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Many feel that resume writing for a Software Engineer is a cake walk. It is not a daunting task, provided you put in great effort in formatting your resume and giving the right and precise information to the employer. After all, this is the initial interface between you and the prospective employer. There may be possibilities wherein you wouldn't be given a second chance among hundreds of resume of software engineer, hence make the most of it and hit the bulls eye in the first short.

One of the first rule of thumb when writing a resume is to keep it as simple and precise as possible. Many believe that a resume should not be longer than a single page but that is often debatable. In the case of a software engineer, it might not be possible to maintain a single page resume going by their varied skills, experience and qualifications. However it's an individual's choice. An ideal resume of a software engineer must begin with a summary, giving very brief information about you as a person, along with your skills and a brief information on the domain you have been working in. Continue reading ...


Article by, Arthur Donald and courtesy of Associated Content, Inc.


A resume is much more than a simple piece of paper; in fact, it is the pivot on which your entire career revolves. In a world that is filled with cutthroat competition, it is your weapon that helps you find your place in the industry of your choice, which is why you must hone it to perfection. It is a missive that employers see even before they set eyes on you, so you must ensure that it hits your target accurately. If employers fail to call you for an interview after reading your resume, you can assume that it has failed to impress them and failed you in the process. A few reasons why this could have happened are:

  • Lack of experience: I don't mean your lack of experience in writing a resume, but your lack of anything substantial to put down in the space marked for experience. Employers are not too keen on taking on greenhorns who have to be trained for the job - this costs them time and money. So experience matters. So what do you do if you're a college graduate who's on the lookout for a job? You're going to claim that it's practically impossible for you to have gained any experience. Au contraire, if you know what you want to do with your life early on in college, you could gain experience through internships and volunteer programs in the industry of your choice. You may not get paid, but at least you gain in experience and enhance your prospects of landing a good job.

Continue reading "3 Reasons Your Resume Fails to Impress" »


Most job seekers are wondering this same question - Am I not receiving calls because of the economy or is it my resume? I've read the articles, blogs, business week stories, monitored the job boards and discussed the issue with recruiters. Everyone has a different opinion and so do I.

I took my daughter to the mall this weekend to buy her a new pair of shoes (hang in here with me for a few minutes and you'll see where I'm going.) Unfortunately for my daughter, she has a wide foot. Which means only select stores carry her size shoe and it only comes in select styles. She's still in children's sized shoes so this even further complicates the issue. We normally go to this same store to buy her shoes every time she needs a pair and it's the only one in my area that carries wide shoes for children. When I went to the store they were out of her size in every single style (over 30) except one. The clerk made the comment 'we don't get much stock here anymore, we're always running out.'

Continue reading "Is It Your Resume or the Economy? " »


Never so much did the term, "Resume Real Estate" resonate until I was tasked to sell my home.

"I want to sell my home 'as-is,'" I firmly asserted to my real estate agent. It's a beautiful home in a great neighborhood and is an ideal opportunity for the right buyer. Standing head and shoulders among its peer group, I felt, this home offered a unique opportunity that would be obvious to the right buyer, and they would know to make an offer - and quickly!

Not only was the home of high quality, positioned in an established neighborhood with a track record of success (e.g., the neighborhood quiet, the homeowners' association upkeep consistent, the reputation for the city's upscale attitude broad-ranging, the schools high-caliber - the list goes on), but it also was uniquely located off of a key corridor in the community - easy to get everywhere else from here. Its value speaks for itself!

So ... why the continual stream of visitors but no offers?

Continue reading "Create Curb Appeal to Attract Interviews" »


Ninety-five percent of resumes are bad, as stated by HR specialists. But that doesn't mean that 95% of candidates are bad professionals anyway, it only means that their resumes are poorly written. Read the most common errors that are made in resumes over and over again and find out how to translate your qualifications and experience into an excellent resume.

Mistake #1. Duties instead of accomplishments.

While writing about your work experience don't use job-description language, i.e. don't list responsibilities and duties of a certain position as it shows that you can only perform basic job functions.

Solution:
Include high-impact accomplishments that will show what you did to overcome problems, what the results of your efforts were, how you helped your employer to make money, save time and make work easier.

Continue reading "15 Most Common Resume Mistakes" »


As co-coordinator with my colleague, Miriam Salpeter, I am proud to help launch a new community of expert career advisors and resume writing professionals called the Career Collective. Today's post is one of many responses to the question, "Are you a cookie cutter job seeker?" I encourage you to visit other members' responses, which will be linked at the end of my reply later this afternoon! Please follow our hashtag on Twitter: #careercollective.

So, you are the guy with the master's degree in the same thing your job competitors have a master's degree in. At your last position you were personally responsible for _______________. Fill in the blank with one of the following answers, A. Increasing Sales, B. Increasing Productivity or C. Team Building.

Guess what? So did 99% of the other applicants.

Continue reading "Eating Bananas Doesn't Make You an Ape" »


So, when are you too old to include your high school accomplishments on a resume? I have been asked this question many times, but as I just finished a resume workshop with a group of 17-21 year olds, it is back in my mind. No, there was no one in my group who was too old to have high school listed. But what got me thinking was the amount of other experience a 20-year-old can have, whereas I still see resumes from people 30 years old or older listing high school credentials.

One of my first edits with most resumes is removing "high school diploma" from the education section. (Note that I said most, not all.) Basically, if you have a college or university education, the high school bit is expected. Why use valuable resume space?

Continue reading "When Are You Too Old to List High School Accomplishments on Your Resume?" »


If you're asking 'what does a French philosopher have to do with resume writing?' you'd have a point. But the other day I read this Voltaire quote:

"The best way to be boring is to leave nothing out."

I read it on the same day that I received this question from someone who bought my book:

"Several times in your online course and your ebook, you mention not to include things that do not pertain directly to what you've chosen as your Value Proposition, but you never say why it would be a bad thing to include extra information. Why? Why should you not include a little extra? Most people would probably think that it might set them apart from the crowd. I'm asking about job-related info, not personal hobbies and such."

Here's the thing. Employers don't care about everything you've done - they care about the things you've done that apply directly to their needs. If you've determined a value proposition that you know is important to potential employers, why would you confuse the message by then adding in lots of extra stuff?

The secret to writing a strong resume is as much about what you leave out as what you include. You must be sure that every word is there for a reason. When adding something to your resume, ask yourself 'does this piece of information increase the chances of my being asked to an interview or not?' If yes, put it in. If no, leave it out!


Article by, Louise Fletcher and courtesy of CareerHub.com. The Career Hub blog connects job seekers with experts in career counseling, resume writing, personal branding and recruiting.


Have you ever had this happen? After you've written something, you go back and look at it, say, a week or so later, and wince over the "obvious" errors you made: typos, grammatical errors, and so on.The same thing may be true for your resume.

While I have no doubt you've put a lot of thought and effort into its preparation, it's always worth a second or third look, especially if you or an objective outsider have not critically examined it in a while--or at all.

And with the need to tweak resumes to better match position requirements, all the cutting and pasting may be wreaking havoc on what you once thought was the perfect resume. Also, the more you stare at your resume (or any document), the less likely you are to spot errors.

Continue reading "Your Resume and Recruiters' Pet Peeves" »


I have worked with a lot of clients over the years and most of them tend to land jobs pretty quickly after they have a completed resume. But times are tough and it tends to take longer for almost anyone to find a job and when people don't find jobs as quickly as they would like they tend to second guess nearly every aspect of their job search.

Am I wearing the right kind of interview suit? Did I offend the interviewer? Why won't the recruiter call me back? How do I make sure my resume is reviewed by a hiring manager? Does my resume need to be redone? These are just a few of the questions that job seekers have asked me. Many times a job seeker can make some changes which rapidly alter the course of their job search. Other times, however, they are over thinking the search process particularly when it comes to their resume.

Continue reading "Resume Formatting and Content - Liz Handlin's Perspective" »


Feeling Adrift at Sea in Your Job Search?

In a recent Twitter chat with my friend Jane Dominguez, a trainer and champion for better business writing and owner of The Write Business Advantage--Twitter handle: @WriteAdvantage--she posed the question: "How do you overcome the objections of professionals that they do not need expert help with their resumes?" As a result of our exchange, this article evolved.

Adrift in Job Search, (but I Don't 'Get' Resume Writers)

I get it: most professionals do not understand, until well into the job search process, the impact and importance of their resumes nor the complexity of the process and complex strategy involved in creating a meaningful resume. Though some professionals embark on a job search with an appreciation for the value of partnering with a professional resume writer, many wait until they are 'not' getting interviews, or, more important, not getting interviews with the right audience, before reaching for the resume writer life line.

Continue reading ""I Can Write My Own Resume!"" »


"Steel is an alloy consisting mostly of iron, with a carbon content between 0.2% and 2.14% by weight (C: 110 - 10Fe), depending on grade," according to Wikipedia's definition.

Steel begins its life as iron ore. Once the ore is mined, oxygen is removed, and the ore is combined with a preferred chemical partner such as carbon.

This process is known as smelting.

I'm sharing this information with you because of the car that sat in front of me at the bank window recently.

The car itself wasn't very old, and already the back end had been caved in by, either, a tailgater who wanted to find out how much of his own car would fit in the backseat of this one, or the inadvertent chance meeting with "tree-that-appears-out of-nowhere-while-I-was-in-reverse-looking-out-of-my-back-window-rearview-mirror-and-both-side-rearview-mirrors-all-at-the-same-time-an-aircraft-ground-traffic-flagman-was-guiding-me-out-of-my-driveway" tree. You know the one.

Anyway, it occurred to me that the steel that had been exposed by the paint and primer that had been chipped away during the accident, was already beginning to rust.

So, here you have a product that is used for everything from bed frames to space shuttle parts because of its strength and ability to be molded into so many different shapes and sizes. A material so vital and so flexible that without it I would have to say we would have few if any of the products that we take for granted on a daily basis. Bridges that take us across great chasms, automobiles that get us from point A to point B in relative comfort and speed, the machinery that protects our nation, the cutlery we use to feed ourselves, and the list goes on and on.

Yet, without a layer of primer, the air itself will destroy this amazing discovery. And of course a paint color of your choice aids in protecting as well as giving the steel-made product an appeal unmatched by, say, painted plastic.

How like our own career paths steel is. Continue reading ...


Article by Jacqui Barrett-Poindexter, one of only 26 Master Resume Writers (MRW) in the world, who has a B.A. in Writing and is owner of Career Trend, a career strategy and writing firm serving a global market. Jacqui composes career positioning documents that land interviews for forward-thinking executives and professionals, unearthing and translating their 'value into words.' Connect with her on LinkedIn - http://www.linkedin.com/in/jacquibarrett. Follow her on Twitter - @ValueIntoWords


Written By Jimmy Sweeney
Author of the brand new, Amazing Resume Creator


Many job seekers ask if they should include volunteer work as part of their job resumes when seeking new employment. It's a question worth looking at. Some employers are only interested in seeing the nuts-and-bolts details that show the what and where of your employment history.

Others want to see what you do in your spare time. They're not referring here to a round of golf on Saturday morning but rather what you do for the community as a volunteer. Perhaps you donate a few hours each week to a homeless shelter for men or you're part of a literacy program for immigrants or you provide meals for the elderly.

Continue reading "Add THIS to Your Resume and Stand Out!" »


I hope that you were all able to have a wonderful and relaxing [Memorial Day] and that you remembered that it was made possible by all the soldiers who, since the Revolutionary War, have been making sure that the U.S. is a safe and free country where we can live our lives in peace. I am very grateful to all the members of the U.S. Armed Services and, over the years, I have also had the opportunity to help many former soldiers to create resumes for use in the civilian world.

So, today, in honor of our soldiers I thought I would list a few tips for describing military service in terms that make sense to civilian employers.

1. Explain the military acronyms on your resume.

Instead of assuming that a civilian will know what FOB, PB, or JRTC means write out the entire word and follow it with the acronym in parentheses. Forward Operating Base (FOB), Patrol Base (PB), Joint Readiness Training Center (JRTC).

2. Where possible explain your military duties in simple terms that make sense to civilians.

If in doubt, describe what you did to your grandmother; if she can't understand what you are saying you need to go back to the drawing board and simplify.

Continue reading "Translating Your Military Experience Into Civilian Terms On Your Resume" »


Hooray! You found your dream job in a recent position announcement. The skills and experience being sought by the employer seem to be a perfect match to your background, qualifications, and career aspirations. There's only one problem: a bachelor's degree is listed as one of the "must-have" requirements, and you never finished your degree.

Is it hopeless to apply for a position when you don't meet the education requirements listed in the job ad?

Not necessarily!

Employers are often willing to overlook the absence of a degree if a candidate has ample experience related to the job in question. So your resume needs to highlight precisely that by showcasing your history of proven performance. It will be especially important for you to include quantifiable examples (using numbers, percentages, dollar amounts, and/or before/after comparisons) of how you have improved operations, profits, team performance, customer service, market share, etc. on your resume.

Continue reading "Overcome the Lack of a Degree on Your Resume " »


By Jimmy Sweeney
Author of the brand new, Amazing Resume Creator

Are you problem solver? Someone who can save the company money? Someone who can make the company money? A person who can organize and categorize without effort? If so, step up and sell those skills. What do you do well that will bring the company bottom line RESULTS?

For example, resolving conflict among subordinates is a good thing--but it doesn't show how that ability affects the company's bottom line. So what do you do? Leave that skill off your resume? Absolutely not! Instead reword it so it highlights the benefit.

