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Part 1 - WRITE A RESUME THAT GENERATES RESULTS
Part 2 - HOW TO KNOCK THE SOCKS OFF A PROSPECTIVE EMPLOYER
Part 3 - THE EVIDENCE SECTION - HOW TO PRESENT YOUR WORK HISTORY, EDUCATION, ETC.
Part 4 - A FEW GUIDELINES FOR A BETTER PRESENTATION
Part 5 - I'M NOT SURE THE JOB I'M LOOKING FOR IS THE RIGHT ONE FOR ME
Part 6 - ADD POWER TO YOUR RESUME WITH POWERWORDS
Part 4 - A FEW
GUIDELINES FOR A BETTER PRESENTATION
The resume is visually
enticing, a work of art. Simple clean structure. Very
easy to read. Symmetrical. Balanced. Uncrowded. As much white space
between sections of writing as possible; sections of writing that
are no longer than six lines, and shorter if possible.
There is uniformity and consistency in the
use of italics, capital letters, bullets, boldface, and
underlining. Absolute parallelism in design decisions.
For example, if a period is at the end of one job's dates, a period
should be at the end of all jobs' dates; if one degree is in
boldface, all degrees should be in boldface.
As mentioned above, the resume's first impression is most
important. It should be exceptionally visually appealing, to be
inviting to the reader. Remember to think of the resume as an
advertisement.
There are absolutely no errors.
No typographical errors. No spelling errors. No grammar, syntax, or
punctuation errors. No errors of fact.
All the basic, expected information is
included. A resume must have the following key
information: your name, address, phone number, and your email
address at the top of the first page, a listing of jobs held, in
reverse chronological order, educational degrees including the
highest degree received, in reverse chronological order. Additional,
targeted information will of course accompany this. Much of the
information people commonly put on a resume can be omitted, but
these basics are mandatory.
Jobs listed include a title, the name of
the firm, the city and state of the firm, and the years.
Jobs earlier in a career can be summarized, or omitted if prior to
the highest degree, and extra part-time jobs can be omitted. If no
educational degrees have been completed, it is still expected to
include some mention of education (professional study or training,
partial study toward a degree, etc.) acquired after high school.
It is targeted. A resume should
be targeted to your goal, to the ideal next step in your career.
First you should get clear what your job goal is, what the ideal
position or positions would be. Then you should figure out what key
skills, areas of expertise or body of experience the employer will
be looking for in the candidate. Gear the resume structure and
content around this target, proving these key qualifications. If you
have no clear goal, take the skills (or knowledge) you most enjoy or
would like to use or develop in your next career step and build the
resume around those.
Strengths are highlighted / weaknesses
de-emphasized. Focus on whatever is strongest and most
impressive. Make careful and strategic choices as to how to
organize, order, and convey your skills and background. Consider:
whether to include the information at all, placement in overall
structure of the resume, location on the page itself or within a
section, ordering of information, more impressive ways of phrasing
the information, use of design elements (such as boldface to
highlight, italics to minimize, ample surrounding space to draw the
eye to certain things).
It has focus. A resume needs an
initial focus to help the reader understand immediately. Don't make
the reader go through the whole resume to figure out what
your profession is and what you can do. Think of the resume as an
essay with a title and a summative opening sentence. An initial
focus may be as simple as the name of your profession ("Commercial
Real Estate Agent," "Resume Writer") centered under the name and
address; it may be in the form of an Objective; it may be in the
form of a Summary Statement or, better, a Summary Statement
beginning with a phrase identifying your profession.
Use power
words. For every skill, accomplishment, or job described,
use the most active impressive verb you can think of (which is also
accurate). Begin the sentence with this verb, except when you must
vary the sentence structure to avoid repetitious writing.
» GO
TO A LIST OF POWER WORDS
Show you are results-oriented.
Wherever possible, prove that you have the desired qualifications
through clear strong statement of accomplishments, rather than a
statement of potentials, talents, or responsibilities. Indicate
results of work done, and quantify these accomplishment whenever
appropriate. For example: "Initiated and directed complete
automation of the Personnel Department, resulting in time-cost
savings of over 25%." Additionally, preface skill and experience
statements with the adjectives "proven" and "demonstrated" to create
this results-orientation.
Writing is concise and to the
point. Keep sentences as short and direct as possible.
