Research Assistant · Clinical Research · Lab Tech · Medical Assistant — Farmington / Greater Hartford, CT
How this works — top to bottom: 🔥 The red "apply first" section (right below) is your
highest-odds jobs plus one-tap searches — hit these first, every day. 🟢 The green LIVE feeds show today's real openings — tap
one and it runs a fresh search every time, so it's always current. The employer lists under them are direct careers pages — applying there beats a
board apply. Your tracker (further down) logs every application — rows turn
red after 5 days to tell you it's time to follow up.
116 links get you seen. These three get you hired.
📋 Copy-paste scripts — tap Copy, fill the [brackets], send
1 · Reach out to a staffing recruiterEmail/DM the agencies — they place people fast
Subject: Biology grad + Certified Phlebotomist seeking RA/lab roles — CT
Hi [Recruiter name],
I'm a May 2026 Biology graduate (B.S., 3.7 GPA) and Certified Phlebotomy Technician looking for an entry-level Research Assistant, Lab Technician, or Clinical Research role in the Hartford / Farmington / Litchfield area.
I have hands-on molecular research experience (PCR, gel electrophoresis, cell-based assays) plus clinical specimen-handling from a hospital internship. I'd love to be considered for anything you're placing — résumé attached. Could we set up a quick call?
Thank you,
Jordan Bennett · (860) 555-0142 · jordan.bennett.bio@gmail.com
2 · Follow up after applyingSend 5 business days after you apply — this is the move most people skip
Subject: Following up — [Role] application, Jordan Bennett
Hi [Hiring Manager / Recruiter name],
I applied for the [Role] position on [date] and wanted to reaffirm my strong interest. As a Certified Phlebotomist and Biology graduate with molecular-research and clinical specimen experience, I'm confident I could contribute to your team quickly.
I'd welcome the chance to discuss the role. Thank you for your time.
Best,
Jordan Bennett · (860) 555-0142 · jordan.bennett.bio@gmail.com
3 · Email a lab PI / hiring manager directlyFor academic RA roles (JAX, UConn, Yale) — going to the source beats the portal
Subject: Prospective Research Assistant — Biology grad, molecular + phlebotomy experience
Dear Dr. [Last name],
I'm a recent Biology graduate (B.S., 3.7 GPA, Boston University) writing to ask whether your lab has any Research Assistant or technician openings.
My undergraduate research analyzed protein-stability research using PCR, gel electrophoresis, and structural modeling, and I'm also a Certified Phlebotomy Technician. I'm very interested in your work on [their topic] and would be eager to contribute.
My résumé is attached — I'd be grateful for any chance to discuss.
Sincerely,
Jordan Bennett · (860) 555-0142
4 · LinkedIn connection noteWhen adding a recruiter or someone at a target company (300-char limit)
Hi [Name] — I'm a Biology grad and Certified Phlebotomist seeking entry-level research/lab roles in CT. I admire the work at [Company] and would love to connect and learn about any opportunities on your team. Thank you!
5 · Thank-you after an interviewSend within 24 hours — it genuinely tips decisions
Subject: Thank you — [Role] interview
Hi [Name],
Thank you for taking the time to meet with me about the [Role] position. Our conversation about [something specific you discussed] reinforced how excited I am about the chance to join [Company].
Please don't hesitate to reach out if there's anything else I can provide. I look forward to next steps.
Warm regards,
Jordan Bennett
✅ Application tracker — so nothing slips
Saves on this phone/browser. Rows turn red when it's been 5 days — that's your cue to send Script #2. Back up to CSV every week or so.
🎤 Interview prep — your answers, ready
"Tell me about yourself."
Your answer: "I'm a May 2026 Biology graduate from Boston University, where I held a 3.7 GPA and did molecular-genetics research on protein stability. I'm also a Certified Phlebotomy Technician, and during a clinical internship at Boston Medical Center I handled patient specimens under HIPAA and biohazard protocols. So I bring both the bench side — PCR, cell assays, careful documentation — and the clinical, patient-facing side. I'm looking for a role where I can put both to work and grow."
Your answer: Name something specific about their lab/company (a study, a service, their mission), then connect it to you: "Your work on [X] lines up with my research background in [Y], and I'm excited to learn [technique/area] hands-on."
Tip: Always research the place for 5 minutes first. Specifics show you're not mass-applying.
"Walk me through a lab technique you're comfortable with."
Your answer: Pick one and go step-by-step: "For PCR, I'd prepare my master mix, set up reactions on ice to avoid degradation, run the thermal cycler with the right annealing temp, then confirm products on a gel. In my undergraduate research I used PCR and gel electrophoresis routinely."
Have ready: PCR/RT-PCR · gel electrophoresis · cell-based assays · minipreps · micropipetting · sterile/BSL-2 technique.
"How do you ensure accuracy and avoid contamination?"
Your answer: "Sterile technique, working under BSL-2 protocols, calibrated pipetting, and detailed lab-notebook records so every step is traceable and repeatable. In microbiology I worked with isolation and pure-culture techniques where contamination control was everything."
Why it matters: labs hire for reliability. This is your strongest signal.
"Tell me about your research project."
Your answer: "I studied the protein stability of a target enzyme — analyzing how specific residue mutations affect the structure using structural modeling, alongside PCR, gel electrophoresis, and bioinformatics. I developed hypotheses from the data and kept rigorous records throughout."
Tip: Know it cold — this is your credibility. Be ready for "what did you find?" and "what was hard?"
"Describe a time something went wrong / a challenge."
Your answer: Use a real lab moment — a failed reaction or unexpected result — and walk through how you troubleshot it methodically (checked reagents, controls, re-ran, documented). End with what you learned.
Format: Situation → what you did → result. Calm and systematic is the whole point.
"How do you handle a nervous patient or a difficult draw?" (phlebotomy/MA)
Your answer: "I stay calm and explain what I'm doing to put them at ease, choose the site carefully, and stay confident and gentle. From my internship and certification I'm comfortable with venipuncture and injections across different patients."
Tip: Empathy + competence. They want to know patients are safe with you.
"How do you handle specimens / protect patient privacy?"
Your answer: "At Boston Medical Center I managed safe, timely transport of clinical specimens under strict biohazard and HIPAA protocols in a high-volume hospital — proper labeling, chain of custody, and confidentiality were non-negotiable."
Why it lands: real hospital experience, not just theory.
"What are your salary expectations?"
Your answer: "I'm flexible and most focused on the right fit to start my career — but based on my research, I understand the range for this role is around [$X–$Y]. Does that align with your budget?"
Tip: Check the range on Glassdoor/the posting first. Give a range, never a single low number. Entry RA/MA/phlebotomy in CT often runs ~$18–24/hr; verify per role.
"Do you have any questions for us?" (ALWAYS say yes)
Ask 2–3 of these: • "What does success look like in the first 90 days?" • "What techniques or systems would I be using day-to-day?" • "What's the team like, and who would I work most closely with?" • "Are there opportunities to learn new methods or grow here?" • "What are the next steps in the process?"
Never say "no, I'm good" — it reads as low interest.
Your game plan (so 100 links isn't overwhelming)
Every morning (10 min): tap through the green LIVE feeds, apply to anything that fits.
This week: direct-apply to the 8 closest (the ★ group up top).
Cast the net once: submit to 3–4 staffing agencies — they work for you after that.
Track it: keep a simple "applied / heard back" list so nothing's missed or doubled.