Example:

Sales Manager

Resolves conflicts among subordinates. Result: Less staff turnover. Company benefit: Money and time saved on training new personnel.

Administrative Assistant

Hired one fast word processor. Result: Eliminated two part-time word processing jobs. Company benefit: Saved department $10,000 in unnecessary wages.

Marketing Director

Split-tested two sales letters against each other for 30 days and found one to improve sales by 25%. Result: Added $20,000 per month in additional profit by switching to the new sales letter.

Continue reading "Resume Tip: It's All About The RESULTS You Can Deliver!" »


Resumes are straightforward documents. They should list information that describes your education, the companies for which you have worked, what your jobs were, and what you accomplished in those jobs. In addition you can include lists of certifications, patents, affiliations, and board memberships. There are some variations on this formula but that is pretty much what a resume should contain. Do you know why?

Because that is what hiring managers, recruiters (retained or contingent), and human resources professionals want to see.

It amazes me that many people do not think about their intended audience when they put together a resume. I have had a couple of clients, both of whom had more than 20 years of work experience, who have asked me to do "clever" things to their resumes. For example, one client wanted to put her salary history at the top of her resume because she felt that it would demonstrate that she had excelled in her most recent jobs.

Continue reading "Don't Try to Be Clever on Your Resume" »

Imagine you're on Google, Yahoo, or any Internet search engine looking for a custom clothing store in your hometown. To search, you might use a series of words (keywords) to initiate your search, such as custom clothes, boutique, petite, and the name of your town. This search combination would result in a returned list of stores that meet one or all of your search word criteria. The same goes for using relevant words (to your profession, industry and personal characteristics) in your keyword rich resume, when an employer is looking for you.

If a recruiter or HR professional is doing a search on passive candidates (those candidates who have not directly submitted an application or resume to the company's database), they'll use a combination of keywords related to the position, as well as words that emphasize the characteristics they're seeking in an employee. They may do this on Google, Yahoo, LinkedIn, or any job board, as well. They're all search engine optimized. If your résumé contains these words or combinations of words, it will show up in the returned search results. When you submit your résumé online to a company's application system, the same concept applies. When the company is ready to pull down resumes for a particular position, it may do so by title, keywords, education, or any other combination of words.

Continue reading "Writing a keyword rich resume" »


Written By Jimmy Sweeney
Author of the brand new, Amazing Resume Creator


If you have one or more gaps in your resume, it's a good idea to build a bridge from one experience to the next--not with fibs or lies but with the truth.

For example, suppose you worked as an administrative assistant from 2002-2008.

But from 1999 till 2002 you were unemployed because you were ill or had a baby or took time off to help your spouse launch a business. Whatever your reason, you may wonder what to put on the resume so the gap won't work against you.

Here's what you can do:

List the actions you took during your 'employment break' right along with your work experiences. This approach will actually work in your favor because it will show you as a well-rounded person who uses your time productively and in some cases unselfishly--especially if you helped a family member or volunteered for a needy cause. By speaking honestly, you also show your integrity. You'll build a trustworthy image and assure the hiring manager you're someone who is balanced and compassionate.

Here's an example of some bridge builders:

1998-2001 Real Estate Office Manager, ABC Real Estate Company,
Oakbrook, IL

2001-2005 Stayed home to take care of aging parent. Did some free-lance
real estate work, as time permitted.

OR

1998-2001 Executive Assistant, Liberty Manufacturing, Inc.,
Austin, TX

2001-2002 Volunteered for Senator Paul Gladstone's re-election campaign
and finished work on Master's Degree in Business Management.

When it comes to your resume, bridge the work gap with the truth and watch it take you over to the other side--back into the work force.

Jimmy Sweeney is the president of CareerJimmy and author of the brand new, "Amazing Resume Creator." Jimmy is also the author of several career related books and writes a monthly article titled, "Job Search Secrets."

Visit our friends at Amazing Resume Creator for your "instant" resume today. In just 10 minutes flat you can UPDATE or CREATE a resume guaranteed to land you more hot job interviews next week.


If you have a gap in your employment history, you may have concerns about how to explain this on your resume.

Keep in mind that many people step away from the workplace each year to raise children, care for ill/aging family members, return to school, recover from an illness/accident, or for some other reason. So the good news is that there is less of a stigma attached to this than there used to be.

It's possible that you may not even need to explain the gap. For example, if you were away from the workforce from February 2006 to October 2007, you can de-emphasize the 20-month gap by listing years of employment (vs. months and years).

But if the gap spans multiple years, and especially if the gap has occurred within the last five years, then it may need to be addressed on either the resume or the cover letter. Employers like to see the work chronology, and may wonder what you were doing if large gaps are present.

Serving as the primary caregiver for a family member or taking a sabbatical to pursue a degree are valid explanations for a gap. You can also fill this time period by showcasing any volunteerism, consulting, or self-study you completed. Treat this experience just as you would a paid, full-time position, and try to include examples of key contributions you made. For example, if you helped with a school fundraising drive, mention how your efforts were instrumental in meeting or exceeding the giving goal. Be sure to emphasize skills and accomplishments that are relevant to your current career objective.

Best wishes for job search success!


Kim.jpg Article by, Karen Hofferber and courtesy of Kim Isaacs and ResumePower blog.


The U.S. housing crisis has led to a mass exodus of mortgage professionals from this industry. With foreclosures and defaults skyrocketing, lending guidelines tightening, and home values plummeting, opportunities for commissions are scarce and layoffs are increasing. It's tough to make a living originating mortgages when lenders and their loan products are dwindling and qualified borrowers are difficult to locate.

If you're a mortgage lending professional and considering a career change, here's some good news: armed with a powerful career change resume, you can successfully break into a new industry. Here's how to make your resume shine:

1. State your goal. Remove guesswork for employers by clearly stating your career goal towards the beginning of your resume. There are several ways you can do this. My favorite is to create a resume title that spells it out succinctly -- such as "Career Goal: Medical/Pharmaceutical Sales." Another option is to write an objective (but make sure that your objective focuses on employers' needs and not just on what you want). A third choice (which I often use in conjunction with a resume title) is to incorporate your goal in a powerful opening profile summarizing your key strengths. (See #3, below.)

Continue reading "Resume Tips for Mortgage Industry Career Changers " »


After my daughter was born, "Get in shape!" topped my list of New Year's resolutions. Eight years and some 20+ extra pounds later, this pesky to-do item still taunts me. I blame it in part on my love of everything "ito," as in Fritos, Doritos, etc.

So if you're looking for get-fit advice, I'm the last person you'd want to consult. But if your resume is in need of a shape-up, I can help!

Follow the suggestions below and I guarantee that with a bit of effort, you'll start 2009 with a more "lean and mean" career marketing tool that can help you win the employment race.

Trim the fat. Is your resume loaded with flowery language? Does it suffer from "adjective-overkill?" Are there chunks of text screaming for white space? Is it guilty of bad resume lingo, fluff fillers, or information overload? Any of these things can weigh down your resume. My colleague and mentor Kim Isaacs is so masterful at eliminating excess on a resume that I affectionately refer to her as "the slasher." See her article on how to write a concise resume.

Continue reading "New Year's Resolution: Get (Your Resume) in Shape! " »


Written By Jimmy Sweeney
Author of the brand new, Amazing Resume Creator

From Times Square in New York City to Tiananmen Square in Bejing City, people will be ringing in the new year with a glass of cheer, a toast, a song, a display of fireworks. And the following day they'll dive into 2008 with new dreams, goals, resolutions, and commitments for the months ahead.

What will yours be? Perhaps among your goals is an exciting new job. To make that a reality, however, you'll need to brush up your resume or better yet, create a fresh one.

But don't just list your previous jobs and responsibilities,
important as they are.

Add a bit of spice! Include a section that focuses on your good will, your volunteer work, and your acts of kindness in your previous work place, church, and community.

Such activities often say more about you than your professional profile. For example, consider how valuable you'd be to a company as a department manager or sales trainer if the hiring manager read in your resume that you managed a group of lay leaders who banded together to put up housing for the poor in Mexico. Imagine how well you'd be thought of for spending one day a month teaching homeless men a skill they can use in the workforce.

Continue reading "Spice Up Your 2009 Resume Now...Add This Little Gem" »


In case you missed last Monday's headlines, the announcement by the National Bureau of Economic Research made it official: we're in a recession. I doubt many folks were shocked by this grim news, as it only reinforces what most Americans already knew - times are tough and belts are tightening.

Layoffs are an unfortunate by-product of economic recessions, but if you take steps now to "recession-proof" your resume, you won't be caught unprepared if you find yourself downsized. Here's how:

1. Emphasize ways you have boosted the bottom line for your employers. Now more than ever, employers will be trying to preserve profits and pinch pennies. Use your resume to prove your talents in this area and you're bound to leave a favorable impression. This might include contributions you have made (either independently or as a member of a team) to cost-cutting measures, revenue-generating efforts, customer acquisition/retention initiatives, or productivity/efficiency increases. Wherever possible, quantify these achievements with numbers for maximum impact and credibility. Here are a few examples using dollars, percentages, and before/after comparisons:

  • Saved company $5K annually by transferring print newsletter to online format.
  • Minimized costly rework on widget product line to increase profit margin by 15% (equivalent to $2.8M in annual revenue gains).
  • Served on continuous improvement taskforce that cut store shrink in half (from 4% to 2%) to deliver annual bottom-line gains of $17K+.

Continue reading "5 Ways to Recession-Proof Your Resume " »


More lessons from the Jobacle Resume Writing Challenge. Here are some essential questions to ask prospective writers - and yourself - before you hire someone to conduct a re-write.

WHAT IS YOUR PROCESS?

Understanding how the resume writer works will increase the odds that you will be satisfied with the final product. Aside from asking is you are entitled to re-writes and edits, it's important to know...

HOW MUCH TIME DO YOU HAVE TO COMMIT?

When I say 'YOU' I mean you the resume owner. Depending on the writer, I spent anywhere from four hours to two minutes involved in the process. Whether it was fielding questions, completing questionnaires, or exchanging e-mails, I strongly advise that you be honest with yourself on how much time you are willing - and able - to commit.

I personally felt that the writers who spent more time with me did a better job, but the panel of Jobacle judges didn't necessarily see it that way.

Ask what the writer's process is and how much involvement you will have. Know your own time constraints and the writer for an estimate before you hire someone.

Continue reading about hiring a resume writer ...

andrew gr.jpgArticle by Andrew G.R. and courtesy of jobacle.com - your cure for carbon copy career advice!


All of the entries for the inaugural Jobacle Resume Challenge have been unveiled. I want to thank the participants, our judges, and most of all YOU, the reader.

As with most experiments, we learned a lot about how we can improve the exercise for next time: and there will be a next time. In fact, the next go around will feature a lucky reader's resume getting the royal treatment.

Subscribe now so you don't miss out.

Many job seekers have e-mailed me asking what my verdict is; is hiring a professional resume writer worth the money? While I'm hesitant to give a simple 'yes' or 'no' answer, I can say that the challenge has given me new appreciation for what resume writers do and the process involved.

The decision to hire the help really comes down to what your goals are, where you are in your career, and most importantly - who the resume writer is.

Continue reading about the Jobacle Resume Challenge ...

andrew gr.jpgArticle by Andrew G.R. and courtesy of jobacle.com - your cure for carbon copy career advice!


Are you someone who includes subjective descriptions of your skills, personal attributes or competencies on your resume? If so this post is for you.

How many people do you think would describe themselves as any one of the following?

  • Great team player
  • Strong communicator
  • Great leader
  • High integrity

The answer is pretty much everyone. The funny thing is that I have met very few actual team players in my professional life so when someone lists "great team player" on a resume I automatically skip over that statement and look for something that is backed up by verifiable metrics.

When you look at as many resumes as recruiters (both in-house and headhunters) do every day you tend to discount the subjective statements that you see on most resumes. So, even though you may have high integrity and you might be a strong team player there is just no point in listing that information on your resume unless you can back it up with some kind of meaningful description or, better yet, metrics.

Continue reading "Leave Subjective Statements Off Your Resume" »


Earlier today, I received a phone message from a caller who offered this:

A recruiter just said these words to me: If you're so good, how come your resume is so bad? Apparently, the recruiter had gone on to say to the caller that he was having a hard time figuring out the candidate's resume story.

Is your resume working for you, or against you? Is your resume helping you generate interviews or is it hurting your chances of getting hooked up with a potential employer? Are you making it easy for someone to get you and your story, or are you making it hard for yourself to get noticed in a sea of talent?


Continue reading "If You're SO Good, How Come Your Resume's SO Bad?" »


Article Provided by JIST Publishing

By now you get it: If you want to land interviews--let alone a job offer--you need a stellar resume. Fortunately, you already have one and are fairly certain it's strong enough to put you a step ahead of the competition.

Not so fast. Sure you've got a knock-out resume, but do you actually know how to use it? Unfortunately, most job seekers don't, according to career coach Katy Piotrowski.

"Nine out of 10 job seekers do very little with their resumes, hoping that their dream employer will come looking for them. Just like a hammer, a resume is a tool that can help you get the job done. But if the hammer sits in a toolbox unused, it's worthless. Your resume, sitting on your desk or in your computer, will do little for you unless it lands in the hands of decision makers," Piotrowski writes in her recently-released book The Career Coward's Guide to Resumes (JIST © 2008). Continue reading about maximizing your resume's results ...