Eliminate any extraneous information and any repetitions. Don't use
three examples when one will suffice. Say what you want to say in
the most direct way possible, rather than trying to impress with
bigger words or more complex sentences. For example: "coordinated
eight city-wide fund-raising events, raising 250% more than expected
goal" rather than "was involved in the coordination of six fund-
raising dinners and two fund-raising walkathons which attracted
participants throughout St. Louis and were so extremely successful
that they raised $5,000 (well beyond the $2,000 goal)."
Vary long sentences (if these are really
necessary) with short punchy sentences. Use phrases
rather than full sentences when phrases are possible, and start
sentences with verbs, eliminating pronouns ("I", "he" or "she").
Vary words: Don't repeat a "power" verb or adjective in the same
paragraph. Use commas to clarify meaning and make reading easier.
Remain consistent in writing decisions such as use of abbreviations
and capitalizations.
Make it look
great. Use a laser printer or an ink jet printer that
produces high- quality results. A laser is best because the ink
won't run if it gets wet. It should look typeset. Do not compromise.
If you do, your resume will look pathetic next to ones that have a
perfect appearance. Use a standard conservative typeface (font) in
11 or 12 point. Don't make them squint to read it. Use off-white,
ivory or bright white 8 1/2 x 11-inch paper, in the highest quality
affordable. If you are applying for a senior-level position, use
Crane's 100% rag paper and make sure the water-mark is facing the
right way. Use absolutely clean paper without smudges, without
staples and with a generous border. Don't have your resume look like
you squeezed too much on the page.
Shorter is usually
better. Everyone freely gives advice on resume length.
Most of these self-declared experts say a resume should always be
one page. That makes no more sense than it does to say an ad or a
poem should automatically be one page. Your resume can be 500 pages
long if you can keep the reader's undivided attention and interest
that long, and at the same time create a psychological excitement
that leads prospective employers to pick up the phone and call you
when they finish your weighty tome. Don't blindly follow rules! Do
what works. Sometimes it is appropriate to have a three pager. But
unless your life has been filled with a wide assortment of
extraordinary achievements, make it shorter. One page is best if you
can cram it all into one page. Most Fortune 500 C.E.O.s have a one-
or two-page resume. It could be said that, the larger your
accomplishments, the easier to communicate them in few words. Look
to others in your profession to see if there is an established
agreement about resume length in your field. The only useful rule is
to not write one more word than you need to get them to pick up the
phone and call you. Don't bore them with the details. Leave them
wanting more. Remember, this is an ad to market you, not your life
history.
Length of consulting resumes.
In a consulting resume, you are expected to shovel it as deep as you
possibly can. If you are selling your own consulting services, make
it sizzle, just like any other resume, but include a little more
detail, such as a list of well-known clients, powerful quotes from
former clients about how fantastic you are, etc. If you are seeking
a job with a consulting firm that will be packaging you along with
others as part of a proposal, get out your biggest shovel and go to
town. Include everything except the name of your goldfish: A full
list of publications, skills, assignments, other experience, and
every bit of educational crapola that you can manage to make sound
related to your work. The philosophy here is: more is better.
Watch your verb tense. Use
either the first person ("I") or the third person (''he," "she")
point of view,but use whichever you choose consistently. Verb tenses
are based on accurate reporting: If the accomplishment is completed,
it should be past tense. If the task is still underway, it should be
present tense. If the skill has been used in the past and will
continue to be used, use present tense ("conduct presentations on
member recruitment to professional and trade associations"). A way
of "smoothing out" transitions is to use the past continuous ("have
conducted more than 20 presentations...").
Break it up. A good rule is to
have no more than six lines of writing in any one writing "block" or
paragraph (summary, skill section, accomplishment statement, job
description, etc.). If any more than this is necessary, start a new
section or a new paragraph.
Experience before
education...usually. Experience sections should come
first, before education, in most every case. This is because you
have more qualifications developed from your experience than from
your education. The exceptions would be 1) if you have just received
or are completing a degree in a new professional field, if this new
degree study proves stronger qualifications than does your work
experience, 2) if you are a lawyer, with the peculiar professional
tradition of listing your law degrees first, 3) if you are an
undergraduate student, or 4) if you have just completed a
particularly impressive degree from a particularly impressive
school, even if you are staying in the same field, for example, an
MBA from Harvard.
