An HTM Technician maintains medical, clinical equipment and systems through effective implementation of the Mayo Clinic Medical Equipment Management Plan. Technician must demonstrate technical and mechanical skills and tasks associated with the planning, installation, maintenance, calibration, and repair of biomedical, laboratory, research, imaging equipment and interconnected patient care systems.
Technicians in this position must be highly customer focused with outstanding communication and interpersonal skills. They must have the ability to prioritize service calls appropriately, and to adhere to Mayo policy and procedure.
Service calls are communicated to the technician through HTM Leadership, HTM Support Specialists, or CMMS dashboard. Emergent calls directly from the customer may require a rapid response time. On-call and overtime may be required, as well as travel to other Mayo Clinic sites and applicable vendor training.
The technician must be committed to continuously improving their knowledge to develop a mastery of increasingly complex equipment and supporting Mayo’s mission.
An HTM Technician Level I will generally work on lower complexity, high volume equipment such as infusion pumps, SCDs, centrifuges, microscopes, or entry level imaging and x-ray.
Associate’s degree in Biomedical Electronics/Healthcare Technology Management, Electronics, Mechatronics, Engineering (mechanical/computer/electronics), or technical discipline ; or U.S. Military training in biomedical electronics, mechatronics, or engineering (mechanical/computer/electronics); or H.S. Diploma or another technical certificate with 3 years of related experience. Related experience includes maintaining medical equipment or medical systems (typically a field service technician).
For laboratory or research positions: Associate's degree or higher in medical/clinical laboratory science, medical technology, or other related science fields and experience maintaining lab or medical equipment/systems.
Preferred Qualification and Experience include:
Authorization to work and remain in the United States, without necessity for Mayo Clinic sponsorships now, or in the future (for example, be a U.S. Citizen, national, or permanent resident, refugee, or asylee). Mayo Clinic does not participate in the F-1 STEM OPT extension program.
Why Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic is top-ranked in more specialties than any other care provider according to U.S. News & World Report. As we work together to put the needs of the patient first, we are also dedicated to our employees, investing in competitive compensation and comprehensive benefit plans – to take care of you and your family, now and in the future. And with continuing education and advancement opportunities at every turn, you can build a long, successful career with Mayo Clinic.
Benefits Highlights

Mayo Clinic has expanded and changed in many ways, but our values remain true to the vision of our founders. Our primary value – The needs of the patient come first – guides our plans and decisions as we create the future of health care. Join us and you'll find a culture of teamwork, professionalism and mutual respect, and most importantly, a life-changing career.
Mayo Clinic was founded in Rochester, Minnesota by brothers Dr. William James Mayo and Dr. Charles Horace Mayo. More than 100 years later, their vision continues to evolve around a single guiding value: "The needs of the patient come first." Today we are the largest integrated, not for-profit medical group practice in the world.
We are recognized for high-quality patient care more than any other academic medical center in the nation. These endorsements are very gratifying, but also humbling. They remind us of the tradition that has been entrusted to each one of us, and the legacy of excellence that we uphold every day.