Is this actually your fit?
Two short trait quizzes scored against this exact role. No signup, no card. Honest answer in 4 minutes.
Every career on ClarUp carries a 6-trait blueprint scored from real practitioners. Take the 3-min DNA test to see your fit.
High Conscientiousness78/100
The strongest signal for this role. People who score 70+ on this dimension report higher day-to-day satisfaction.
India-first salary signal — fresh-grad to senior, the cities where it pays best, and what each level is worth on the open market.
Numbers reflect open-market hires at the level shown.
Equity, bonuses, and overtime are not included. Senior-bracket numbers can rise 30–60% at top studios / tier-1 firms; smaller cities trend 20% lower than metros.
Cost, time, and what each path actually buys you in the hiring market.
Strongest signal · highest ceiling
Fastest paid hire route
Cheapest · portfolio is your degree
Two short trait quizzes scored against this exact role — see your fit % in 4 minutes. No signup, no card.
Two short artifacts go beyond the general DNA test — a per-career simulation tests how you make real workplace decisions, and a per-career aptitude test checks your capability with the actual work. Sign in with Pro to start.
Verified this quarter
Healthcare
Operation Theatre Technicians (OT Technicians) are the backbone of every surgical team — they set up the sterile field, prepare instrument trays, manage autoclave sterilisation, and assist scrub nurses and surgeons intra-operatively. In India, the role is entered via a B.Sc OT Technology (3-year) or Diploma in OT Technician (2-year) after 12th PCB, and is in high demand at corporate chains (Apollo, Fortis, Max, Manipal), AIIMS and government district hospitals, and standalone surgical centres. Experienced technicians who specialise in Cardiac OT, Neuro OT, or Robotic-assisted surgery earn significantly higher salaries and are actively recruited to GCC countries (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Oman) on tax-free packages.
Healthcare
Pharmacists in India sit at the safety checkpoint between a doctor's prescription and the patient who will actually swallow the tablet — verifying drug dosages, flagging interactions, counselling patients on use, and in many settings being the most accessible healthcare professional in a neighbourhood. The qualification ladder runs D.Pharm (2 years) for retail / community pharmacists, B.Pharm (4 years after Class 12 with PCB / PCM) for hospital and industry roles, and M.Pharm or Pharm.D (6 years, an emerging clinical-pharmacy track) for hospital-clinical, regulatory, and R&D careers. Workplaces split sharply across three lanes: retail / community pharmacy (Apollo Pharmacy, MedPlus, Wellness Forever, neighbourhood chemists), hospital pharmacy (AIIMS, Apollo, Fortis, Manipal — drug-store, IV admixture, oncology day-care, ICU unit-dose), and industry (Sun Pharma, Cipla, Dr. Reddy's, Lupin, Pfizer India, Aurobindo) covering R&D, formulation, regulatory affairs, quality assurance, and medical affairs. State Pharmacy Council registration after qualification is mandatory before practising — and the council under the Pharmacy Act 1948 is a real, audited credential the Drug Inspector can ask for at any moment.
Healthcare
Plastic Surgeons in India operate across two interlocking practices: reconstructive surgery (burn management with split-thickness and full-thickness skin grafts, cleft lip/palate repair using Millard or Tennison-Randall techniques, free flap microsurgery for post-oncological and post-traumatic defects, hand surgery including replantation and tendon reconstruction) and cosmetic/aesthetic surgery (rhinoplasty, blepharoplasty, rhytidectomy, breast augmentation with Baker Grade monitoring, abdominoplasty, liposuction, hair transplant via FUE/FUT). The canonical path is MBBS + MS General Surgery + M.Ch Plastic Surgery (3 years via NEET-SS) at AIIMS, PGI Chandigarh, KEM Mumbai, CMC Vellore, or PGIMER — giving access to both high-volume reconstructive units (burn wards, trauma centres, cancer reconstructive teams at Tata Memorial) and a premium cosmetic practice in metro cities. Aesthetic-only clinics such as Sculpt India, Cocoona, and Anti-Clock have created a parallel high-income private track; senior cosmetic practitioners in Delhi-NCR, Mumbai, and Bengaluru clear ₹2–8 Cr annually.
