10 Skills Every Australian Practice Manager Needs in 2026

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Australian practice manager working calmly across an open RACGP-style accreditation binder, a clinic dashboard on laptop, and clinic paperwork at a tidy desk

The Skillset

10 Skills Every Australian Practice Manager Needs in 2026

Australian practice managers need a hybrid skillset that blends Medicare and MBS billing literacy, RACGP Standards knowledge, healthcare-specific HR, clinical software fluency, financial management, privacy and records governance, risk and incident management, communication and leadership, recruitment and retention, and quality improvement. No single qualification covers all ten in equal depth, but the HLT57715 Diploma of Practice Management gives you the structured framework employers expect, and on-the-job experience layers the rest.

This guide explains each of the ten skills in detail: what it is, why it matters, and how to develop it. Below, we explain each in detail, then map how the skills connect and where you build them. TalentMed Pty Ltd (RTO 22151) delivers HLT57715 fully online, and HLT57715 is one of only a handful of practice management diplomas in Australia approved for VET Student Loans.

The 10 skills at a glance

If you are scanning, here is the full list. Each is expanded in its own section below.

  • 1. Medicare and MBS billing literacy. Item numbers, mixed billing, claim resubmissions, ECLIPSE and the Practice Incentives Program.
  • 2. RACGP Standards and accreditation cycle knowledge. Reading the Standards, mapping evidence, walking a clinic through accreditation.
  • 3. Healthcare-specific HR. Supervising clinical staff, AHPRA registration verification, scope of practice awareness.
  • 4. Clinical software fluency. The major Australian practice management platforms and the discipline to learn another fast.
  • 5. Financial management. P&L, cash flow, fee structures, debt management, doctor billings versus practice income.
  • 6. Privacy and records governance. Privacy Act 1988, My Health Record obligations, RACGP information security expectations.
  • 7. Risk and incident management. Clinical incidents, root cause analysis, complaints handling, AHPRA notification awareness.
  • 8. Communication and leadership. Doctor-to-doctor mediation, team handover, patient experience and difficult conversations.
  • 9. Recruitment and retention. Hiring in tight healthcare labour markets, onboarding, performance conversations, retention strategy.
  • 10. Quality improvement and change management. PDSA cycles, evidence-led improvement projects, leading the team through change.

Skill 1: Medicare and MBS billing literacy

1What it is

The ability to read the Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) confidently, oversee bulk and mixed billing accurately, and resolve rejected or downcoded claims without slowing the clinic. Medicare is the dominant revenue source for most general practices and many specialist rooms, so billing literacy is non-negotiable for a practice manager.

Why it matters. A small percentage of incorrect billing across thousands of consultations adds up to real money. Australian Department of Health and Aged Care audits also expect documented billing oversight, and MBS item descriptors change regularly. A practice manager who can audit a doctor’s billing patterns, brief new clinicians on item-number conventions and resolve ECLIPSE rejections is the person owners trust to protect revenue.

How to develop it. Spend time alongside the billing officer. Read the relevant MBS item descriptors (start with the Group A1 GP attendance items if you are in primary care). Attend AAPM or RACGP webinars on MBS updates. The HLT57715 Diploma of Practice Management includes a structured Medicare and billing module that gives you the underlying framework. After that, fluency comes from real claims and real corrections.

Skill 2: RACGP Standards and accreditation cycle knowledge

2What it is

Understanding the RACGP Standards for general practices, knowing what evidence an accreditation visit will scrutinise, and being able to walk a clinic through readiness without panic. Accreditation is the formal recognition that a practice meets minimum quality and safety expectations, and it is renewed on a defined cycle through accrediting bodies such as AGPAL or QPA.

Why it matters. Most general practices need accreditation to access the Practice Incentives Program (PIP) and other Medicare-linked funding, so a failed accreditation is a financial event as much as a quality event. The Standards cover everything from infection control to patient feedback to clinical governance, and the practice manager is the person who pulls the evidence together. For a deeper, module-by-module explainer, read RACGP Standards 5th edition explained for practice managers.

How to develop it. Read the current Standards directly from racgp.org.au. Sit in on at least one accreditation cycle if you can, even as an observer. Build an evidence map for one criterion in your current practice. The HLT57715 Diploma covers accreditation, quality systems and clinical governance as core modules, which gives you the structured language and the framework to apply. From there, the only way to build deep fluency is to walk a clinic through a real accreditation visit.