Telephone number that will be
answered. Be sure the phone number on the resume will,
without exception, be answered by a person or an answering machine
Monday through Friday 8-5pm. You do not want to lose the prize
interview merely because there was no answer to your phone, and the
caller gave up. Include the area code of the telephone number. If
you don't have an answering machine, get one. Include e-mail and fax
numbers, if you have them. » top
A FEW MORE TIPS
Try not to include anything on the resume that could turn the
employer off, anything that is controversial (political, etc.) or
could be taken in a negative light.
Put the most important information on the first line of a writing
"block" or paragraph. The first line is read the most.
Use bold caps for your name on page one. Put your name at the top
of page two on a two-page resume. Put section headings, skill
headings, titles or companies (if impressive), degrees, and school
name (if impressive), in boldface.
Spell out numbers under and including ten; use the numerical form
for numbers over and including 11 (as a general rule), unless they
are the first words in a sentence. Spell out abbreviations unless
they are unquestionably obvious.
If you are not sure what sort of job you are looking for, you
will most likely wind up in something that turns out to be just a
"job." In a "job" you exchange your life for money. It is possible
to choose a career that will fit you so well that you do it because
you like to go to work. At Rockport Institute we offer career
counseling, coaching and testing programs for people committed to
choosing a new career direction for a lifetime of satisfaction and
success. Our services, available worldwide and consistently
commended for excellence since 1981, are for people who realize that
choosing the best possible career direction is one of the most
important decisions they will ever make. » Info on Rockport
services to help you choose the perfect new career
» top
WHAT NOT TO PUT ON A RESUME
- The word "Resume" at the top of the resume
- Fluffy rambling "objective" statements
- Salary information
- Full addresses of former employers
- Reasons for leaving jobs
- A "Personal" section, or personal statistics (except in
special cases)
- Names of supervisors
- References
» top
ACCURACY/
HONESTY/STRETCHING THE TRUTH
Make sure that you can back up what you say. Keep the claims
you make within the range of your own integrity. There is nothing
wrong with pumping things up in your resume so you communicate who
you are and what you can do at your very best. Did you ever see an
ad that didn't pump up the features they hope will convince you to
buy? In fact, you are being foolish if you seek to convey a careful,
balanced portrayal of yourself. You want to knock their socks off!
» top
WHAT IF I HAVE NOT
PERFORMED BRILLIANTLY?
If you are not really exceptional at doing this job or at least
potentially exceptional but inexperienced, maybe you are applying
for the wrong job. Why would anyone want to spend their days doing
something they did not excel at and didn't really enjoy? Click the
underlined text below and your computer will waft you off to a
Rockport Institute web page that tells you about our programs and
services for people who do not want to spend their life as a career
zombie, stuck in a boring, lifeless job where each day you wish you
were somewhere else.
» Rockport Institute's Pathfinder Career
Coaching programs.
» top
QUESTIONS A PRO WOULD
ASK YOU
What key qualifications will the employer be looking for?
What qualifications will be most important to them that you
possess?
Which of these are your greatest strengths?
What are the highlights of your career to date that should be
emphasized?
What should be de-emphasized?
What things about you and your background make you stand out?
What are your strongest areas of skill and expertise? Knowledge?
Experience?
What are some other skills you possess--perhaps more auxiliary
skills?
What are characteristics you possess that make you a strong
candidate? (Things like "innovative, hard-working, strong
interpersonal skills, ability to handle multiple projects
simultaneously under tight deadlines")
What are the three or four things you feel have been your
greatest accomplishments?
What was produced as a result of your greatest
accomplishments?
Can you quantify the results you produced in numerical or other
specific terms?
What were the two or three accomplishments of that particular
job?
What were the key skills you used in that job? What did you do in
each of those skill areas?
What sorts of results are particularly impressive to people in
your field?
What results have you produced in these areas?
What are the "buzz words" that people in your field expect you to
use in lieu of a secret club handshake, which should be included in
your resume? » top
» Go On to Part 5 - I'M NOT SURE THE JOB I'M LOOKING FOR IS THE RIGHT ONE FOR ME
This resume writing guide is an excerpt
from
our national bestselling book, The Pathfinder: How To
Choose or Change Your Career
for a Lifetime of Satisfaction and Success.
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