Article by Selena Dehne and courtesy of JIST Publishing


Every once in awhile someone tells me what they want done with their resume and I just shake my head in wonder. I am referring to folks who think that with a little sleight of hand they can fool recruiters into thinking that their work experience, employers, or education are something other than what their resume says it is. The truth? You are nuts if you think you can really fool recruiters.

Here are some examples:

Example A
One client who had never worked in "Green Energy" in her life wanted her resume to include a list 10 or 15 seminars she attended (she wasn't a speaker, mind you, just an attendee) that were related to green energy. Her rationale? She figured that if she kept the seminars on the resume that recruiters would consider her qualified for positions in green energy. Her real problem? Her job is in sales but she couldn't tell me any of her sales goals/quotas over the past few years -- but she wanted her resume to claim that she exceeded quota every year.

It seemed to me that she was trying to perform a magical illusion and try to focus recruiters away from the fact that there was no substance to her resume. She didn't want readers to focus on the fact that she had no numbers to back up her claims of sales excellence -- she wanted them to focus on her supposed expertise in green energy. What she didn't realize is that recruiters have seen every magic trick in the book and are very alert to a resume that lacks substance.

I pointed out that (a) if you are a sales person and you list "exceeded quota" on your resume you can bet that any recruiter will ask the obvious question, "What was your quota and by how much did you exceed it?" and (b) No recruiter will think that a list of seminars you attended in a field other than your own makes you qualified for a career change.

Continue reading "Who Do You Think You Are Fooling?" »


I was just talking to a client who received resume feedback from a recruiter. The recruiter had suggested that her resume would be stronger if she added dates to her earliest employment and education, and if she described the type of companies she worked for.

I know why the headhunter wanted this information - these are both useful pieces of data for his decision-making process. But I left them off for a specific reason: Because the recruiter's interests and your interests don't always align.

Your goal is to get your resume past the screeners and score an interview (because in many cases the information that might screen you out won't actually matter once the company meets you and realizes how fabulous you are). The recruiter's job is to gather the facts so he can see if you fit the exact job criteria. See how those two things don't always match up?

When a product marketer writes a promotional brochure, she doesn't include all the downsides of the product - she just highlights the good things and it's up to you to ferret out the rest if you are so inclined. I think the same thing applies with your resume.

In the case of my client, I left off the early dates to stop possible age discrimination. I omitted the types of companies because she specifically stated that she wanted to change industries and I didn't want her being eliminated from consideration just because all her prior jobs were in telecommunications.

Even though the recruiter suggested these 'improvements' to the resume, he still scheduled an interview with my client. I know many recruiters would disagree with me, but I think that means the resume did exactly what it was supposed to do.


louise fletcher.jpgArticle by, Louise Fletcher and courtesy of CareerHub.com. The Career Hub blog connects job seekers with experts in career counseling, resume writing, personal branding and recruiting.


After writing this post, I noted an excellent earlier post by Barbara Safani on this topic, written as a fellow-attendee at the recent National Resume Writers Association conference in San Diego. To her great comments, I hope my post will provide some additional valuable input. Remembering the old blind men and the elephant story, we each zero in on different aspects of things, with equally valid observations...

One of the speakers at the NRWA conference was Paul Forster, Co-founder and CEO of Indeed.com. For those unfamiliar with Indeed, it is one of the new breed of mega-job search engines that according to their About page "gives job seekers free access to millions of employment opportunities from thousands of websites." It is ranked by Time magazine as one of the top 10 websites and described by the Wall Street Journal as "Simply a one-stop shop for job seekers." I can personally highly recommend it, both as a search engine and for its many other valuable features such as job trend analyses and salary information.

Mr. Forster's presentation entitled "Resume Optimization in the New World of Search" provided some insights into factors you will want to consider in developing your resume for online posting purposes. A key consideration is now "ROSE," "Resume Optimization for Search Engines," and it comes into play both in the massive online resume databases of job sites as well as in the internal resume databases of individual companies that use software such as Taleo (an Applicant Tracking System) to manage and search the resumes they keep on file.

Here are a few valuable suggestions I gleaned from Mr. Forster's presentation:

  • Leverage Indeed's capability to search for equivalent job titles to zero in on variations on your job title. Work these into the text of your resume to make it more likely to pop up in a search.
  • Search sites like LinkedIn for relevant keywords related to your relevant job titles and make sure to work those into your resume text as well.
  • Mine the job boards, LinkedIn, and other resources to identify synonyms for your key skills and include them.
  • Look for variants in how names of companies and terms are spelled or abbreviated (e.g., EBay, E-bay; ETrade, E-Trade; IT, Information Technology; SEO, Search Engine Optimization) and include them (possibly in parentheses) to help ensure someone searching for that company or term will find your resume.
  • Consider "stemming" as you craft your resume's content - using varying endings of words. For example, someone searching for a marketer may actually search for the word 'marketing' or for accounting may key in 'accountant'.
  • Make your resume Web friendly, avoiding tables and indentions, etc. that will translate poorly online no matter how carefully you manually insert your spaces.

Looking forward, Mr. Forster sees the future of the resume as being in the virtual world, with increasingly rich media. He also sees it as boundary-less--with many links going into and out of the document. Examples might be a link to a book you wrote that is for sale on Amazon, your websites, your LinkedIn profile, articles that mention you, etc. Also on the horizon are "Open Standards" which are currently under discussion but have a good way to go before finalization and widespread adoption. Open standards will one day result in a single resume that will be acceptable everywhere in applying for jobs, eliminating the necessity to fill out widely varying forms on each job board or company's website.

I have saved for last a "to do" that I strongly concur with and feel is probably the most important piece of advice in his presentation: Once you have posted your resume, REFRESH it periodically, as a recent post/edit date is a critical factor in ranking your resume, superseding all other criteria.

laurie smith.jpgArticle by, Laurie Smith and courtesy of CareerHub.com. The Career Hub blog connects job seekers with experts in career counseling, resume writing, personal branding and recruiting.


I recently attended the National Resume Writers' Association annual conference in San Diego and had the pleasure of hearing Paul Forster, Co-Founder and CEO of Indeed.com speak. Paul offered some excellent tips for resume optimization that can help job seekers increase the chances that they will be found on a job board. Here are my favorites:

Use full and abbreviated words in your resume. For example, a CFO should include both CFO and Chief Financial Officer in the body of the document. A candidate in the pharmaceuticals industry should use both pharmaceuticals and pharma to describe their industry.

Stem keywords and vary your word choices. For example, rather than just using the word analyst on your resume, include variants such as analysis or financial analyst as well.

Use a text only version of your resume for online posting. Many companies use parsing technology to locate the information they need on a resume. Heavily formatted Word documents may be compromised or unreadable when uploaded into their databases. Save a copy of your resume as an ASCII, plain text document to maximize the chances of having your document read.

Refresh your resume. Recent, fresh resumes appear higher in the database cue. By changing something on the resume you have uploaded to a job board, you increase your chances of being found online. Be careful not to use this technique too frequently or your resume could be perceived as spam.

Don't compromise the reader. While it is important to optimize the resume, it must be done in a way that it still makes sense to the human reader. Be sure to balance the needs of the human reader with search engine optimization techniques to create the best results. Weave word variations into your document in a logical and natural way.

barbara safani.jpgArticle by, Barbara Safani and courtesy of CareerHub.com. The Career Hub blog connects job seekers with experts in career counseling, resume writing, personal branding and recruiting.


I just finished reading "The Complete Idiot's Guide to the Perfect Resume" (Fourth Edition), by Susan Ireland. It's an excellent book for job seekers and college students trying to land the best internships. Ireland describes and offers samples of four different types of resumes:

  • Chronological
  • Functional
  • Chronological hybrid
  • Functional hybrid

Although I've always used nothing but a chronological resume, I discovered that a functional resume would serve me better. I also learned that in the United States, a resume and a CV (curriculum vitae) aren't the same thing. Resumes are for ordinary job seekers, but CVs are for people in education, medicine or technical fields.

Besides being packed with resume writing tips and dozens of sample resumes, Ireland also gives detailed instructions for making a resume email and scanner friendly. Of course, cover letters are included. What surprised me was that she also offered instructions for how to write a thank you letter. Again, samples were provided. Ireland's samples are typed, but some career counselors recommend handwritten notes, giving the thank you note more of a personal touch.

"The Complete Idiot's Guide to the Perfect Resume" is a must for any college student looking for an internship or a recent college graduate looking for an entry-level job. I'm glad to have this book in my collection of professional reference material. It's simple, to the point and easy to navigate if there's a particular section or sample that's needed.


The purpose of a resume is to relay your accomplishments and qualifications to an employer. A resume lists in one place everything you have done in your career, so an employer can scan through it quickly to see if you a match for a position.

The perfect resume is focused, clear, and written well. Here are some tips to crafting it successfully:

  • Include your full contact information.

  • Include your objective and position wanted. This objective will let the employer know what position you are seeking and will keep you on task as you write or update your resume.

  • Include all of your past positions. If you do not want prospective employers to know where you are currently working, leave it out, and put down something like, "Top Fortune 500 Company" or "Small boutique firm." If you have more than twenty years experience, you can list positions before that time as bullets or a note that reads, "Additional work history can be provided upon request."

  • Include volunteer work. Work is work, whether you have been paid for it or not.

  • Include the results you've achieved. Use percentages and dollar amounts. For example, you increased production by 25 percent. You made $500,000 for your company. You reduced turnover by 50 percent. Numbers make your resume stand out and pop for the reader.

  • Include education and awards received.

  • Be clear and concise. Know what you want to say before you craft a new résumé or update your current one.

  • Make a note where gaps exist. If you were let go, make a note of that on the résumé. If you took a break, were out of work for a while, did consulting assignments or temp work, note that on the resume. Anything that seems out of place will be questioned by the reader. Don't expect to be able to explain yourself. You don't want to be passed by because someone had an unanswered question or reservation about you.

  • Choose a chronological or functional format and stick with the one chosen.

  • Be consistent. If you spell out a month for one position, do the same for all positions.

  • If you use periods at the end of bullets, use periods for all.

  • Use a font sized 11 or bigger.

  • Leave some white space or your resume will look too crowded.

  • Proofread your résumé and eliminate typos.

  • Don't include personal references or hobbies.

  • Don't include your Social Security number.

  • Don't exaggerate your experience or lie.

  • Don't include your salary.

  • Don't be the only one who reviews your resume before you send it out. It's important to have another pair of eyes (or several pairs) to give you feedback. If you get conflicting opinions, go with what feels right for you.

  • Don't think you have to get your résumé together on your own. It's OK to hire a professional to write it for you.

Your resume is a promotional piece about you, and is your opportunity to shine and impress employers. If you are a match for a position, an employer will bring you in for an interview. If you have less than what an employer is looking for, you will be seen as underqualified. If you have more than what the employer is looking for, you will be seen overqualified. No one is going to give you a chance to explain yourself. If you want a job, it's up to you to prove that you can do it. Your resume is your proof.

If you would like to know more about any of these tips, I would be happy to elaborate.

debbrown.jpgArticle by Deborah Brown-Volkman, a top professional Certified Coach (PCC), sought-out career coach & expert, best-selling author, and the President of , Surpass Your Dreams, a successful career coaching, life coaching, and mentor coaching company that has been delivering a message of motivation, success, and personal fulfillment since 1998.

Job searches nowadays are much more in-depth than they have been in the past. Before, you simply drafted a good resume, printed it on quality paper, and submitted it to the companies you were interested in working for. Now, however, most companies prefer to have their applications completed online.

Recruiters make no exception to this rule as they have also moved the majority of their candidate searches to the Internet. This means in order to be found for a job it's a good idea to post your resume on one or more online job banks. To help you prepare for this adaptation in job seeking let's look at some ways that you can advertise your resume through Internet job search services.

Understand the Process

Before you begin posting your resume with various online job banks, it is a good idea to understand the method behind their madness. So let's look at one of the more popular sites, Careerbuilder.com, to see how they go about having users participate in their process.

To get started, you simply visit their website where you can immediately post your resume using their wizard (after signing up for a free account). Once your resume has been posted, their search engine will scan it to record keywords. Your resume is then sorted categorically allowing employers to locate it based on which keywords they type into the search database. If you don't have a resume to post, you can use their resume builder, which is a wizard offering the ability to create a resume to post.

Choose Applicable Keywords

Since we know that job banks rely heavily on keyword searches, it is a good idea to make certain that you're listing the right ones before you even post your resume. But how can you know which keywords to use?

One good way to find keywords is by thinking of appropriate phrases in your field. For instance, as a nursing professional, keywords like "CRNA" or "registered nurse" are applicable. Also, listing nursing organizations like AAACN or AMSN is great if they apply to your career. You can consider phrases like "self starter" and "fast learning," in addition to action words like "established" and "implemented" to help highlight your strengths as an employee. Whichever keywords you find that apply to you and your career, make sure to use some for the title of your resume as well.

Internalize Being the Most Qualified Employee

When trying to sell yourself for a non-yet-existent position, it can be difficult to know exactly what qualifications to list for yourself. But you can start by simply determining why you feel you're a great candidate overall. Confidence can get you far when writing your resume because it helps you choose words that define how you feel about yourself. That way, even if you don't know what recruiter may look at your resume, you can still rest assured that whoever it is will feel you're the right person for the job.