Healthcare
Siddha doctors in India practise one of the oldest indigenous medical systems — rooted in the Tamil Siddhar tradition, with a 5,000-year lineage attributed to the 18 Siddhars including Agasthiyar and Yugi Munivar. The standard route is BSMS (Bachelor of Siddha Medicine and Surgery, 5.5 years including 1-year compulsory internship) from a CCIM/NCISM-recognised college, admitted through NEET-UG via AYUSH counselling. Practice centres on Mukkutram (Tridosha analogue: Vali/Vata, Azhal/Pitta, Iyam/Kapha) diagnosis through Envagai Thervu (eight-fold examination including Naadi/pulse reading, tongue, eyes, urine, stool, sound, skin, complexion), and prescription of mineral-metallic formulations: Parpam (calcined metals/minerals), Chendooram (red oxide preparations), Mezhugu (wax-based formulations), and Kashayam (decoctions). Thokkanam (classical Siddha massage and manipulative therapy) and Varmam (vital energy-point therapy) are additional procedural skills. The field is highly concentrated in Tamil Nadu — which operates the National Institute of Siddha (NIS Chennai), Arignar Anna Government Hospital of Indian Medicine, and the country's largest state AYUSH Siddha infrastructure — with secondary presence in Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, and among the Tamil diaspora in Sri Lanka and Singapore.
Healthcare
Veterinary doctors in India diagnose, treat, and prevent diseases in animals ranging from companion pets (dogs, cats, exotic birds) to livestock (buffalo, cattle, poultry), wildlife, and aquaculture. The qualifying degree is B.V.Sc & A.H. (Bachelor of Veterinary Science and Animal Husbandry, 5 years including a 6-month internship) from a VCI-recognised college, admitted via NEET-UG. Practice settings span state Animal Husbandry Departments (AHD), private small-animal hospitals in metro cities (Cessna Lifeline, CGS Hospital, Petcura network), dairy cooperative veterinary units (Amul, Nandini, Mother Dairy), poultry integrators (Suguna, Venkateshwara Hatcheries), pharma companies (Zoetis, MSD Animal Health, Elanco), and wildlife / forest departments under the MoEFCC. India's urban pet-care boom — over 32 million pet dogs alone in 2025 — has created a wave of corporate multi-specialty small-animal hospitals in tier-1 and tier-2 cities, bringing surgical specialties (orthopaedics, ophthalmology, oncology) that barely existed 10 years ago.
Healthcare
Nutritionists in India design evidence-based food, nutrient, and lifestyle plans that improve metabolic, hormonal, and chronic-disease outcomes — distinct from clinical dietitians (typically hospital-based RD-IDA-registered roles managing tube feeds, post-surgical, and ICU nutrition) by their stronger lean towards community, corporate-wellness, sports, and private-practice work. Standard routes are B.Sc Food, Nutrition & Dietetics or B.Sc Home Science (Nutrition major) followed by M.Sc Dietetics & Food Service Management or M.Sc Clinical Nutrition; the Indian Dietetic Association RD (Registered Dietitian) credential is the highest-respected India qualification. Practice settings span hospital wards (Apollo, Fortis, Manipal, Max, Medanta), corporate-wellness companies (HealthifyMe, Cure.fit, Truweight, Nourish, Possible, Cult.fit), gym and sports-nutrition consultancies, school and government nutrition programs (POSHAN, ICDS), and increasingly Instagram / YouTube-driven private clinics where a senior nutritionist can run ₹15-50L+ practices on personal-brand reach. The work blends rigorous biochemistry (macronutrient calculation, micronutrient assessment, body-composition tracking, lab-marker interpretation) with sustained behaviour-change coaching — the patient who knows what to eat is not the patient who actually eats it, and the difference is the nutritionist's craft.