Skill 3: Healthcare-specific HR

3What it is

Managing a workforce that includes registered health practitioners, with the awareness, documentation and verification habits that healthcare HR requires beyond ordinary employment law. Practice managers are not registered with the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA), but you supervise people who are, which carries specific obligations.

Why it matters. AHPRA registration must be current for every clinician working in your practice. Lapses are a clinical risk, an insurance risk and a reputational risk. You also need to know when a clinical incident triggers a mandatory notification, how to support a clinician under investigation and how to document scope-of-practice conversations. None of this is covered in a generic HR qualification.

How to develop it. Build a registration verification routine using the AHPRA register. Read RACGP guidance on credentialing and scope of practice. Talk to your medical defence organisation about their resources. The HLT57715 Diploma includes healthcare-specific HR content that complements general employment law, and your real fluency comes from managing a clinical team through a registration renewal cycle and at least one scope-of-practice conversation.

Skill 4: Clinical software fluency

4What it is

Confident administrator-level use of the major Australian practice management and clinical software platforms, plus the discipline to learn another quickly when you change jobs or your practice changes vendors. Software is where the appointment book, billing, clinical records, recalls, communications and reporting all converge.

Why it matters. Most Australian general practices run on Best Practice or Medical Director, with Genie and Zedmed common in specialist and allied health settings, and platforms like Cliniko or Halaxy used widely in allied health and aesthetic clinics. A practice manager who can configure templates, build recall lists, generate financial reports and troubleshoot user errors is the person clinicians rely on every day. A practice manager who only knows the front-end appointment screen is not yet a practice manager.

How to develop it. Get administrator access to your current platform and work through the vendor’s training resources. Ask the vendor for a structured walkthrough of reporting and billing modules. If you only know one platform, set yourself a goal to learn the basics of one other. The HLT57715 Diploma covers practice management software fundamentals at a vendor-neutral level so the principles transfer.

Skill 5: Financial management

5What it is

Reading and acting on the practice’s financial picture: profit and loss, cash flow, fee structures, debt management, and the relationship between doctor billings and practice income. You do not need to be the bookkeeper, but you need to be the person who sees the trend before the owner does.

Why it matters. Most clinic owners are clinicians first and business operators second. They need a practice manager who can prepare the monthly numbers, explain a cash-flow squeeze, identify a service-mix problem and propose a fix. Practices that drift financially almost always lose their practice manager soon after, because the owner concludes the role is not earning its salary. Practices that thrive financially almost always have a practice manager who treats the P&L as their scoreboard.

How to develop it. Learn to read a P&L if you cannot already. Build a simple monthly reporting pack for your practice owner: revenue by doctor, billing mix, debtor days, expense variance to budget. Take a short bookkeeping or small-business finance course if you are starting from zero. The HLT57715 Diploma includes a finance and business management module that gives you the framework, and the AAPM offers CPD specifically on practice finance.

Skill 6: Privacy and records governance

6What it is

Operating the practice in line with the Privacy Act 1988, the Australian Privacy Principles, My Health Record obligations and the information security expectations baked into the RACGP Standards. Health information is among the most sensitive personal data, and the regulator (the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner) takes breaches seriously.

Why it matters. A privacy breach in a medical practice is a notifiable event in many cases, and the practice manager is the person who triggers and runs the response. Beyond breaches, day-to-day privacy work covers consent for sharing, record release requests, medical record retention, secure messaging, and the staff training that keeps the team compliant. Practices that treat this as a paperwork problem get caught out; practices that treat it as a discipline rarely do.

How to develop it. Read the Australian Privacy Principles directly from oaic.gov.au. Audit your practice’s consent forms, secure messaging and access controls. Build a simple data-breach response plan and walk the team through it. The HLT57715 Diploma covers privacy and records governance in the quality and compliance modules, and the RACGP publishes information security guides that complement it.

Skill 7: Risk and incident management

7What it is

Identifying clinical and operational risks before they bite, running structured incident reviews when something does happen, and managing complaints in a way that strengthens the practice rather than damaging it. This is one of the skills that distinguishes a practice manager from an office manager.

Why it matters. Clinical incidents are inevitable in any practice that sees patients. The question is whether your practice has a system that catches near misses, learns from them and improves, or whether it absorbs each event as an isolated shock. Good risk management also reduces medical defence premiums, supports accreditation evidence and protects clinicians from preventable AHPRA notifications.

