Career & DNPInnovation

Medicine to Microsoft: My Journey to a Non-Clinical Nursing Job

Non clinical nurse job

My favorite thing about being a nurse practitioner is that the career possibilities are endless! While the majority of nurses provide patient care, I’ve discovered a very fulfilling non-clinical nursing job at… Microsoft!

My career started traditionally. I attended nurse practitioner school and worked at a large hospital on a consultation-liaison team. Through a variety of experiences and mentors, I discovered the field of user research. This article summarizes my journey from medicine to Microsoft.

I originally wrote this article for the awesome team over at NursePractitionerSchools.com. Be sure to check out their incredible resources, news, and updates on our profession.

Nurse Practitioner Education

After graduating from high school, I attended Xavier University where I double-majored in nursing (BSN) and photography and minored in psychology. I didn’t have a precise idea of what I wanted to do, but I knew that I wanted to be a scientist, artist, researcher, detective, and philosopher.

After college, I headed to Vanderbilt University to become a psychiatric nurse practitioner by earning my master of science in nursing (MSN). I dove headfirst into the world of psychiatry, falling in love with existential analysis and basically everything ever written by Viktor Frankl.

I continued along the academic route to pursue a doctor of nursing practice (DNP) degree from DeSales University, a school near my first clinical job in Pennsylvania, where I learned about leadership, health policy, and informatics. My DNP project was a systematic review and clinical practice guideline on the use of bright light therapy to treat seasonal affective disorder. Most recently, I earned a certificate in human-centered design and engineering at the University of Washington.

Are you considering a DNP? Make sure you read these books first!

Early Days as a Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner

I started my professional career as a psychiatric nurse practitioner and specialized in psychosomatic medicine. Practitioners of psychosomatic medicine are known as “med-psych detectives.” They are charged with investigating some of the most complex patient cases. Have you ever heard of the TV show House? It’s sort of like that, but with less Hollywood spin and more paperwork.

I saw patients and treated conditions I’ll never forget: factitious and conversion disorders, addictions, suicide attempts, psychogenic amnesia, and encephalopathies. I witnessed some of the darkest moments in people’s lives, but I know I came out with a more profound and precise understanding of the human condition.

A Writer at Heart: Dipping my Toe in a Non-Clinical Nursing Job

Towards the end of my DNP program, I started this blog to amplify my voice and my perspective on health innovation and issues facing the nurse practitioner profession. My favorite thing to write about was how to solve the complex problems of modern medicine by creatively disrupting the status quo.

I wrote articles listing all the issues I saw facing the healthcare industry. I also wrote about how I saw products like the Band, Hololens, and Surface influencing (and occasionally improving) patient care. Turns out, writing and blogging can be a great non-clinical nursing job too!

My writing caught the attention of Microsoft, and, for the following year, they sent me to their product launch events and healthcare conferences. Through these experiences, I met Microsoft’s Chief Nursing Officer, Molly McCarthy, who introduced me to the field of design research.

I also happened to be a big fan of the Surface computers. So much of a fan, that Microsoft filmed a short YouTube video about me during nursing school.

Moving into a Non-Clinical Nursing Job: User Research

For the last few years, I have worked at Microsoft as a user researcher—also known as a design researcher or UX researcher. I study how people interact with technologies, and I use these findings to help build better user experiences.

Throughout my tenure here, I’ve grown a small team of researchers who provide usability tests for other teams across the company. I’ve also conducted ethnographic field research around the country, traveling with a team of videographers to produce short documentary-style films.

I’ve had the chance to study subjects like motivation, personality, decision-making, trust, cognitive biases, and attitudes, and I’ve been able to partner with a team that focuses on designing more inclusive products. User research methods are similar to nursing research methods with a few unique additions such as usability tests and heuristic evaluations.

People often ask me why I made this job change (from traditional to a non-clinical nursing job), and the truth is that I’ve never thought of my career path in that way. I never woke up one day and thought, “I’m going to be a user researcher now.” Instead, I followed my interests and took new opportunities as they arose.

As it turns out, being a psychiatric nurse practitioner prepares you very well for being a user researcher. Psychiatric evaluations teach you how to quickly build rapport with users and more deeply understand their motivations and unmet needs. Running group therapy sessions prepares you for running focus groups. It’s worth noting that nursing philosophy, which is rooted in systems thinking and Six Sigma strategies, permeates the technology sector as well.

If you are interested in a user research career, I’d consider enrolling in a technology-focused DNP program, or tailoring your DNP project to something technology-oriented such as a usability study of an electronic medical record.

Also, if you’re interested, please join my private LinkedIn Group. This is a new community of nurses that I created just for us to discuss, learn, and network.

To learn more about my non-clinical nursing job, check out some of my favorite user research books:

If you’re an avid reader like me, consider signing up for Get Abstract. They condense the latest books into 10-minute written and audio summaries. I try to listen to one daily.



3 Comments on "Medicine to Microsoft: My Journey to a Non-Clinical Nursing Job"

  1. Derek Moss

    It's amazing where your degree took you! Hope your time at MS is blessed!

  2. Emma Bowser, MSN, ANP-BC

    Thank you for sharing your story. Very interesting and inspirational!!

  3. Grace E Lagmay

    Wow you are an inspiration ! More Power to you
    Thank you for sharing


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