Posts Tagged ‘Resume’

Write a Better Resume than Paris Hilton

Monday, August 17th, 2009

        So to start this article on résumé writing: I scoured the Internet to compare a few notes from different regions around the country, and guess what I found? Résumé writing is not all that much fun! A Google search on “résumé writing” produced 32,300,000 results, whereas a search for Paris Hilton came out to over 51,000,000! I guess this goes to show that following someone famous (and what exactly is she famous for?) can be more fun than suffering through the headache of preparing your résumé.
        In the interest of not boring you to death, I am leaving the technical crap alone, and just putting together as a list of tips to help you put together your next résumé.

Have a little OCD: Many experts give many different tips for the formatting, so there is no perfect format. Getting the format “right” means getting bullet points lined up and eliminate wacky spacing. Crazy and uneven formatting will get you questioned about skills that have nothing to do with what you can do on the job. Tip: If you copy and paste your Word (or similar program) formatted résumé into most online sites, the formatting will go all screwy. Don’t be lazy, just fix it.

When did you do that? If you’ve got a bad gap, explain it in your cover letter (we will look at cover letters in another blog). So, unless you were a super secret spy and it’s one of those “I could tell you, but I’d have to kill you” situations go ahead and put in the dates of past jobs and degrees. The truth is, when you don’t put dates employers start thinking you are being sneaky and/or exaggerating your true experience and education.

1993 – 1995 Bad Burger Barn: You shouldn’t have more information for the job you had 10 years ago at the local fast food joint, than you do for your last position as an accounting clerk, especially when you are applying for a job in accounting. The information you put on the older positions should only be what pertains to the particular job you are submitting it for.

Gobbledygook: Experts say buzzwords or industry jargon is bad and in some ways it is – you can easily over use it. However, you want this job right? Then use the terminology that they put in their job description. Exploit the vocabulary they are acquainted with and are requesting from you…(Use the terms they know and are asking for…but don’t go overboard!). It’ll show you were paying attention rather than just ramming a bunch of crap together to sound nifty.

Save the trees: Let’s be honest with each other shall we? Why do you need a four-page resume to get an entry-level position at Wal-Mart? The answer — You don’t. Employers really do prefer shorter and to the point. If you are applying for an upper level or management position, then maybe (if you actually have experience in those positions) you might be justified in a multi-page resume.

Custom Tailored Fit: Do you really want a job? If the answer is yes, then put in the effort to rewrite your résumé for each job position. Besides, if you’re claiming you can type 80 words per minute, then it shouldn’t take you very long anyways! Look at what we said above, and consider making adjustments for each employer that you send it to. Think about it from his or her point of view – Would you hire someone who puts in only a minimal effort?

Spel thngs ryte! I read something, somewhere that said your résumé is like the restroom in a restaurant; it is the one room everyone will see. And, hey, if you can’t keep that clean, what’s it like in the kitchen? What do you think a résumé filled with grammar and typing errors says about yourself? Computers have spell check for a reason…go ahead! Give it a whirl!

Playing Dress Up: I know all the books say to use heavy bond white or off-white resume paper but I have talked to numerous employers in our area, and the paper choice is a lot like the number of pages choice. Employers looking at many one-page résumés are more concerned about it being easy to read, without errors, and that the job seeker is actually paying attention to detail. Let’s face it; pink scented résumés are only going to work for Reese Witherspoon. Fancy colors can really hurt you, and heavy bond paper only becomes important when looking at those higher-level positions. It doesn’t hurt to use that better paper, but it doesn’t help as much as you might think.

Paranoid or Employed?

Monday, July 13th, 2009

Don’t Let Paranoia stop you from getting that new Job!

 

            Is someone going to see my private information?  Am I at risk for identity theft if I post a resume on the Internet?  The Internet has created a haven for the more unscrupulous to find way to victimize us…but some simple forethought can prevent everything.  Beside we are talking about finding a new job, bettering ourselves and our lifestyles…are we really going to let paranoia beat us? NO!

 

            Why would I even post a resume on a website that doesn’t currently have a position advertised I like?  Well, because the Internet moves at a nearly instant speed.  Let’s pretend for a moment…

 

            It is 9:37am Monday and you check CoosJobs.net for new positions.  You just checked late last night, and nothing you like is there.  You haven’t created a resume profile yet; you haven’t seen anything that fits your career desire.  You go away, check another website, then you check another; it is now 9:58am and an employer just logged in to CoosJobs.net to post a job.  You turn off your computer at 9:59am.  At 10:04am, that new employer (who just happens to have that dream job for you) is done creating a new listing and moves over to the resume search feature.  They are browsing through some resumes that are posted.  By 11:00am they found two they liked and have put out contacts for them to set up interviews.  Both of them will be interviewed the following morning.

            You decide to wait a day or two before checking back.  On Thursday morning at 8:57am you come back to our website, and look there is the job you want.  What you don’t know is there is a person right now shaking hands with the person who just accepted the job offer.  They never even applied for the job, at least not directly, and by the time you get your resume to them, they have already pulled the listing and there is no opening available.

 

            While this seems like a bit of an exaggerated example, but it has, and will happen again.  I even spent some time explaining this once to a jobseeker who could just not believe that it had happened to them.  That darned ol’ Murphy’s Law will get you every time if you let it. 

            Now let’s look at the protection aspect.  Resumes are not just randomly thrown out for anyone to see.  Job-posting sites have created this feature to assist employers in their job search – They are the ones who have access to view it.  It is these people that you not only want to know about you, but you want them to be able to get in contact with you.  Your name, contact number, e-mail, these are things you want to put in their hands.  As for the fear of these getting “into the wrong hands”, well folks, there are much easier ways for someone to get this info about you then trying to pull restricted information from a Job-listing website.  All jobseekers should (if they don’t already) have a specific e-mail just for their job search.  Most of your personal information, such as birthdays, social security numbers and family information, shouldn’t be in a resume anyway (this is a topic we will tackle another day). 

            Remember being successful in a job search means making sure that anyone who has a job for you can find you.  Using the Internet and posting your resume for Employers to view means you are job seeking even while you sleep…and that’s making your resume work!