-
Perform general office activities, such as typing, answering telephones, operating office machines, processing mail, or securing confidential materials.
-
Retrieve documents stored in microfilm or microfiche and place them in viewers for reading.
-
Answer questions about records or files.
-
Track materials removed from files to ensure that borrowed files are returned.
-
Add new material to file records or create new records as necessary.
-
Complete general financial activities, such as processing accounts payable, reviewing invoices, collecting cash payments, or issuing receipts.
-
Input data, such as file numbers, new or updated information, or document information codes into computer systems to support document and information retrieval.
-
Modify or improve filing systems or implement new filing systems.
-
Assign and record or stamp identification numbers or codes to index materials for filing.
-
Perform periodic inspections of materials or files to ensure correct placement, legibility, or proper condition.
-
Keep records of materials filed or removed, using logbooks or computers and generate computerized reports.
-
Eliminate outdated or unnecessary materials, destroying them or transferring them to inactive storage, according to file maintenance guidelines or legal requirements.
-
Scan or read incoming materials to determine how and where they should be classified or filed.
-
Design forms related to filing systems.
-
Find, retrieve, and make copies of information from files in response to requests and deliver information to authorized users.
-
Sort or classify information according to guidelines, such as content, purpose, user criteria, or chronological, alphabetical, or numerical order.
-
Gather materials to be filed from departments or employees.
-
Place materials into storage receptacles, such as file cabinets, boxes, bins, or drawers, according to classification and identification information.
-
Operate mechanized files that rotate to bring needed records to a particular location.