Joining the 21st century application process doesn't have to be frustrating or unpleasant. If you can understand the process, keep up with key phrases in your field, and let your confidence speak in your resume, you'll find that securing an exciting job is easier than your thought.

Heather Eagar is a former professional resume writer and owner of http://www.ResumeLines.com who is now dedicated to providing job seekers with resources and products that promote job search success from beginning to end.


So, you are trying to write your own resume, and you are focusing on trying to highlight all of the things that you've done in the past? STOP!

Your resume isn't ABOUT your past - it's about your future! Of course, you need to rely on what you have done to convince your next employer of what you can do for him or her, but remember: Your resume needs to read as the perfect match for your next job. You don't want to look like the candidate who is qualified to do the job you already have.

Just as you need to target you resume to address your potential employer's problems, you also need to target it to highlight the skills and accomplishments that propel you to where you want to go. Review job descriptions that interest you. What do they want? What skills do they seek? Demonstrate that you are that person by artfully illustrating that you have the skills and accomplishments to get the job done.

You don't have those skills on your resume? The "propel you forward" ones? Take the wheel and get them! Talk to your employer about the skills you'd like to develop. See where there are opportunities to get involved in projects that will give you what you need for your resume. Drive your own career bus, or be stuck hopelessly at the red light.

Article by Miriam Salpeter of Keppie Careers

Article courtesy of the Recruiting Blogswap, a content exchange service sponsored by CollegeRecruiter.com, a leading site for college students looking for internships and recent graduates seeking entry-level jobs and other career opportunities.


There are so many people applying for jobs these days, it's difficult even to get your resume read, let alone get invited for an interview. Some candidates, however, go overboard in the quest for attention, resorting to boldfaced lies about their education and experience in order to make their resumes stand out. CareerBuilder.com's Rosemary Haefner has these suggestions for ethically getting your resume to the next stage.

  • Be the first in line. One in five employers said they are receiving more resumes this year than last year. A good way to break out from the crowd is to be the first one in line. Sign up for e-mail alerts and perform daily searches for jobs in a specific field or industry.
  • Use keywords. Many hiring managers and HR departments are using new technology to review job candidates. Applicant tracking systems scan resumes and provide the managers with a ranking based on keywords in the document. Among the terms employers searched for most often: "problem-solving and decision making skills," "oral and written communication," "customer service," "retention," "performance" and "productivity improvement," "leadership," "technology," "team-building," "project management" and "bilingual."
  • Focus on tangible results. Most hiring managers spend a minute or less looking at resumes. Think of yours as a written audition and make the most of a limited window of opportunity. Focus on specific accomplishments and positive outcomes that you achieved in previous positions.
  • Be transparent. If you have a gap in employment periods, explain why. Mention any volunteer work you did or classes you took at these times to show that your skill set is still current and highlight what you have accomplished. People often forget to include volunteer work, part-time jobs and freelance work in a resume, even though that work is often relevant to your career path. If you did not complete a degree, do not claim that you did; college and university attendance is easy to verify.

alexandra levit.jpgArticle by Alexandra Levit and courtesy of Water Cooler Wisdom blog.

If you are a college student, you may not yet be accustomed to writing resumes and cover letters. However, the time will soon come where you'll need to learn in order to secure an on- or off-campus job, internship, or job after graduating.

You'll be happy to know that the process is not difficult. It's just a matter of gathering your experiences and organizing them effectively. So to give you a jump start on the writing process, let's look at some ways you can utilize your current skills and talents to create great cover letters and resumes for the jobs you want.

Think of the Purpose of Your Resume

Though you may feel like a novice resume writer, if you set your sites on the purpose behind creating your resume, you'll find that even your first one can be very successful. So what is the purpose? To engage the hiring manager by displaying the many ways you are qualified for the position you want.

Of course, if you are new to the workforce, you may not have a great deal of experience to list on your resume. However, you can list other information, like volunteering efforts or community service projects, technical or computer skills, coursework and GPA (if over 3.0), skills acquired through internships and summer jobs, awards, and any positive personal characteristics that show the employer you are a good fit for their company. Highlighting this information showcases your strengths, and offers insight into your potential as a great employee.

Research, Research, Research before Writing Your Cover Letter

The most important thing you can do when writing your cover is research the job and company you're applying with. This way, you can not only get the inside track on what the company is looking for in an intern or employee, but also tailor your skills and experience to match the position you want.

For instance, let's say you are applying for an internship with a design company because you are pursuing a degree in fashion. First, you'll want to research the company's mission to learn their organizational culture. Then you'll want to make sure the skills you have match that culture, as well as the job you want. If you've tailored outfits for your friends or sewed costumes for your church's play, tell them about it. You can use your experiences to date, alongside an explanation of your passion for the field, to illustrate a great picture of why you're qualified for the position.

Consider the Layout Design

Because you may not have a lot of information to include on your resume, it is that much more important that you consider the layout design. If you don't want yours looking like everyone else's, you may want to avoid MS Word templates. You can look for really creative designs at your career center or on the Internet to help you organize your information. That way, your resume will not only be informative, but eye-catching as well.

While you may not have a lot of work experience, you still have plenty to offer. So gather everything that you've accomplished in your high school and college years for your resume and cover letter. You'll be surprised to find that you're a much stronger candidate than you could have ever imagined.

Heather Eagar is a former professional resume writer and is passionate about providing working professionals with current, reliable and effective job search tools and information. If you need a resume service, compare some of the top ones in the industry at http://www.resumelines.com.


Bachelor of Science degree (major in Chemistry, Biology, Molecular, etc.) is not necessary, but it is helpful in medical sales, clinical diagnostics sales, laboratory sales, DNA products sales, sales of medical or surgical supplies, medical device sales, pharmaceutical sales, or any healthcare sales. So don't bury it at the bottom of your resume where I have to search for it. Candidates who don't have a BS try to hide that fact in various ways, but if you have yours, display it proudly. (But don't fake it!)

While we're on the subject of resumes: Recruiters have limited time to sift through the rubble of your resume, so it would be helpful (for you) to use bullet points. Make it easy for me to skim through and discover how fabulous you are. Your college professor wanted to read a well-crafted paragraph, but I don't.

If you have any questions regarding this topic or any other, please do not hesitate to ask....

Article by, Medical Sales Recruiter

Article courtesy of the Recruiting Blogswap, a content exchange service sponsored by CollegeRecruiter.com, a leading site for college students looking for internships and recent graduates seeking entry-level jobs and other career opportunities.

Being fired from your job can be extremely difficult. You not only have to think about how you will put meals on the table and pay your bills, but also how your pride and belief in yourself as an employee has been affected.

No matter the reason you were let go, it can be more than a notion trying to start over again. But if treated with the right attitude, the application process can be very similar to before you were fired. So to help you get started, let's look at some ways you can pick yourself up and get back in the workforce.

Focus on the Positives When Writing in Your Resume

You may feel obligated to come right out in your resume and tell a prospective employer why you left your former employer. But in all honesty, the resume is not that place. Your goal in the resume is to spell out where you worked and how your active responsibilities and skills made a difference during the time you were there.

In other words, focus on the positives. You can create a section titled "Attributes and Qualifications" to highlight the ways you were able to make a difference in the company. In that section you can very specifically name projects that showcase the highest points in your career. This way, you can help the employer focus on how you will be an asset to their company - not the opposite.

Let Your Cover Letter Tell a Great Story

The last thing you want to do when opening your cover letter is say the words "The reason I'm applying for this position is because I was fired from my previous one." Instead, you want to focus on the strengths in your area of expertise that have encouraged you to apply for the job. In fact, there is no need to mention being fired at all in the cover letter as it will leave tons of questions in the hiring managers' minds about why you were fired instead of focusing on why they want to hire you.

What can you do instead? Treat your cover letter like you would any other. Explain with passion why you really want this position. Let them know how you can enhance the company's mission with your expertise. And sell yourself as a great asset. You will have your chance to explain why you were fired; but dwelling on it in the cover letter is not the best place to do it.

What about References?

If you can avoid using a reference from your previous employer then it would be a good idea to do so. However, if you must reference the employer from which you were fired, you might want to try a manager with whom you had a good relationship, despite how you departed. That way, they can focus on your personality or work ethic (if it was good) and not so much on why you were fired.

Getting fired does not have to be the end of the world. So keep pushing toward your goal of finding employment. You'll see that with the right attitude - and a solid cover letter and resume - you'll land another job in no time.

Heather Eagar is a former professional resume writer and owner of http://www.ResumeLines.com who is now dedicated to providing job seekers with resources and products that promote job search success from beginning to end.


I was recently talking with a friend of mine who spent 2 weeks shopping for the perfect interview suit. She was scheduled to interview at a very white shoe investment bank for a senior position so she wound up purchasing a Chanel suit for the big day. And of course she had to find the perfect new shoes (Prada) and bag (Prada) to round out the look. She spent thousands of dollars on her outfit over the course of two weeks in preparation for this huge and lucrative opportunity. She even scheduled her hairdresser and a makeup artist to make sure she looked her best on the day of the interview. Yet she waited until 2 days before the interview to call me to talk about updating her resume.

I should mention that she wasn't actively looking for a job and she got the interview through a partner at the firm who set up the meeting based on knowledge of her past work and reputation. At the moment she walked through the bank's gilded doors to meet some very senior bankers all they knew about her was based upon reputation. She was, of course, asked to bring a resume with her.

Her resume, at a minimum, needed updating but I did a complete overhaul to make sure the resume made her look like the rock star that she is. In fact when she saw the finished product she told me that she was almost as excited to show them her resume as she was to wear her fancy new perfectly-fitting outfit.

And that got me to thinking about my other friends and clients....does your resume make you feel as fabulous at your outfit?

If it doesn't then you need to get that document updated and keep it current. Remember that after the interview, when you leave the office, your resume will be passed around to others who didn't meet you and your candidacy will be discussed. Your resume needs to be able to stand on its own and represent you as well as you could represent yourself if you were present. Does your resume do that?

If not, you had better get busy and update your resume. Even if you aren't presently looking for a job you never know when your hard earned reputation will land you an interview for a fantastic new opportunity. I am sure you will make time to shop for a new interview suit but will you have time to create a resume of the same caliber?

Liz Handlin.jpg Article by Liz Handlin and courtesy of Ultimate Resumes


If you are a client of mine or read this blog with any frequency you probably know that I am not a fan of summaries/objectives/executive profiles or any of the other lengthy chunks of information that some people use to fill the first ½ page or so of their resumes. My reasons are simple: recruiters aren't interested in subjective statements that represent your opinion of yourself and that are what most folks (and many resume writers) include at the top of the resume. In my opinion those sections are mostly a waste of space. I started my career as a recruiter and spent many years in all kinds of recruiting and HR roles and never once did I spend a lot of time reading those sections. I just jumped right to the "Experience" section to see if a candidate had the right experience and impressive accomplishments.

Having said all of that, I recently had a great conversation about this very topic with the CEO of a top technology recruiting firm, HireStarter, named Marc Davis. Marc is one of the most highly respected recruiters in the technology industry in Central Texas so when he told me his perspective on summaries I really sat up and took notice.

Continue reading "Summaries, Objectives, and Profiles Oh My!" »

How many times have you found yourself in the midst of writing your resume when you realized that there were some questions you simply had to have answered before you could move forward? Everyone has probably been in this predicament at least once during a resume-writing experience.

Of course, there are some questions that are more frequently asked than others. So before you put your fingers back on the keyboard, let's take a moment to explore some of the more commonly asked questions regarding resumes.

How Do I Write a Great Objective?

For many, the objective is the most abstract and challenging portion of the resume to write. You may find yourself asking questions like "what does the employer want to know?" and "how can I describe myself in just one sentence?" during the process. But don't let these issues deter you from continuing on, because in actuality, it is not hard to create a succinct objective that will entice the employer to read on.

First, take note that objectives can be more than one sentence long. Depending on your level of experience, you may want to include up to three sentences describing who you are and what career plans you have that fall neatly in line with the employer's goals. Within the 1-3 sentences, you want to express your strengths, abilities and qualifications in your field, and how they match the specific employer's goals. However, try to avoid using the word "I" in this section as it creates a self-centered image, something that can quickly result in your resume hitting the bottom of the stack.

What if I Haven't Worked in a While?

If you haven't worked for several years, or even several months, you may feel a little bit nervous about explaining your employment gap. But don't worry; if you truly feel you're qualified for the job, you can express this in a number of ways.

One is by using a functional resume style (as opposed to chronological) that focuses less on timelines and more on skills. Also, you can roll up all of your non-work experience, including volunteering, community involvement, consulting, or even your continuing education, to highlight the skills you've acquired over the years. If your gaps are a little smaller, you can make them less obvious by not noting months on your resume. In the end, you want to showcase your knowledge of industry trends, so be creative in explaining how this knowledge can enhance the position you're applying for.

Should I Include References?

Typically, the rule for references is this: if they don't ask for them, don't provide them. However, if they do it's a good idea to create a separate sheet just for them. On that sheet, you can include the references' names, phone numbers, and their locations, as well as your personal/professional relationships. But before you add references be sure to contact them so they are prepared to offer information about you.

Writing a resume can be an exciting process if you remember that your hard work can result in a great job. So take the time to ask more questions about the writing process. You'll find that the more you ask, the more likely you are to create a standout resume that may just secure the job you want.

Heather Eagar is a former professional resume writer and owner of http://www.ResumeLines.com who is now dedicated to providing job seekers with resources and products that promote job search success from beginning to end.


