Manage billing inquiries, prepare and forward invoices, monitor outstanding bills and follow up for payment, produce billing reports and spreadsheets, collaborate with finance to ensure contract compliance, and complete online status reports.
Bilingual Specialist duties and responsibilities
When writing a job description for a Billing Specialist, it is important to specify the main functions of the role. Some of the most important duties and responsibilities required to excel as a Billing Specialist include:
- Ensuring any billing process inquires are handled quickly and efficiently
- Preparing invoices and forwarding to the appropriate contact or department as required
- Monitoring and reviewing outstanding bills and following up with the appropriate internal or external teams to ensure payment is made
- Preparing various reports and spreadsheets related to billing and receivables
- Working with the finance department to ensure that contract specifications are up-to-date and procedures are followed
- Completing any online status reports
Similar Jobs
Insurance
The HR Assistant provides operational support, coordinates onboarding, maintains employee records, assists with benefits, and responds to inquiries, ensuring efficient HR processes.
Top Skills:
Microsoft Office Suite
Information Technology
Calculate and validate sales commissions, process automated and manual adjustments, respond to sales/finance inquiries, generate reporting and commission statements, support monthly/quarterly closes, perform reconciliations and UAT, and monitor accounting/system controls.
Top Skills:
As/400ChangepointExcelMS OfficeTruecomp
Artificial Intelligence • Fintech • Insurance • Marketing Tech • Software • Analytics
Design, build, test, deploy, and support full-stack, cloud-native claims applications. Develop Java/Spring Boot microservices, responsive JavaScript/TypeScript frontends, scalable APIs and event-driven integrations on AWS. Improve CI/CD, observability, performance, security, and reliability. Troubleshoot production issues, mentor engineers, and collaborate in Agile cross-functional teams to modernize claims technology.
Top Skills:
AngularApi GatewayApigeeAWSCloudwatchDatadogDynamoDBEcsEksEvent-Driven ArchitectureGithub ActionsGithub CopilotIamJavaJavaScriptKubernetesLambdaLibertygptMicrosoft CopilotRdsReactRest ApisS3SnsSplunkSpring BootSQL ServerSqsStep FunctionsTypescriptVue
What you need to know about the Boston Tech Scene
Boston is a powerhouse for technology innovation thanks to world-class research universities like MIT and Harvard and a robust pipeline of venture capital investment. Host to the first telephone call and one of the first general-purpose computers ever put into use, Boston is now a hub for biotechnology, robotics and artificial intelligence — though it’s also home to several B2B software giants. So it’s no surprise that the city consistently ranks among the greatest startup ecosystems in the world.
Key Facts About Boston Tech
- Number of Tech Workers: 269,000; 9.4% of overall workforce (2024 CompTIA survey)
- Major Tech Employers: Thermo Fisher Scientific, Toast, Klaviyo, HubSpot, DraftKings
- Key Industries: Artificial intelligence, biotechnology, robotics, software, aerospace
- Funding Landscape: $15.7 billion in venture capital funding in 2024 (Pitchbook)
- Notable Investors: Summit Partners, Volition Capital, Bain Capital Ventures, MassVentures, Highland Capital Partners
- Research Centers and Universities: MIT, Harvard University, Boston College, Tufts University, Boston University, Northeastern University, Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, National Bureau of Economic Research, Broad Institute, Lowell Center for Space Science & Technology, National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratories



