
What Does A Funeral Director Do?
Becoming a funeral director can be a noble and rewarding job, especially for those who are interested in helping people to have a decent funeral for their departed loved ones. You may be interested in taking the career path as a funeral director. Before you start, you must be able to learn what things you need to do once you become a funeral director?
What does a funeral director do?
Funeral directors typically plan and arrange the funeral of a deceased according to what the family wanted it to be. They offer services from preparing the body to its transportation, may it be locally or across the country. But their job is not limited to those tasks.
- When a body arrives from a hospital, home or other places, funeral directors take note of the personal information of the deceased including items that the deceased have like clothes, jewelries and etc.
- They meet up with relatives and family members in order for them to get their requests regarding how they wanted the funeral to be.
- They are also responsible for coordinating with the church, cemetery and other personnel needed in the entire funeral service such as florists, security and more.
- Funeral directors also do paperwork, especially those who work in family-run small funeral homes businesses.
- They assist the family in terms of the need for financial aid or insurance claims, such as an application for a burial benefit from the social security administration.
- They also submit necessary papers to the authorities, which includes details regarding the body which are essential for the state to issue a death certificate and be distributed to the family of the deceased.
- Most of the funeral directors are also licensed as embalmers, which is necessary for some states. Directors are also responsible in preparing the body of the deceased. They do restorative art and embalming techniques in order to preserve the deceased’ body from the day of the funeral until it is buried.
- They are also responsible for keeping track of invoices and expenditures, doing bookkeeping, accounting and marketing duties. Some may also be responsible of filing for tax reports.
- They guide and direct the service from the transportation of the body until it reaches its resting place.
As a funeral director, you don’t just work to earn but also work to support and assist families through one of the most difficult time of their lives.
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