August 23rd 2008 Posted in Resume Articles Library, Resumes and Cover Letters
Someone asked me how to write a winning resume, and the question took me by surprise. Usually people ask specific questions, like "How can I avoid looking like a job-hopper?" and "I'm concerned about age discrimination -- should I drop my degree date?" (Or the always popular, "Can you review my resume...for free?")

So after the question was asked, I saw 13 years of resume writing experience flash before my eyes, along with every resume tip I ever offered -- it was like a near-death experience.

Where to start? Winning resume strategies vary dramatically depending on the job seeker's background, career level, goals, even geographic location. It would be impossible to give the recipe for a winning resume and wrap it in a pretty bow. But I like a challenge, so I decided to break it up into a list of do's and don'ts. So here goes...

Do's


  • Do state your career goal. Your objective should be clear from the very beginning of your resume. You can incorporate your goal into a bold headline, or weave it into your Qualifications Summary. Thinking about using a "one-size-fits-all-jobs" resume? You could be in for a long job search.

  • Do include a Qualifications Summary. If you're diving right in to your work history without a brief introduction, you're missing the opportunity to spoon-feed your strongest credentials or "value proposition" to the resume reviewer -- right at the top of your resume.

  • Do include your important skills. Hiring managers are looking for specific skills when filling a job opening. So create a bulleted list of your industry-related skills. Relevant job-related skills (such as "vendor negotiations") hold more weight than general skills (like "communication skills," which everyone claims to have).

  • Do include accomplishments. Most resumes are heavily focused on job duties, but employers want to see how well you've done your job. Include specific examples of the main ways you contributed to your employers, and hiring managers will see the value that you bring to the table. Use quantifiable accomplishments whenever possible.

  • Do pick the right length. If you're a new grad with minimal experience, chances are you need one page. If you are an experienced professional with lots of experience, two pages should do the trick. If you're a top-level executive with an extensive track record or a techie with many relevant projects, you might need three pages. Professionals who require a longer resume are in academia and need a CV, not a resume. A resume is a brief "snapshot" of your qualifications -- you want to have something to discuss in an interview.

  • Do create an attractive design. Your resume needs to stand out from the pack of resumes, and a distinctive (yet conservative) design can help your resume get noticed. Make use of your word processing program's formatting features, like font size, bold, italics, etc. But don't overdo it -- it's a careful balancing act to make sure your resume looks nice, and not like a three-ring circus!

  • Do give kudos to team accomplishments. Did your department generate $2.5 million last year? Then give credit to the team instead of claiming the accomplishment as your own, unless you want to look like a braggart who likes to steal the limelight.

  • Do use a readable font size. I've been seeing more and more resumes with teeny tiny fonts -- apparently people are trying to squeeze in as much information on a page to avoid starting a new page. Not good. Your font should be easily readable on-screen. It's better to go to a new page or edit some of the content and use a font that doesn't make your reader squint (or just delete your resume to avoid a migraine headache). Along the same lines, make sure you have plenty of white space to make your resume reader-friendly.

  • Do include related hobbies. The emphasis is on related. If your hobby shows some aspect of your personality that would be desirable or an interesting talking point with the interviewer, include it. Avoid including anything that is kind of "out there" or would reveal something about you that you wouldn't want your next employer to know.

  • Do proofread. Your resume should be error-free. Sending a resume with typos is the equivalent of showing up to a job interview with food stains on your shirt.

  • Do keep your resume updated. A resume that's frequently updated and revised is more effective than one that is out-of-date and neglected. Make a point to update your resume when you have a new accomplishment, and take a good look at the document at least every few months.


Don'ts

  • Don't use a functional format. It's almost never the right answer, and only raises red flags and doubts about your work history. Plus, if you're trying to hide dates, a functional resume may do the opposite and draw attention to dates. A "combination" resume (a reverse chronological resume that leads with a Qualifications Summary) works for almost all professionals.

  • Don't be a copycat. Don't use a resume template (unless you want to blend in with the crowd) and don't copy your friend's resume. You can use resume samples to inspire you, but don't copy!

  • Don't lose sight of your career goal. When writing your work descriptions, always keep your career goal in mind. Highlight the accomplishments that are related to your next career move, and downplay unrelated career information. Remember, you can't include everything you've ever done, so you might as well include the skills and accomplishments that will grab your reader's attention.

  • Don't overuse bullets. Professional resume writers refer to this type of resume as a "polka-dot resume." If you bullet everything, no one point stands out and you dilute the impact of the bullets. Instead, strategically use bullets to draw attention to the key points that you want to emphasize.

  • Don't go way back. If your work history spans more than fifteen years, keep in mind that employers are most interested in what you did recently. So dedicate the most space to your recent experience. You can include earlier work history if you want, but consider summing up the highlights in an "Early Career" section.

  • Don't use a funky font. Most resumes are being emailed and opened on computers, so it's important that your font selection translates properly on the receiver's end. If not, the receiver's system will convert to a different font, and there goes all of your perfect formatting.

  • Don't write "References Available Upon Request." This is not the 80s, folks!

  • Don't include personal information. Marital status, date of birth, salary data, and other personal information shouldn't be included on most resumes. There are a few exceptions, like resumes going to foreign countries and entertainer resumes in which personal information is relevant to the job. Federal applications also require personal information such as salary history. Other than that, omit personal information.

  • Don't use personal pronouns ("I," "me," or "my"). The reader knows you are writing about you. Use an "implied" first-person voice, like "Developed reports..." instead of "I developed reports."

  • Don't use bad resume lingo. If you're a "results-proven leader with excellent communication skills looking for a growth-oriented position with a forward-thinking company," please delete the bad resume lingo right now! This post has more detail on offensive, over-used cliches that should be eliminated from your resume.

  • Don't lie. Whatever you are trying to cover up isn't as bad as you think it is, and a dishonest approach can get you into all kinds of trouble (even long after you're hired). And yes, omitting significant jobs is lying. "Honesty is the best policy" -- didn't we learn this lesson in kindergarten?



To your success!


Kim.jpgBy Kim Isaacs and courtesy of ResumePower blog.

Writing a resume can be a tedious task. There's so much information to include and organize (employment history, skills, education, career highlights, awards, etc.) that the process can easily overwhelm you if you let it.

Luckily, there are now tons of resources available that make resume writing much easier. In particular, online resume builders and downloadable writing software can do more than samples and templates ever could in guiding you through the writing process. So if you're looking for assistance in writing a resume, you may want to look into using an online or downloadable resume builder.

What is an Online Resume Builder?

An online resume builder is a tool that offers user-friendly, step-by-step guidance for writing resumes. Usually providing assistance through a wizard, you are asked questions about your career and background to help you create a resume specific to your field. The reason resume builders are so popular is that many help you sort out problems like determining whether to choose between a chronological, functional or hybrid style. Also, most offer spell check tools and other writing tips to help keep you on track.

Most effective online resume builders come with a price tag attached; you usually can expect to pay a one-time fee of anywhere from $10 to $15 to create one resume. And if you want to go back to edit existing resumes or create more, you may have to pay a monthly fee - but for that monthly fee you are likely to get extras like the ability to apply for existing jobs, post your resumes online, and even create cover letters and follow-up letters.

Resume Writing Software Packages

In addition to using online resume building services, you can download software packages that work similarly to help you write and edit your resume. Many of them, once downloaded, offer the same types of job-searching tools and help with resume distribution that the online resume builders offer.

In fact, there doesn't seem to be a huge difference between the resume software package and the online resume builder except that one you download to your hard drive and the other you have to visit the website to work from. And most fall into the $20 to $50 price range, which is not bad for the service you're receiving.

Don't Forget the Essentials

While the resume builders are great at helping you organize and write clean, error-free resumes, you still want to remember resume-writing essentials like conducting research on the company, and using action words instead of duty-oriented phrases during the writing process. Though the resume building website or software can give you writing tips, it cannot do the extra work for you that will heighten your chances of getting called in for an interview, so keep this in mind throughout the writing process.

Using a resume builder or downloadable writing program is a quick and easy way to create a professional resume. So the next time you need to write yours - and you're short on time and money - you might want to try one out. The added expertise and guidance may be just what you need to increase your chances of landing your next great job.

Heather Eagar is a former professional resume writer and is passionate about providing working professionals with current, reliable and effective job search tools and information. If you're in need of a resume builder or other career and employment software, go to
http://www.resumelines.com/career-resources/resume-ebooks.html


Just answering some questions from a client who wanted to know why certain information had been omitted from her resume and after a while my answers got repetitive - really there was just one answer: "I didn't include it because it won't sell."

For example, the two colleges she attended for a year before settling at a third and getting her degree. They're not ivy league schools and there's nothing remarkable about them - they won't sell her and so I left them off the resume to make room for more valuable information.

How about the retail sales job she had right out of college? She's not in retail sales anymore and it's 10 years later. It won't sell so why include it?

She wrote: "Shouldn't company names be bolded?"

My answer: "not necessarily - not if they won't help to sell you." (In this case, the companies were unknown and I wanted the reader to focus on the job titles, so I bolded those instead).

Finally she asked 'shouldn't I include the towns and states of the companies I worked at? By now you probably know my answer.

If you have questions about what should or should not be on your resume, you can usually make a quick determination by just asking yourself 'does this piece of information make it more likely that I will get interviews?'

In other words: Will it sell?

louise fletcher.jpgArticle by, Louise Fletcher and courtesy of CareerHub.com. The Career Hub blog connects job seekers with experts in career counseling, resume writing, personal branding and recruiting.

Securing a top-level job (executive, senior manager or senior professional) may seem like an impossible task, especially if this is your first time applying for one. But if you feel that you're ready to take that next step in your career, you can certainly get the job you want - you'll just have to put in the necessary work by creating a great resume.

Undoubtedly, a resume for an executive-level job is different from one for a lower-level position. So before you send off your application for the position you're eyeing, you should take some time to develop strategies that can help you write a standout executive resume. Here are some ideas to get you started ...

Use an Executive Profile

While you may be used to using an objective as an introduction to your resume, for executive jobs it is a good idea to create an executive profile. It serves a similar purpose in explaining why you're applying for the position, but also goes one step further to summarize your key qualifications.

The executive profile is typically much longer than an objective, sometimes spanning up to a half of a page. In the profile, you can highlight 4-6 specific skills or qualifications that are each followed by examples of these skills. For instance, one qualification may be that you're "effective and wholly accountable in high-profile executive roles." Beneath this qualification you can note the reasons why this is true. By doing this you'll be able to highlight your standout abilities without forcing the employer to sift through the resume to find them.

Show Them You're a Complete Package

As an executive you are expected to showcase leadership and strong decision-making skills at all times. You need to prove you are a visionary who can help the company grow. Also, you must have integrity, charisma, and the ability to communicate with individuals at all levels in the company. In other words, you should be the complete package.

A good way to express that you are is by creating an achievement-oriented resume that focuses on specific instances at your previous employers that show off some or all of the above criteria. You may have taken a chance on a retail product that others were unsure of, but your risk-taking made the company record profits. Or you may have masterminded and implemented a new team to manage internal conflicts that was so successful that turnover decreased by 30 percent. Whatever details you choose to highlight when summarizing your experiences at previous employers, you should also tailor them to match what the specific employer is looking for in an applicant.

Believe You Belong There

It may seem a bit intimidating to take steps toward higher-level positions, but fortunately for you no one starts at the top - you are not the first to try this. So see yourself in that great job, making confident decisions, and catapulting the company into a new stratosphere. Your positive attitude will serve you immensely in writing your resume as well as interviewing.

Submitting your executive resume is only the start of your journey in securing a top-level job. But by creating a very thorough, very informative, and very professional one, you can at least know that your dreams are that much closer to being realized.

Heather Eagar is a former professional resume writer and owner of http://www.ResumeLines.com who is now dedicated to providing job seekers with resources and products that promote job search success from beginning to end.

Attention professional and amateur resume writers...

It's been a full year; it's officially time to update my resume.

Despite writing this blog and staying ahead of the curve on online career resources, I realize that I've hit a wall. It's time for fresh eyes to come in and give my resume a tweak - or an overhaul.

Over the years, we've received many e-mails asking if hiring someone to re-write your resume is worth the money. Here's the answer: I have no idea, but I'm about to find out.

Welcome to the Jobacle Resume Challenge. The mission, should you accept to choose it, is simple. Take my current resume and rework it as you see fit. Make your changes and the results will be featured on Jobacle.com. A winner will be chosen by our panel of Jobacle writers. We'll explain the process of working with a resume writer to our readers and provide your link and contact information - even if you don't win.

The winner will receive bragging rights, an approved Jobacle icon to place on their Web site, a three-month banner on Jobacle.com announcing your superior resume writing skills and a $100 donation to the charity of your choice.

Interested? Fill out this form to get started. There's no set criteria. Our writers and readers will know an amazing resume when they see it. (But we are suckers for creativity).

Challenge runs until September 15, 2008. Resume will be provided after you indicate you are interested. Good luck!


andrew gr.jpgArticle by Andrew G.R. and courtesy of jobacle.com - your cure for carbon copy career advice!


Over on my own blog, I invite my readers to submit questions about resume writing or job search, and then I answer the best questions in blog posts.

I received an email the other day from a reader who called himself 'Confused in Austin.' He's confused because after being told that the job market was hot in Austin, and uprooting his life to move there from New York City, he's finding it difficult to get interviews. He sent me a link to his online portfolio (he's a designer) and asked 'what can I do to get more call-backs and interviews?'