How to develop it. Learn the basics of root cause analysis. Build a simple incident register and review the entries monthly. Treat every patient complaint as a chance to spot a systems issue. Get familiar with your medical defence organisation’s incident-reporting pathway. The HLT57715 Diploma covers clinical governance and quality systems in detail, and the AAPM runs CPD on complaints handling and risk management.

Skill 8: Communication and leadership

8What it is

The ability to mediate between clinicians, communicate sensitively with patients during difficult moments, brief the team clearly and lead the practice through change without losing trust. This is the skill most often underrated in job ads and most often decisive in real practice.

Why it matters. Clinicians often disagree, sometimes strongly, about clinical priorities, after-hours arrangements, fee structures and patient management. The practice manager is the person who keeps those conversations productive. Patients have hard days too, and the front desk needs a manager who can handle a complaint at the counter without escalating it. None of this is glamorous, but it is the day-to-day fabric of a healthy practice.

How to develop it. Watch experienced practice managers run team meetings before you have to. Read on conflict resolution and feedback. Practise direct, kind language in lower-stakes conversations so it is available to you in high-stakes ones. The HLT57715 Diploma includes leadership and team management content, and the AAPM runs CPD on communication and difficult conversations specifically for practice managers.

Skill 9: Recruitment and retention in tight labour markets

9What it is

Hiring well into a healthcare workforce that is structurally short of receptionists, nurses, allied health staff and clinicians, and keeping the people you do hire long enough to build real value. Recruitment is now one of the most demanding parts of the role.

Why it matters. Australian healthcare staff turnover costs are significant, and clinical talent is genuinely scarce in many regions. A practice manager who can write a job ad that attracts the right candidates, run a structured interview, onboard properly and build a culture people stay for is contributing tens of thousands of dollars to the bottom line every year. The same practice manager protects clinicians from the burnout that comes with chronic understaffing.

How to develop it. Get clear on what your practice is actually offering beyond pay (flexible hours, learning, autonomy, team culture) and write your ads accordingly. Build a structured interview pack so hiring is consistent. Track first-90-day retention as a quality metric. The HLT57715 Diploma includes HR content covering recruitment, onboarding and retention, and the AAPM publishes practical guides specific to healthcare hiring.

Skill 10: Quality improvement and change management

10What it is

Running structured improvement projects (often as Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles), interpreting practice data to spot opportunities and leading the team through change with minimal friction. Accreditation requires evidence of continuous improvement, but the deeper value is in compounding small gains.

Why it matters. A practice that runs even two or three quality improvement cycles a year (smoking cessation, diabetes care, recall accuracy, theatre turnover, patient feedback response time) becomes measurably better over time. The practice manager is almost always the project owner. Change management matters because clinical teams are busy and resistant to disruption, and a good practice manager designs change so it sticks rather than rebounds.

How to develop it. Pick one small improvement project in your current practice and run it as a formal PDSA cycle, even if you have to make up the documentation. Read the RACGP improvement resources. Track outcomes, not activity. The HLT57715 Diploma covers continuous improvement and change management as core content, and the AAPM offers CPD on quality improvement methodologies in healthcare settings.

How these skills connect

The ten skills are not independent. Most reinforce others, and a few are foundational that everything else rests on. Understanding the connections helps you sequence your development and explain the role properly to the owners and clinicians you work with.

Skill What it underpins
1. MBS billing literacy Financial management (5), risk management (7), accreditation evidence (2)
2. RACGP Standards Privacy (6), risk (7), quality improvement (10), HR (3)
3. Healthcare HR Recruitment (9), risk (7), communication (8)
4. Clinical software Almost everything else: billing, recalls, reporting, accreditation evidence
5. Financial management Recruitment decisions (9), change projects (10), owner trust
6. Privacy and records Risk (7), accreditation (2), HR onboarding (3, 9)
7. Risk and incident management Quality improvement (10), HR (3), accreditation (2)
8. Communication and leadership Every other skill, because none deliver value without team buy-in
9. Recruitment and retention Practice capacity, financial stability, team culture
10. Quality improvement Accreditation (2), risk (7), patient experience, owner confidence

Clinical software (4) is the most cross-cutting technical skill. Communication and leadership (8) is the most cross-cutting human skill. If you are short on time, prioritise these two before the others, because they multiply the value of everything else you can do.

Where you build these skills

The answer is that no single source covers all ten. Most experienced practice managers build their skillset across three layers: on-the-job experience, a structured qualification and ongoing CPD. Each layer fills gaps the others leave.

