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Nature of the Work
Personnel clerks maintain the personnel records of the organization's employees. These records include information such as name, address, job title, earnings, benefits such as health and life insurance, and tax withholding. On a daily basis, they record and answer questions about employees' absences and supervisory reports on job performance. When an employee receives a promotion or switches health insurance plans, the personnel clerk updates the appropriate form. Personnel clerks may also prepare reports for managers elsewhere in the organization. For example, they might compile a list of employees eligible for an award.
In smaller organizations, some personnel clerks perform a variety of other clerical duties. They answer telephone or letter inquiries from the public, send out announcements of job openings or job examinations, and issue application forms. When credit bureaus and finance companies request confirmation of a person's employment, the personnel clerk provides authorized information from the employee's personnel records. Payroll departments and insurance companies may also be contacted to verify changes to records.
Some personnel clerks are also involved in hiring. They screen job applicants to obtain information such as education and work experience; administer aptitude, personality, and interest tests; explain the organization's employment policies and refer qualified applicants to the employing official; and request references from present or past employers. Personnel clerks inform job applicants, by telephone or letter, of their acceptance or rejection for employment.
Other personnel clerks are known as assignment clerks. Their role is to notify a firm's existing employees of position vacancies and to identify and assign qualified applicants. They keep track of vacancies throughout the organization and complete and distribute vacancy advertisement forms. The clerks review applications in response to the advertisement and verify the information using personnel records. After the selection is made, they notify all the applicants of their acceptance or rejection.
In some job settings, personnel clerks have more specific job titles. Identification clerks are responsible for security matters at defense installations. They compile and record personal data about vendors, contractors, and civilian and military personnel and their dependents. Their job duties include interviewing applicants, corresponding with law enforcement authorities, and preparing badges, passes, and identification cards.
Personnel clerks held about 124,000 jobs in 1996. Although these workers are found in most industries, about 1 in every 4 works for a government agency. Colleges and universities, hospitals, department stores, and banks also employ large numbers of personnel clerks.
Replacement needs will account for most job openings for personnel clerks through the year 2006. Jobs will open up as clerks advance within the personnel department, take a job unrelated to personnel administration, or leave the labor force.
Little or no change is expected in employment of personnel clerks through the year 2006. Contributing to the lack of employment growth is the increased use of computers. The growing use of computers and electronic data interchange in personnel or human resource departments means that a lot of data entry work done by personnel clerks can be eliminated as employees themselves enter the data and send it to the personnel office. This is most feasible in large organizations with multiple personnel offices. In addition, as professionals in personnel offices increasingly use computers and other automated office equipment, there could be less work for personnel clerks.
(See introductory statement on record clerks for information on working conditions, training requirements, and earnings.)
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