I won't link to his portfolio for confidentiality reasons, but I will say that it's clear to me why he isn't getting much response. The portfolio isn't the problem however - it's his resume. (Remember that people won't even get to your web portfolio in most cases unless they like what they see on your resume.)

Confused's resume looks like almost every other resume that I see, and that's the problem. Although I don't know him, I am 100% sure that he's better and more interesting than his resume. His resume communicates nothing of his personality. It says nothing about his design accomplishments. It doesn't even hint at the creative challenges he has faced and how he has addressed them. It basically says nothing about how he can be expected to add value.

Instead there are job titles, company names and dates followed by brief job descriptions - just lists of duties. All web designers have the same duties, however, so reading this list tells me nothing about this particular candidate.

Is he passionate about his work? Is he often the last one to leave at night because he just has to finish up a design? What are his design strengths? What projects does he love to work on and why? What is the most challenging project he was ever given and how did he handle it? How does he work under pressure? Does he do well when given a tight deadline? How does he approach difficult clients?

In other words, what are the unique blend of personality traits, skills and experiences that make this web designer different from the other people who sent resumes?

For me this is the core of writing a resume that drives call-backs and interview requests. (I wrote more about it in my free resume writing report which you are welcome to download here). Standing out from the crowd isn't about fancy designs or unusual fonts - it's simply about showing how and why you are unique.


louise fletcher.jpgArticle by, Louise Fletcher and courtesy of CareerHub.com. The Career Hub blog connects job seekers with experts in career counseling, resume writing, personal branding and recruiting.

Written By Jimmy Sweeney
Author of the brand new, Amazing Resume Creator


Are you seriously searching for a new job?

If so, consider what employers are really looking for when they read the resumes that come across their desks. Following is a list of the 'top ten' with examples of how to:

Tuck These 'Top Ten' Traits Into Your Resume

1. Openness

I learned a new software program under the supervision of the sales manager, mastered it, and taught it to others throughout the sales department.

2. Commitment

I studied the company's vision statement so I was better prepared to carry it out in my daily tasks.

3. Ethnic Experience

I studied Spanish (or German, Italian, etc.) in order to speak and negotiate with international partners.

4. Communication

I took a communications class on my own to improve my skills with co-workers and clients.

5. Community Service

I headed up a community service program to underprivileged children on behalf of the company.

6. Enthusiasm

I joined the local branch of Business Network Allies in order to network with other professionals.

7. Integrity

I presented the company's products and services in an honest and above board manner, thereby drawing new clients and building the bottom line.

8. Responsiveness

I learned from and shared with others new and innovative ideas that helped broaden our client base and increase revenue.

9. Ingenuity

I initiated an idea for quicker expedition of company products that was adopted and credited to me.

10. Team Spirit

I received the "Team Spirit Award" for fair and balanced work with colleagues and management.

Make it EASY for employers to lean in your direction--and to want to read more of what you have to say. Show them that you are the person they are looking for--an individual who not only is a good, reliable employee, but also one who stands out from the crowd because of your personal qualities and high character.


jimmy.jpg Jimmy Sweeney is the president of CareerJimmy and author of the brand new, "Amazing Resume Creator." Jimmy is also the author of several career related books and writes a monthly article titled, "Job Search Secrets."

Visit our friends at Amazing Resume Creator for your "instant" resume today. In just 10 minutes flat you will have an amazing resume guaranteed to land you more hot job interviews next week.

So you're looking to land your first Federal job and are just about to start working on your resume. Stop right there. Before you put pen to paper (or fingers to keys), you should know that applying for Federal employment is different than the private sector.

Federal guidelines require that you provide very specific and detailed information to apply for a job by way of the OF-612 form or Federal resume (along with a KSA). Since the Federal resume carries the greatest influence of the two, let's take a look at ways to create one that will help you get the job you want.

What You Need to Know

When applying for a Federal job, there are certain details that you must provide in order to be considered by a recruiter. They include job information (announcement number, title and grade), personal information (full name, address, phone, social security number, and country of citizenship), veteran's preference or reinstatement eligibility (if applicable), education (chronological listing of high school and colleges with degree types, dates of acquisitions, major subjects, GPAs and total credits earned), and extensive work experience (with previous salaries included).

When detailing your work experience, you should keep the specific position you're applying for in mind. The Federal government is strict about ensuring that applicants' skills match the listed qualifications. So go into as much detail as possible regarding how you are qualified. This process will get you that much closer to getting hired.

Don't Forget Your KSA

The KSA is also known as Knowledge, Skills and Abilities and is a series of statements written in a narrative format that you must include with your Federal resume. It is written in first person and is meant to showcase in greater detail how you are qualified for the job you're applying for.

Jobs that require a KSA will usually list between three and five statements in the posting that you need to provide answers for. You want your answers to be as thorough as possible by disclosing your knowledge, skills or abilities that relate to each statement, as well as when, how and why you acquired them giving concrete examples. In other words, use up to a page to sell yourself for this position with each answer. Don't make your KSA a carbon copy of your resume - make it original. And don't forget to type your full name and sign it before sending it off.

Adding the Extras

As mentioned previously, acquiring a Federal job requires putting in some extra effort, which includes disclosing any information that will help showcase your ability to perform. If you have additional work experience that relates to the position, provide plenty of details (including salary info and who to contact to learn more about your work experience). Also, remember to list any software, training courses, certificates, professional memberships, or awards that might help tip the scale in your favor.

Knowing the rules of writing a Federal resume can get your foot in the door. But taking extra steps to focus specifically on the job position, and include a thorough KSA will get you one step closer to securing a great Federal job.

Heather Eagar is a former professional resume writer and owner of http://www.ResumeLines.com who is now dedicated to providing job seekers with resources and products that promote job search success from beginning to end.

Have you ever wondered what the differences are between a resume and curriculum vitae? In college, you may have heard about them both, yet since graduating, you probably have heard less about the CV and more about the resume.

Though the CV may not be as well-known as the resume, it is a very relevant job seeking tool depending on your field. So before you prepare for your first - or next - career, let's take a look at the differences between the resume and CV to help you determine which one is best for you.

The Major Differences

The purpose of both the resume and CV are similar: to provide insight into your qualifications as a potential employee. However, there are some major differences between them. A resume is a brief synopsis (one or two pages) of your professional strengths, typically including standard sections such as your objective (or executive summary), educational background, work history and additional skills. The CV goes into more depth in each section, and even looks at teaching and research you've conducted, works you've published, and major presentations. However, because this information is not relevant in many professions, the CV is usually used by those looking for academic, research, scientific, or medical positions that require a more comprehensive look at the applicant.

Writing Your CV

Your main goal when writing your CV should be to focus on all of your professional involvement from college onward. Luckily, with a CV you have no suggested page limits to worry about, so you can let loose on all of your accomplishments.

Much of your CV will look like a resume (name, address, contact info at the top, employment history, educational background, training and awards); however, you can also include sections that cover detailed professional skills, certifications, professional memberships, and even individuals you've mentored. The more skills and accomplishments you have, the more sections you can create to highlight them. Just make sure to keep them all organized and easy to find. Also, try to tailor your CV to each job you apply for (i.e. highlight more research accomplishments in research-driven positions). Placing your last name and page number at the top of each page is also recommended.

The Successful Resume

Though you may already be familiar with how to create a successful resume, you can always use more great tips to catch the attention of the hiring employer. For example, it is good to use action-oriented statements to describe your skills. So instead of saying, "Duties included assisting manager with documentation and organization of studies," you might say, "Documented and developed electronic filing system for 10 studies on internal company growth conducted by the manager of organizational development, which were made accessible to the public via the company's website." Also, you'll want to include keywords, like "pharma" or "tradeshows" that can showcase your knowledge of your field. And don't forget to research the company you're applying for to help match your skills to their mission.

Whether you're using the resume or CV to fulfill your job seeking goals, it is important to maintain focus on your purpose, which is to market your skills and abilities. By doing so, you can move yourself that much closer to your desired position in the field you love.

Heather Eagar is a former professional resume writer and owner of http://www.ResumeLines.com who is now dedicated to providing job seekers with resources and products that promote job search success from beginning to end.


If you're trying to select the best format for your resume, most likely a functional resume won't work. Not convinced? Check out the following article by guest writer Jessie Richardson, CPRW of MilitaryResumes.com. Best wishes, Kim Isaacs


Many of my transitioning military clients are overwhelmed at the thought of capturing their experience in a resume, just like their civilian counterparts. Getting started with writing a resume can be overwhelming, but choosing the right resume format can be the key to getting your resume read. You may have heard that there are several resume styles from which to choose. Although technically that is true, there is really only one style that you should use. So heed this warning before you put that pen to paper - no matter who has "sold" you on a functional format - do not listen!

The two most popular resume formats are functional and reverse chronological. A reverse chronological resume lists employment with the most recent position first. Each entry includes the company, job title, dates, and a job description with an emphasis on accomplishments, and includes an education or certifications section. Functional resumes begin with a professional summary that lists primary functional skills, such as project management, maintenance, reorganization, etc. This is followed by skills and significant achievements for each of the primary functional skills. Next is a tabular summary of employment, followed by education and certifications.

There are three problems with functional resumes. First, they do not provide hiring managers with enough information. As a hiring authority, how am I to know if you have three months or three years of "project management" experience? Second, they come across as suspicious. Functional resumes are popular among people with something to hide, such as habitual "job hoppers" and those with large gaps in their employment history. Third, they tend to be heavy on empty phrases like, "exceptional leadership skills." To a seasoned resume reviewer, this means nothing. A great resume leads the reader, on his or her own, to come up with the very assertions you would like to make. Aim to show not tell - a hard order to fill with a functional resume.

In summary, readers want the resume in a certain format. List your work experiences in reverse chronological order rather than by function performed. If collateral duties and multiple, simultaneous jobs make your reverse chronological timeline somewhat difficult to follow, add a "collateral duties" or "additional experience" section and keep the focus on experience most relevant to your target. While a functional resume may make you feel better about representing your skills, it will not please the reader and you could suffer the consequences because your resume ended up in the trash.


Kim.jpgArticle courtesy of Kim Isaacs and courtesy of ResumePower blog.



This morning I happened upon a blog called JobMob which has a couple of posts about funny resumes. I started reading and within about 15 minutes I was doubled over with laughter. I cut and pasted a few of the ones that I thought were the funniest (I divided them by category) but you should go over to JobMob and check them out. If you are a job seeker please review your resume and make sure that you don't include anything you see in this post in your resume. If you have any funny resume stories please email them to me and if I get enough I will create another post with the ones you send. Enjoy!

Hobbies/Activities:
"Getting drunk everynight down by the water, playing my guitar and smoking pot"

"Drugs and girls".

"Sitting on the levee at night watching alligators".

"Gossiping."

"Playing trivia games. I am a repository of worthless knowledge."

Why Interested in Position:
"To keep my parole officer from putting back me in jail"

Miscellaneous:
"I am great with the pubic."

A candidate listed her e-mail address as pornstardelight@*****.com

One candidate's electronic resume included links to her homepage, where the pictures were of her in the nude.

One applicant for a nursing position noted that she didn't like dealing with blood or needles.

Candidate included family medical history.

"It's best for employers that I not work with people."

"I have become completely paranoid, trusting completely no one and absolutely nothing."

Achievements:
"Nominated for prom queen"

One resume that came across my desk stated that the individual had won a contest for building toothpick bridges in middle school.

Arrests:
Candidate explained an arrest by stating, "We stole a pig, but it was a really small pig."

Personal interests:
Donating blood. Fourteen gallons so far.

Marital status:
Often. Children: various."

Reason for leaving last job:
"I thought the world was coming to an end."

"Bounty hunting was outlawed in my state."

Salary desired:
"Starting over due to recent bankruptcies. Need large bonus when starting job."

Bad traits:
"I am very bad about time and don't mind admitting it. Having to arrive at a certain hour doesn't make sense to me. What does make sense is that I do the job. Any company that insists upon rigid time schedules will find me a nightmare."

References:
"Bill, Tom, Eric. But I don't know their phone numbers."

Objective:
"My dream job would be as a professional baseball player, but since I can't do that, I'll settle on being an accountant."

To obtain a position within an organization in which both my fashion and administrative experience can be of great detriment."

Personal:
"My family is willing to relocate. However not to New England (too cold) and not to Southern California (earthquakes). Indianapolis or Chicago would be fine. My youngest prefers Orlando's proximity to Disney World."


Liz Handlin.jpg Article by Liz Handlin and courtesy of Ultimate Resumes

If you are a Baby Boomer, you are a part of a generation that is headed toward retirement. However, due to our slumping economy, there is a chance that even if you are able to retire, you could be making a u-turn right back into the workforce to supplement your retirement savings.

With competition being so stiff, it may seem that the odds are against you for getting hired, especially having to compete with younger talent. In some cases this is true, but there are also employers out there looking for the skills and expertise mature workers can bring to the table. So if you're a Baby Boomer looking for employment, it is not too late to secure a great job. You just need the right resume and cover letter to get you in the door.

Updating Your Resume

If you've been out of the job market for a decade or more, updating your resume may be more challenging than you remember, especially when you factor in the Internet and possibly having to apply online. But that's not all you have to think about. As a mature worker, you also have the challenge of creating a resume that showcases your years of experience without shining a spotlight on your age.

