I know how it feels
to spend hours, or even days, creating a résumé. You pore over every word of
your cover letter and agonize over what to say in your email. Then you hit
’send’ and wait…and wait…and wait. No one calls. No one writes. You don’t know
if anyone even saw your résumé.
When this happens,
it’s easy to get dejected and worry that employers are not interested in you. Don’t! Remember, they haven’t met you. They
have only seen your résumé and that may be the problem.
An overwhelming
majority of job seekers make basic mistakes with their résumés – mistakes that
ensure that they will not get the interviews they deserve. If you feel as
though you’re sending your résumé into a black hole, try this ‘10 Step Program’ to diagnose
problems and get your résumé working for you.
1. Is your résumé the right length?
You may have heard that your résumé should fit on one page. This is
nonsense. Recruiters don’t care if your résumé is one or two pages long. But
they do care whether it is easy to read and
gives key information upfront. Your résumé can be
one, two, or occasionally even three pages. The only rule is that the length should be
appropriate for you.
2. Does your résumé clearly position you as someone who can meet the needs
of the employer?
Think
of a résumé as an advertisement for a product, only this time the product is you. Just like any other advertisement,
positioning is everything. The person who receives your résumé will scan it
quickly – perhaps for no more than 20 seconds – to determine
whether you can help her company. Your job is to say quickly, clearly and
loudly that you can!
Don’t just launch into a chronology
of your career history. Instead, determine your own positioning by spelling out
your message at the start of the résumé and giving the reader your version of
events straight away. For this reason, you should use the first 1/3 of your résumé to create a
compelling personal profile which highlights your key strengths in an
attractive, easy-to-read format.
3. Does your résumé begin with an objective?
Recruiters and hiring managers may not like them because they focus on
the needs of the job seeker rather than the needs of the potential employer.
Consider this objective statement:
“Seeking a software engineer position with a progressive employer where
I can contribute to the development of new technologies and work with bright,
committed people.”
This may be very honest but it is irrelevant to the reader, who does not
care what you want and only cares what you have to offer. Instead of an
objective, try using a positioning statement that clearly and concisely
explains what you have to offer.
“Senior Software Engineer with 10 years experience developing
leading-edge technologies.”
Now the reader can immediately see your value to the company. For even
greater impact, tailor this statement for each position so that the reader
immediately sees a match between his/her needs and your skills.
4. Does your résumé contain specifics?
You must place your
achievements in context by providing specifics.
For example, don’t say something vague like “contributed to product
design.” This tells the employer nothing about your actual contribution.
Instead be specific about what you did: “Conducted market analysis for (name of
product) to determine design and mechanics. Led changes to original design
spec. despite initial developer objections. Received critical acclaim and sold
over 4 million units.”
See how being specific makes a difference? This level of detail shows
the reader the contributions you have made in the past and therefore the
contributions you can be expected to make in the future.
5. Have you outlined achievements as well as responsibilities?
Don’t provide a laundry list of responsibilities without showing what
results you achieved. Most employers already know what the main
responsibilities of your job were. They want to know what makes you different
from all the other applicants. An effective résumé summarizes
job responsibilities in a few sentences and then provides details of
quantifiable achievements.
Focus most of your résumé on the
results you accomplished, not the regular
duties of your job.
6. Are there any typos?
Your
résumé has to be perfect. Proof read it over and over again. When you are sure it’s perfect, have other people proof it! If even one
word is misspelled the reader will assume that you didn’t know how to spell the
word (this is bad) or that you didn’t care (this is even worse!) Nothing puts
the reader off more quickly than misspellings or typos.
7. Is the résumé easy to read?
At
least 50% of the impact of your résumé derives from design. A strong résumé design will pull the eye through the document, making it
easy to keep reading and will highlight your key strengths clearly. But if your
résumé is badly laid out, disorganized or hard to read, it will be discarded
before the reader knows how qualified you are. Take time to understand how the
page has been laid out and then apply what you’ve learned to your résumé.
8. Have you listed irrelevant information?
Don’t list your hobbies unless they directly support your qualifications
for the position. Don’t detail your marital status or the number of children
you have. Don’t mention non-professional affiliations such as political or
religious volunteer work unless it directly relates to the position you are
applying for. Any personal
information runs the risk of turning the reader off. However proud you are of personal achievements, you should not run the
risk of alienating someone before you even have your foot in the door.
9. Are you too modest?
Don’t be uncomfortable about blowing
your own trumpet. Too many people play down their achievements. While you should never exaggerate on a résumé, you
should definitely take credit for the things you’ve accomplished. Some people feel uncomfortable boasting on paper preferring to explain
in an interview. But if your résumé doesn’t spark interest, you may never get
that opportunity, so don’t be modest!
10. Have you created an internet-ready version of résumé?
And finally, if you have to post your résumé online, or apply to a job
via an online system, you will need to convert your résumé to a text-only format.
If you don’t do this, your résumé will be almost impossible to read because
most online systems cannot support the type of formatting used in a résumé
(bold, italics, bullet points, lines etc.)
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