  • On-the-job experience. Builds the fluency you cannot get from a course: real billing edge cases, real complaints, real accreditation visits, real software workarounds. There is no substitute for time in a clinic.
  • A structured qualification. Gives you the framework, the language and the evidence employers use to screen applications. The HLT57715 Diploma of Practice Management is the most widely recognised credential in Australia and is approved for VET Student Loans.
  • Ongoing CPD. Keeps you current as Standards revise, MBS items change and new software platforms emerge. The AAPM is the main professional body for Australian practice managers and offers structured CPD plus the Certified Practice Manager (CPM) credential.

For a step-by-step view of the full pathway from where you are now to a paid practice manager role, read how to become a practice manager in Australia. For a realistic view of the role itself and where practice managers work, read practice manager jobs in Australia.

The HLT57715 Diploma of Practice Management at TalentMed

The HLT57715 Diploma of Practice Management is TalentMed’s flagship practice management qualification. It maps directly to the ten skills in this article, with structured modules covering Medicare and MBS billing, RACGP-aligned accreditation content, healthcare HR, software fundamentals, finance, privacy, risk, leadership, recruitment and quality improvement. It is delivered 100 per cent online, self-paced, and is approved for VET Student Loans.

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Frequently asked questions

Communication and leadership is the most cross-cutting skill, because every other skill on the list depends on getting buy-in from clinicians, staff and owners. Clinical software fluency is the most cross-cutting technical skill, because it sits underneath billing, recalls, reporting and accreditation evidence. If you are sequencing your development, prioritise these two first.
No. Practice managers are not clinical coders, and clinical coding is a separate profession that codes hospital inpatient episodes. Practice managers do need to be fluent in MBS item numbers and Medicare billing, which is the equivalent skill for primary care, but you do not need to learn ICD-10-AM or ACHI to do the job well.
Whichever platform your current or target practice runs on. In Australian general practice, Best Practice and Medical Director cover the majority of clinics, with Genie common in specialist rooms and Zedmed used in some GP and allied health settings. Cliniko and Halaxy are widely used in allied health and aesthetic clinics. Get fluent in one platform, then learn the basics of one other so your skillset is portable.
The HLT57715 Diploma of Practice Management has structured modules covering Medicare and MBS billing, accreditation and quality systems, healthcare HR, software fundamentals, finance, privacy and records, clinical governance, leadership, recruitment and continuous improvement. It maps directly onto the ten skills in this article, gives you the framework employers expect and is delivered 100 per cent online.
No. Practice managers are not registered with AHPRA and are not expected to provide clinical care. Many strong practice managers come from receptionist, office-administration or business backgrounds. Clinical experience helps because it shortcuts trust with doctors and reduces the time you need to spend learning clinic flow, but it is not a precondition.
RACGP is the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners. It publishes the Standards for general practices that accreditation bodies such as AGPAL and QPA assess against. Most general practices need accreditation to access the Practice Incentives Program (PIP), so the practice manager who can lead an accreditation cycle is protecting both quality and revenue. Read more in RACGP Standards explained for practice managers.
Most people who set out to become an Australian practice manager build the core skillset within one to three years, depending on starting point. The HLT57715 Diploma can be completed in twelve months (six for motivated students) and gives you the structured framework. The deeper fluency comes from running real billing, real accreditation, real complaints and real change projects, which is why on-the-job time matters as much as the qualification.
Yes for most career practice managers. The Australian Association of Practice Management (AAPM) offers structured CPD across the skills in this article, peer support, access to the Certified Practice Manager (CPM) credential and conferences. Joining is voluntary, but most career practice managers join either during study or shortly after their first PM role.
Yes, provided you build the financial-management skill on the way. You do not need an accounting degree, but you do need to be able to read a P&L, manage cash flow and produce monthly numbers your owner trusts. The HLT57715 Diploma includes a finance and business management module, and short bookkeeping or small-business finance courses can fill specific gaps.
Yes. Practice managers are not registered with the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency, but you supervise people who are. You need to verify registration is current, recognise when a clinical event might trigger a mandatory notification and support clinicians through any AHPRA process they encounter. This is part of the healthcare-specific HR skill.

TalentMed Pty Ltd, RTO 22151. HLT57715 Diploma of Practice Management is delivered fully online. VSL approval, current fees and intake details are confirmed on the course page and at training.gov.au. Always confirm specific funding eligibility at studyassist.gov.au.

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