So how can you get this done? One way is by using a functional resume format that highlights specific skills rather than chronological timelines. When writing your skills, try going into detail regarding projects you've completed that have benefited your previous companies. You can also create a section that focuses on the computer technologies you've mastered or any training you've completed. All of these things can help employers focus more on your skills and talents, and less on your age.

Using Your Cover Letter to Reveal Who You Really Are

Being a mature worker, you may have to contend with a few stereotypes during your job search. Some include you being less productive than your younger counterparts, more resistant to newer technologies, and set in your ways. Of course, none of those descriptions define who you really are. But it is up to you to help prospective employers understand this.

One way to do this is by explaining how important it is for you to expand the landscape of your career. You're not in it for the money, you simply want to grow. If you've recently received any advanced degrees or additional education, don't hesitate to mention it. And most importantly, let employers know you have no intentions of leaving the industry any time soon - you're still getting your feet wet.

Confidence is Key

You may be feeling uncertain about your ability to compete in an already competitive job search. But don't let that deter you. You have years of experience under your belt and the skill level to match. So make sure you maintain your confidence throughout your job search process. It will shine through in your resume, cover letter, and face-to-face interview.

Getting back into the workforce as a Baby Boomer isn't an impossible task if you believe in your capabilities and make a strong effort to excel. The more proactive you are about putting yourself out there, the more success you will have in locating opportunities that can take your career to the next level.

Heather Eagar is a former professional resume writer and owner of http://www.ResumeLines.com who is now dedicated to providing job seekers with resources and products that promote job search success from beginning to end.

So, you've been working in the same position for several years and now feel the time is right to elevate your level of responsibility along with your title and salary. However, with this being your first time attempting to move into a more prominent role, you have no idea where to start.

Many people are in your position and also wonder what steps they should take to move up the corporate ladder. One thing you can do is stay on top of current trends and educational requirements in your field. But once you've fulfilled these tasks and are ready to apply for a job, you'll need a great resume to get your foot in the door. Let's look at some ways to create the right resume to match your accelerated career goals.

Try a Functional Resume Style

One recommended way to create a resume that appeals to higher-level recruiters and hiring managers is to shine a light on the skills you've acquired. You can get this done by using a functional resume format.

For example, if you were to use a functional format to describe your skills as an IT tech, instead of listing each job you've had year after year, you would focus on specific skills. By creating headings for each skill (ex. Software Development) you would be able to describe in detail all of the software you've developed for each company you've worked for. Using a functional resume in this way can help you expand on each skill you possess and show the employer your versatility as an employee.

Highlight Your Outside Achievements and Awards

Another great way to make your resume appeal to upper-level recruiters and hiring managers is by using a section to highlight anything you've achieved outside of your hired role. This works especially well if you focus on roles that have required you to act as a supervisor or manager of others.

For example, let's say at your current company you have worked as a training coordinator for 5 years. However, in your spare time you founded and led a diversity awareness group that consisted of 10 volunteer employees. With this group, you used presentations and focus groups to demonstrate the need for diversity awareness in a work setting. By noting such a huge accomplishment on your resume, you show the hiring manager that you're able to successfully develop and manage projects outside of your hired role.

Staying at Your Current Employer?

If you want to move up the corporate ladder while remaining at your current employer, it is a good idea to create a resume similar to one you would create for an outside employer. Why? Because it is very likely that the hiring manager won't have any idea what you've accomplished on the job. But don't feel bad about this duty as there are benefits to applying in-house, including being able to use respected employees for recommendations, and noting in-house training programs that are very relevant to the company.

Working your way up the corporate ladder can be an exciting ride - especially when you come equipped with the right tools. By showing up with a great resume and even better attitude, you'll see in no time that your ride to the top will move smoother than you could ever imagine.

Heather Eagar is a former professional resume writer and owner of http://www.ResumeLines.com who is now dedicated to providing job seekers with resources and products that promote job search success from beginning to end.

The hardest part of getting an entry-level job after graduation from college is getting your foot in the door. A great resume can do just that. Although several resume experts have given their advice, it always bears repeating because every year brings a new group of recent graduates looking for new jobs.

Resume-Help.org is one site that is a fountainhead of information for job seekers, especially recent college graduates looking for entry-level employment and college students looking for internships.

Since many new grads have a limited amount of work experience, Resume-Help.org advises beefing up the education section of their resumes and also making mention of any transferrable skills acquired in college that are relevant to the job being applied for. Skills that can be transferred from college to work are:

  • "Leadership
  • Time management
  • Written and verbal communication
  • Problem-solving
  • Analytical
  • Computer"

The key is to make sure that the skills mentioned are relevant to the job and the company. And any work experience counts, Resume-Help.org says. Any transferrable skills learned during an internship, through volunteer work or as part of a club or organization can be included on the resume.

Choosing a proper format for the resume is also important and, again, Resume-Help.org can be of service. Whether you're a recent college grad in need of a resume template or sample, or a more experienced candidate looking for ways to improve on what you already have, Resume-Help.org can help. And if they can't, they can put you in touch with someone who can.

There is no doubt that our current economy is a little scary to say the least. Companies are laying off in mass numbers while gas, food, and energy costs are reaching record highs. It can be very difficult to maintain sanity in the midst of such uncertainty, let alone think about finding a job. But with responsibilities like bills and family always present, one must learn to keep pushing forward.

If you're trying to find a job in our unsettling job market, you may feel less than excited about your prospects. However, you can find a job...and a good one at that. You just have to develop the right attitude, and an even better resume.

Make Yourself More Marketable

With layoffs on the rise, more people are competing for the same job. So in order to make yourself more marketable, you'll need to perfect your resume. This means, no spelling or grammatical errors. You'll also need to make sure your skills stand out above the rest.

One way you can do this is by conducting thorough research on the company and position to illustrate how you can enhance their goals. When describing your skills, try using action-oriented words like designed, marketed and researched, instead of phrases like "responsibilities included." And also focus on specific achievements, like how much money you made at your previous company, and on which projects, to help employers assess your skill level.

Consider Economic Growths, Declines, and Specific Regions

Before you even apply for a job, it's good to look at which business areas are growing, which are declining, and how your region is fairing economically. For example, a May 2008 Newsweek article reported that finance and accounting, engineering, technology and science are seeing growth, while construction, manufacturing, and automotive seem to be declining. In the same article, it noted that Midwest jobs may be on the decline due to its strong construction focus, while cities like New York, Washington, D.C., Atlanta, and Dallas may see a rise due to their professional focus.

After you conduct your research, if you find your field isn't negatively impacted by the economy, you may still want to conduct more research to learn details such as whether managers and administrators, or hourly employees, are keeping or losing jobs. And if things aren't going so well in your industry, you might consider a slight career shift, such as moving from software development to hardware networking, or even switching cities. That is if the prospects for long-term employment seem more promising.

Maintain the Right Attitude

In this economy, it is important to keep a positive attitude about your career prospects. Because the fact of the matter is, if there is a job available, someone must eventually fill the role. So why couldn't it be you? You are just as qualified for the job as you were before the economy worsened. So try not to let the economy's current state negatively affect your job search.

Under stable conditions, getting on track career-wise requires strong determination. But in a weak economy, it takes more. So take time to perfect your resume, conduct extensive research on your field, and keep a positive attitude. You will see that despite the economy, you'll be able to thrive.

Heather Eagar is a former professional resume writer and owner of http://www.ResumeLines.com who is now dedicated to providing job seekers with resources and products that promote job search success from beginning to end.


I write resumes professionally. About once a month, I take on a client who has paid a lot of money to another resume service only to hate the results. While I obviously like getting new clients, these situations make me both sad and angry on behalf of the clients who were hurt by one bad choice.

So here are my recommendations for selecting a resume writer.

1) Shop around. If you like the first company you find - even if it's mine! - I still recommend contacting a couple of other services just to be sure that you're in the best hands.

2) Look at samples. All good writers should display samples on their site - preferably in 'before' and 'after' format so that you can see what changed. Look for quality, but also look for variation. Does each resume have a different structure? Does each one use different words? Or are they all the same, as though a template was used. And finally, do they impress you personally?

3) Ask about guarantees. Personally, I think all writers should offer a 100% satisfaction guarantee. But most are not willing to go quite that far so you may have to settle for less - at the very least, your writer should promise to rework your resume as many times as possible to ensure your satisfaction.

4) Evaluate their qualifications. What makes them qualified to write your resume? Do they understand your industry or function? Have they worked in recruiting or HR? If not, do they have other expertise in those areas that gives you a sense of comfort? (Perhaps they have written books, or have lots of certifications, or come highly recommended by other people in your field).


5) Ask what they DON'T do. We turn away clients who want to work for the federal government or academia because none of our writers have expertise in these areas. Any good writer should be turning away clients - it proves their honesty.

6) Are they web savvy? Is their website modern and well maintained? Have they conveyed their brand well? Do they blog? Do they have a Linked In or Facebook page? You are hiring someone to help market you - make sure they know how to market themselves effectively in today's world.

7) Check LinkedIn testimonials. LinkedIn testimonials can't be fudged because the site allows you to click through as see who wrote the reference. To see them, you must be a member but it's quick and easy to sign up. Don't hire a writer who doesn't have glowing testimonials.

8) Who else refers their services? If you're still unsure, ask who refers clients to them. Do they have affiliations with career counselors, recruiters or other websites? Such relationships - especially with recruiters - are indications that their work is respected by the people who count.

9) Be sure the process works for you. Resume services have different approaches to writing a resume. Some require the completion of worksheets to develop a career history and value proposition. Some utilize phone interviews. Some do a combination of both. I personally prefer worksheets and we've developed a very specific proprietary worksheet that helps us develop a truly compelling resume- but not every client is comfortable with this process and it's important to know that upfront.

10) Finally, don't base your decision on price. I know that price has to be a consideration, but don't make it the be-all and end-all. Those cheap services advertising on the web are cheap for a reason - in most cases they will outsource your work to underpaid writers who have to work quickly just to make a living. In other cases, the fee is low because the person is in no way qualified to do this but saw a chance to make some money from home. If you can't afford to hire a good resume writer, take the time to learn about resume writing from books or articles and do it yourself. You'll get better results, believe me.

You'll notice that I didn't include professional certifications in my list. That's because I don't personally feel they are a reliable indicator of quality. This is a controversial view in my industry and other Career Hub writers probably disagree, so take it as just my opinion. But if you do take professional certifications into account, I think we would all agree that they are only the first step in evaluating a resume writing service. All the points above still apply.

Choosing the right resume writer can make all the difference to your job search so take the time to understand what you're getting. Good luck!

Article by, Louise Fletcher and courtesy of CareerHub.com. The Career Hub blog connects job seekers with experts in career counseling, resume writing, personal branding and recruiting.

Writing a resume can be complicated if you're not sure how to convey the message that you're the right person for the job. A good way to get this accomplished, however, is by choosing the right sections to include in your resume.

Choosing the standard sections (contact information, objective, work experience/skills, and education) is typically a breeze. But optional sections like career highlights, interests/hobbies, professional/community involvement, awards, and technical skills can be more of a challenge to decide between. So to help you get on the right track, let's look at some ideas for choosing your sections.

Consider the Position for Which You're Applying

When thinking about what sections to include in your resume, it is a good idea to first look closely at the position you're applying for. Why? Because this can help you determine which sections will help you provide the most thorough information regarding your skill set.

For example, if you're applying for a position that requires several years of professional experience in Corporate Communications, and also a strong writing background, there are a couple of ways you can take advantage of resume sections. Of course, you can use your standard Work/Professional Experience section to showcase the jobs you've worked in the field. Then if you have standout writing accomplishments, you can include a separate section (ex. Writing and Distribution) strictly for your writing accolades.

Likewise, if you are interested in furthering your career as a software developer, you could include a "Certificates and Training" section strictly for showcasing all of your Microsoft, Apple, and other certifications. This way you can highlight your standout skills and paint an accurate portrait of your potential abilities.

Think About the Message You Want to Convey

When thinking of optional sections to include, it is also a good idea to consider what message you want to offer the employer about the type of person you are. This is especially true if you know that getting hired for a position might rely partially on your personal interests.

For example, you may want to apply for a manager position with Girl Scouts of America and have extensive professional experience as a manager, though not with a non-profit organization. However, in your spare time, you've sat on the boards of multiple non-profits in your community. This would be a great opportunity to include a "Professional/Community Involvement" section that could showcase your understanding of non-profit organizations coupled with your strong professional background as a manager.

If You're Thinking of Using a Template ...

If you are brand new to writing resumes, or simply want some help creating a new design, a template can provide a good starting point. However, it is smart to avoid following the template to a tee. You would be doing yourself a disservice by not critically thinking about each section in reference to each job you're applying for. This can result in your resume looking carbon copied - and ultimately ending up at the bottom of the stack.

By exploring what the company is looking for, and deciding what message you want to convey, you can have great success in choosing optional sections for your resume. So take your time and think out your purpose. You will find that doing so can help you create your perfect resume.


Heather Eagar is a former professional resume writer and owner of http://www.ResumeLines.com who is now dedicated to providing job seekers with resources and products that promote job search success from beginning to end.



One of the services I offer is cover letter writing. Many clients contact me and ask me to write both a resume and cover letter. I always tell them the same thing: I am happy to write a resume but let's wait until you are applying for a specific job or to a specific company to write that cover letter. Part of the reason for that is that the way I write cover letters is very customized. I need to learn about the person I am writing the cover letter for before I can create a really top notch document. The resume writing process usually offers me enough information to create a great cover letter but I still think its best to wait until you have some idea what job you are applying for before I write the cover letter for you.

