The purpose of a resume is to
secure you an interview or phone screen.
Period. That is it. The resume is
a marketing tool and as such, it has to have a few key ingredients to get the
attention you need.
What can you do to ensure your
resume rises to the top?
Besides the obvious categories,
educational & experience, the resume has to quickly say, I am the resume you are looking for, pick me. How do you make that happen?
Accomplishments
First, your resume needs to
be clear and concise. Don't list every
single job duty you've ever had. Think
in terms of major accomplishments. What
have you done to streamline a process or save your company time or money? For example if you work at a fast-food
restaurant, rather than saying, "Work as a cashier at a restaurant,"
you could say, "Provide fast, efficient, yet excellent customer service
while taking orders..." If you are a software engineer you can stress
your technical abilities while showing that you are a team player.
Focus
With
distinctive proficiencies in mind, you must focus the resume to increase its
effectiveness. That is, tailor it for each opportunity. As arduous as that may
seem, it really is quite simple if you organize your resume properly in the
first place.
Keep
several versions with optional skills and summary sections. Remember, the
reader is seeing an average of 50-100 resumes at once and is looking for
reasons to eliminate yours.
Below
is a brief description of the sections that should be included in your resume.
Remember, the reader's eye goes from top to bottom and left to right.
The Summary
The summary section is a
quick and easy way to spark the reader's interest and make them want to go
further. Whether you discover a job lead through a job board, a friend, or a
recruiter, get a written or verbal job description. Then customize your summary
section to that description.
This simple step will
significantly increase your chances of landing an interview. Include your major
marketable strengths and preferences, including your specific knowledge.
Objective
Objective
Use of the objective is
completely a matter of taste. I prefer instead a title after the applicant's
name. This should either be the title of the job as advertised or the title you
really want -- "project manager," for instance, even though your
current title may be "team leader."
Each company has their own
way of delineating job titles, so try to use industry-standard titles. Be clear about the job you want because
resumes with vague objectives get put in the "maybe later" pile.
Technical Skills
Technical Skills
You can design this section
in any logical manner, as long as your most marketable or most recent skills
are first.
Accomplishments And
Experience
Now that you have the reader's
attention, keep them interested. Your detailed list of accomplishments should
be expressed in quantifiable results in order to demonstrate credibility. For
example, "completed all projects on time and under budget" or
"won team award for outstanding achievement."
Start sentences with powerful
action verbs: "designed," "developed," "wrote,"
"tested," "managed," "saved." Giving tangible
examples that measure your accomplishments eliminates the impression that
you're just bragging.
Education And Training
List your degree or degree
candidacy, both bachelor's and master's. Many companies today still prefer
degreed employees. Include any honors or awards earned, such as "Graduated
with honors" or "GPA 4.0." It's a different way of saying,
"I'm a hard worker." Include
recent training courses that relate to the job you are seeking.
Before mailing your resume,
sleep on it. When you pick it up the next morning, think of the reader and ask
yourself these three questions. Is my resume pleasing to the eye? Does it
emphasize my pertinent skills? Does it present the benefits of hiring me?
By Janice Schooler Litvin
Litvin is a recruiter with a focus on resume writing and editing. Located in the East Bay Area of San Francisco. She can be contacted at jlitvin@microsearchsf.com and is available for Skype or FaceTime Resume consulting. Reasonable Rates.
Litvin is a recruiter with a focus on resume writing and editing. Located in the East Bay Area of San Francisco. She can be contacted at jlitvin@microsearchsf.com and is available for Skype or FaceTime Resume consulting. Reasonable Rates.
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