the opportunity to converse with everyone and to learn
about their views on the Pharmaceutical Industry and its sales representatives.
Create opportunities to witness the interaction that takes place between
Medical Representatives and Practice Staff. By doing so you can begin to form
your own opinions, as well as establishing knowledge of the skills required to
'open doors'. This level of 'go the extra mile' research will pay dividends and
to a certain extent will allow you to stand out from the crowd when you are
dealing with recruitment agencies and subsequently at interview.
- Via your local Retail Pharmacy
All
Pharmacists know Medical Representatives. Why not adopt a similar approach as
discussed above? Ask for personal introductions and consider a days work
experience.
- Via your local Post Graduate Education
Centre
Most hospitals have educational facilities for their
resident NHS staff. These are usually termed 'Post Graduate Educational
Centres' and are always frequented by Medical representatives, per the
educational timetable. You may wish to seek a meeting with the Manager
of your nearest 'Post Grad Centre', explaining your goals and gaining her
permission to attend the centre at the appropriate times. If nothing
else, this will allow you the opportunity to meet with a number of Medical
Representatives and to witness one aspect of their sales / educational role.
In our experience, the above methods
work and it is likely that you will learn a whole lot more than you would from
a shadowing experience alone. If you have yet to shadow or to conduct
some industry / NHS research, consider the merits of not contacting the
recruitment agencies until you are better prepared. At the very least, have
your plan in place and field visits in your diary before seeking the help of a
Recruitment Consultant. We guarantee that if you heed this advice, the
recruitment process will be a smoother journey for you, with less setbacks and
a higher probability of a successful outcome. Wishing you
success
For further information read: How to shadow a UK Medical Sales
Representative
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