In this article
Welcome to the world of administration
Whether you're organised and like supporting a busy workplace, or you want an accessible, stable office career, this guide covers what a secretary actually does, the skills, the day-to-day, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
A secretary provides administrative and organisational support in an office. In simple terms: they keep schedules, communication, and admin running smoothly. Think of them as the organisers of the office.
- Manage schedules and diaries
- Handle communication and correspondence
- Organise documents and admin
- Support the team and office
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- Organisation โ keeping everything in order
- Communication โ clear and professional
- Reliability โ the office depends on you
- Attention to detail โ accuracy in admin
- Discretion โ handling information
- Calm โ juggling many tasks
Education & qualifications
No degree required โ secretaries are trained on the job and through office skills, making it one of the most accessible office careers.
Typical responsibilities
- Scheduling โ diaries and meetings
- Communication โ calls and correspondence
- Documents โ preparing and filing
- Admin โ keeping things running
- Support โ the team and office
- Organisation โ the office backbone
Responsibilities by seniority
Junior / Admin
0โ2 years
- Supports the office
- Learns the systems
- Handles admin
- Building experience
- Toward owning support
Secretary
2โ6 years
- Runs office support
- Manages diaries and admin
- Trusted organiser
- Handles communication
- Toward senior
Senior / PA / Office Manager
6+ years
- Senior support
- Or executive assistant
- Or office management
- Mentors juniors
- Toward management
Where secretaries work
๐ข Corporates
Office support.
โ๏ธ Legal
Legal secretaries.
๐ฅ Medical
Medical secretaries.
๐๏ธ Public sector
Administrative support.
๐ซ Education
School admin.
๐ Remote / hybrid
Support anywhere.
A day in the life
Organising the day โ managing diaries, scheduling meetings, and prioritising the team's tasks.
Handling communication โ calls, emails, and correspondence โ professionally and promptly.
Preparing documents and reports, keeping everything accurate and organised.
Coordinating the office, the behind-the-scenes organisation that keeps it running.
Schedules managed, communication handled, the office organised. The organiser of the office. That's the job.
What this job gives you
- Accessible office career
- Stable and steady
- Foundation of skills
- Foothold into office work
- Organised, varied
Pros & cons
โ Advantages
- Accessible office career
- Stable and steady
- Foundation of professional skills
- Foothold into office work
- Organised, varied
- Path to PA/office management
- Transferable everywhere
โ Disadvantages
- Modest pay
- Can be routine
- Juggling many tasks
- Desk-based
- Sometimes underappreciated
- Limited progression without moving up
Salary potential โ global rating
Rated against all professions globally, where โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ = top 1% earners:
Career growth paths
- Personal Assistant โ support a senior person
- Executive Assistant โ support executives
- Office Manager โ run the office
- Specialist (legal, medical) โ specialist secretary
- Administration roles โ broaden in admin
- Operations support โ support operations
Secretary vs related roles
Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.
| Role | Core focus | Note | Pay | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Secretary You are here | Organises the office | Admin, scheduling, communication | Baseline | Accessible |
| Executive Assistant | Supports senior executives | Organisation, discretion | Higher | Accessible |
| Receptionist | First point of contact | Front-of-house | Lower-similar | Accessible |
| HR Generalist | Handles broad HR | HR practices | Higher | Medium |
| Account Manager | Grows client relationships | Relationships | Higher | Medium |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market and seniority.
Future outlook
Offices always need organising, and while some admin automates, the organisation and people skills of a good secretary keep the role in steady demand and a foundation of office work.
- Offices always need organising
- People and organisation skills endure
- It's a foundation of office work
- Automation handles routine admin
- Steady, accessible demand
Fun facts ๐ค
A good secretary keeps a whole office running smoothly behind the scenes.
It's one of the most accessible office careers, no degree required.
Many executive assistants and office managers started as secretaries.
Specialist secretaries โ legal and medical โ are especially valued.
The role builds professional skills that transfer anywhere.
Myths about this role
"Secretaries just type."
โ They organise, schedule, communicate, and keep the office running.
"It's a dead-end job."
โ It's a foundation that leads to PA, EA, and office management.
"Anyone can do it."
โ Organising a busy office reliably is a real skill.
"You need a degree."
โ No โ it's built on organisation and office skills.
"Automation killed the role."
โ Routine admin automates, but organisation and people skills endure.
Is this job right for you?
โ Good fit if you...
- Are organised and reliable
- Like supporting a workplace
- Want an accessible office career
- Are good with people
- Are detail-focused
- Want a foothold into office work
โ Maybe not for you if...
- You want a senior role immediately
- You dislike admin and routine
- You want high pay fast
- You dislike desk work
- You dislike multitasking
- You want a creative role
Accessible & foundation
Secretary is an accessible, stable office career and a strong foundation of professional skills, with a clear stepping stone toward executive assistant, office management, and administrative leadership.
โ Advantages
- Accessible office career
- Stable and steady
- Foundation of professional skills
- Foothold into office work
- Path to PA/office management
โ Challenges
- Modest pay
- Can be routine
- Juggling many tasks
- Desk-based
- Limited progression without moving up
How to get started
- Build office and admin skills organisation is the core.
- Get an office or secretarial role an accessible entry.
- Learn the systems software and office tools.
- Take on more responsibility support senior people.
- Advance PA, executive assistant, or office management.
What to know before you start
- It's organising the office, not just typing
- No degree needed โ it's highly accessible
- It builds transferable professional skills
- It's a foundation that leads to PA and EA roles
- Routine admin automates, but organisation endures
- Specialist legal and medical secretaries are valued
From the field
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job:
People think secretaries just type. I keep a whole office running โ managing diaries, scheduling, handling communication, preparing documents, coordinating the team. When it's organised, everything flows; when it isn't, everything stalls. It's the backbone of the office.
Secretary ยท 6 years in
It got me into office work with no degree, just good organisation, and it built professional skills that opened doors. I started as a secretary and I'm now an executive assistant โ it's a genuine stepping stone.
Senior secretary / PA ยท 9 years in
Specialising made all the difference for me โ as a legal secretary, I'm valued for knowing the terminology and the processes. Specialist secretaries in legal and medical fields are in real demand, and the pay reflects it.
Legal secretary ยท 11 years in