When you write a cover letter here are a few things to keep in mind:

1. Outline reasons you are interested in applying to the company.
Use the company website as well as Google and LinkedIn to search for information about the company and its employees. Specifically look for information that you find compelling and that somehow ties into your background or experience. Let's say that you earned a B.A. in Environmental Affairs but you are currently working in Government Affairs for an oil company. Find out about your target employer's Legislative/Government Affairs team - do they have one? If they do, what are the key issues facing the company? If they don't have a legislative affairs team, does it look to you like they could use one? Read newspaper articles about the company, it's officers, and their clients to see where you could add value. Include a couple of lines in the letter that explain how you could uniquely add value to the company and make sure it's clear you have researched the company. Employers are always attracted to candidates who take the time to do their due diligence.

2. Give a couple of examples of projects you have led, companies you started, or projects you have participated in (even if they were extra-curricular) that are relevant to the company (or department you are applying to) mission, goals, or values. Describe your accomplishments and any special skills you used as part of the project. You want a potential employer to read a few tangible examples of ways that your experience dovetails with the company mission. You are drawing a dotted line between your experience and the company's needs so that whomever reads the letter will see how you could be of value.

3. If your experience has been varied or diverse, include a few sentences that explain the commonalities between all of your experiences. I have seen resumes in which the resume owner's experience appears to be "all over the place". All kinds of different jobs that don't have much to do with one another. Normally there is a story behind these job changes but to the casual reader of a resume it just looks scattershot and, often, these resumes are set aside in favor of a resume with more of a linear career progression. If you are one of those people whose career has been extremely varied make sure you explain the common denominators and how they would benefit this employer...again you are painting a picture for the potential employer about how you could help them.

4. Understand that not everyone reads cover letters. Even if you write the world's best cover letter (I really think I do) understand that it may never be read and, if you are really determined to work for this particular company, have a backup plan. Find out the names of some employees on Linked In and try to network with any who are connected to your network. Once you know the names of some employees see if you can buy one of them a cup of coffee and find out more about the company and any employment opportunities. If your network doesn't extend to the company you could always try to cold call the HR representative or the head of the department in wish you wish to work - offer to buy them coffee and tell them that you are passionate about their industry and would like to find out more about the company. Flatter works as long as its sincere and not smarmy or creepy. No guarantees but a lot of people are willing to spend 15 minutes talking to someone who treats for the coffee.

5. You don't always need to submit a cover letter. If you are working with a recruiter the chances are that you won't need to submit a cover letter for job openings. If you are applying for an a job that is posted on a company's website and there is a box in which you can add a cover letter it means that you probably should. If you have a friend who works for the company and who wants to submit your resume to HR you may not need a cover letter - ask your friend about the expectations. If, however, you plan to contact a company at which you have no contacts it's a good idea to include a cover letter that explains your interest in the company or in a specific job opening.

A great cover letter draws a line between your experiences and the company's needs. You want to remove the "Why is this woman/man applying to our company and how is his/her background relevant?" question out of the equation. You want to make it clear that you can add value and you want to show some specific examples of how you may have done so in other jobs in the past. There are no guarantees that a great cover letter will get you an interview but under the right circumstances it certainly increases your odds.

Liz Handlin.jpg Article by Liz Handlin and courtesy of Ultimate Resumes

Whether you're a recent college graduate looking for entry-level employment or a student seeking an internship, you're going to need a resume. Most employers want to see a cover letter, too, but more than that, they want to see a resume that looks as if the candidate took his time with it and put some thought into where he's applying.

I asked my resume experts what resume "faux pas" (false steps) annoyed them the most. The consensus was TYPOS. No one liked them and most said they would toss a resume that had them into the trash. But there are other resume flaws that could hinder a candidate's chance of landing just the right entry-level job or internship opportunity.

Carly Drum, managing director of Drum Associates, doesn't like to see "silly email addresses for contact."

Two things that don't sit well with Tom Ruff, founder and CEO of the Tom Ruff Company, are "sending a draft of the resume where you can still see the editing notes," and "emailing the resume to multiple people at once instead of personalizing the email to an individual: laziness doesn't score points."

Craig Kasco, recruiter for 1-800-GOT-JUNK?, also dislikes "blanket resumes" because "it shows that the applicant has not put any thought into the application process at all."

Like some others, Linda Pophal, human resource management expert and business journalist, has three pet peeves:

  • "Submitting what is clearly a generic 'form letter'
  • Misspelling the name of the company and/or hiring manager - along with giving a sense that the candidate has not done enough background research to understand the company and its needs
  • A focus on 'I' vs. 'we' - candidates whose resumes speak about all of the great things they've accomplished independently are always suspect. In most cases it takes a team to make things happen."

Steven Himmelrich of Himmelrich Public Relations, dismisses candidates who exaggerate. And he advises candidates to list all experiences on their resumes. He said he was "far more impressed with the waitressing than the internships" of a woman he interviewed because the waitressing jobs, he said, show "perserverance, hard work, and commitment."

Kassi Belz, director of client services for MassMedia agrees with Himmelrich, "What most college students don't understand is that you can include those part-time bartending and retail jobs on your resume. The key is indentifying the skill sets they learned at these jobs and how it can help this business."

Dr. Rachelle J. Canter, president of RJC Associates, dislikes exaggerated resumes. "The reader doesn't expect a resume that sounds like a 35-year-old's, and if they get one, they'll think you're engaging in puffery," she warns.

"Weak language is a major faux pas," says Lisa Mitrenko, senior manager for Capital One. "Using strong action verbs that are relevant to the position being applied for are important. Recruiters read many resumes and so making sure that there are words that will grab their attention is important."

Debbie Anglin, principal for Anglin Public Relations, Inc. pointed out that "many resumes are missing start and end dates for employment history, the name of the company (i.e. Marketing Intern at a Dallas Gas Company) or an understandable, brief descripiton of what they did for the employer."

Karen Wright, operations director for KMSU 89.7 FM and Tina Hamilton, PHR for HireVision Group, have similar pet peeves. For Wright, it's on the cover letter and the resume, "when students write the salutation to the wrong person (from a completely different company) or not changing the objective on their resume to fit the job for which they are applying (such as saying they want a computer programming job when they are applying for a news reporter position)." Hamilton, too, is turned off by inattention to the objective portion of a resume. "The 'Objective' noted on top is different from the position in which they are applying (ex: Applying for an Engineering postition - Objective is to be a Graphic Artist). this is sudden death for any resume that I receive," she says.

Sue Thompson, author and speaker, Michelle Tillis Lederman, founder of Executive Essentials, and Lee Salz, founder of Sales Dodo, provide a little food for thought for recent college graduates looking for entry-level jobs as well as students seeking quality internships:

"In a professional atmosphere, I need my employees to be able to communicate professionally. A cover letter and resume are the first impression I receive that they may or may not be able to do this," says Thompson.

"If the resume is not inviting to read - I don't read it," says Lederman. "If I have to trudge through a bullet with three adjectives and lots of big words and have no idea what I read even after reading it three times - I am done reading."

Finally, Lee Salz has interesting advice about the purpose of a resume, "Resumes should be designed to tell a story. Give your resume to multiple people (professors, business friends, etc.) and ask what message the resume communicates. If the message it sends is not the intended one, back to work!"

Well, there you have it, great advice from people who may one day end up reading your resume. My advice, heed theirs.


Jeff Benrey, CEO of Trovix, is a fountainhead of resume writing advice. Below are nine tips and tricks for job seekers to consider before submitting their resumes to employers:

1) You're More Exceptional than You Think


  • Often employers can input your current job description into an online search and find the same language - including social networking sites. Always assume that any information you've uploaded to the Internet is public. Keep personal social networking information separate from your resume and professional information.

2) All May Not Be Fine with the Fine Print


  • There are options on many popular job search Web sites that allow you to determine which employers can contact you, instead of the reverse. These new services allow more control over your job search and who sees your resume.

3) Be Consistent and Truthful or Get Caught


  • When updating your professional online information, profile or resume, be consistent in the details that matter, such as companies, titles, schools and degrees. It's okay to highlight different skills for different audiences and jobs, but making up significantly different pieces of information may attract the attention of not only your current employer, but your potential employer as well.

4) Beware the Modern "Cookie Trail"


  • Don't forget to eliminate old resumes or inaccurate information. Old information online can be misleading to your current or potential employers. Set up a Google Alert for your name - to your personal e-mail account.

5) Beware of All Eyes upon You


  • E-mail Addresses - Do not use your work email for job hunting. Use your personal email address or create a new account to be in touch with current and future job opportunities.

  • Phone Numbers - Remember not to use your work number as some employers review and monitor phone call logs. Alternatively, use your mobile or home phone or even a separate phone number that is only for voice mail.

  • Volunteer Titles - While many employers like to see that candidates are helping their community or cause, posting too much information may tip off your current boss.

6) Add keywords in the context of your skills and experience.

Being a recent graduate, you may not have ten years of work experience. However, you may have been in charge of promoting the environmental club at school. Be sure to reflect this on your resume to demonstrate the skills you gained from the opportunity.

7) Keep the format of your resume consistent.

If you list your most recent job by Company, Title, Date then, be sure to list your previous employment experiences in the same order as well. A clean and orderly resume is very important so that search technology can easily interpret your information.

8) Label sections properly.

The fancier you get, the more inconsistent you become. You want to make it relatively easy for search engines or software to parse your resume accordingly. Otherwise, you may not get the credit for that section of your resume.

9) Include your contact information in plain view.

It is very easy for this information to become buried in the header or footer and may be missed.


One of the many people who responded to my query about resumes and cover letters was Jeff Benrey, CEO of Trovix. While Benrey's advice is tailored more toward job seekers who like to use the Internet for most - if not all - of their job searching, certain aspects of it are useful to all.

Here's Benrey's advice:

Optimizing Your Resume for Online Job Search


  1. Don't focus on keywords. Instead, draw recruiters to your experience. If you feel like you need *meta tags, put them at the bottom of the page.

  2. Make sure your job titles are current. You may not find many listings for a secretary; however an executive assistant may pull up more results.

  3. Create multiple resumes. If you have several resumes, each focusing on different strengths, a search will find more jobs for you to choose from.

  4. Avoid special tables, fonts and graphics. Simple formats will help yield greater results.

  5. Add keywords in the context of your skills and experience. Being a recent graduate, you may not have ten years of experience, but you may have been in charge of marketing for the environmental club. Be sure to reflect this on your resume to demonstrate the skills you gained from the opportunity.

  6. Keep the format of your resume consistent. If you list your most recent job by Company, Title, Date, then be sure to list your previous employment experiences in the same order as well. A clean and orderly resume is very important so that search engines can easily interpret your information.

  7. Label sections properly. The fancier you get, the more inconsistent you become.

  8. Include your contact information in plain view. It is very easy for this information to become buried in the header or footer.

*Okay, I admit I'm far from Internet-savvy and had absolutely no clue what meta tags are. I found out, though. Courtesy of Jeff Benrey, meta tags are HTML codes that can be added to online posted resumes and may help with search results placement with some search engines. These meta tags are an "invisible" collection of keywords that you can add to your resume's HTML file at either the header or footer of the page. Caution: When including key word meta tags, be sure that you have the skills and experience to back it up. The problem with meta tags arises when the keywords that you use lead one to believe that you have more experience than you actually do. This dishonesty will certainly be revealed in the interviewing process.


The more I learn about resume writing, the more I realize that a lot of it is a matter of taste. There are some universal standards that I will discuss in later articles, but there are also some things that most people will say turn them off, but one or two others say are okay. So, I recently sent out a query to get more information on just what turns employers off and what gets their attention when reading resumes.

One of the experts who answered my query is Mark Stevens, an image consultant, marketing/management expert, and CEO of MSCO. Although he isn't as radical as Seth Godin, who recommends doing away with a resume altogether, Stevens does suggest breaking away from the rest of the pack. The following are his thoughts:


Most resumes suck.

Stevens recommends NOT TO follow the rules that everyone else does. Dare to
be different - you'll stand out from the crowd...

Stevens' Resume Advice:

Putting your worst foot forward: The toll of the cookie cutter resume. In
the annual ritual that begins with high school summer jobs then college
graduation - hopefully, with a job in hand, millions of students appear to
do their best to squander a costly education. Why? Because they forgo even
an iota of creativity and send out cookie cutter resumes that camouflage
whatever intelligence, innovation and personality they may have.

Continue reading "Resume Advice from Mark Stevens - Part 1" »

Looking to apply for a new contract or temporary position but are unsure of how to create the right resume? You'll be happy to know that writing resumes for these types of positions is not as difficult as you think.

The major difference between resumes for temporary or contract work and those for permanent positions is the need to more specifically focus on your accomplishments and personality. Let's explore some ways you can get this done.

"I'm a Quick Learner"

When applying for a temporary or contract position, the prospective employer often expects you to arrive with some knowledge of the work they do. And if you don't have the knowledge, they hope that you can learn it very quickly. Likewise, if you are a contract worker, you may have your own business specializing in their field, which also means that the employer probably will expect you to hit the ground running.

So how can you convince them that you are the right person for the job? One way is by highlighting those responsibilities that showcase how flexible and adaptable you are. For example, if you are applying for a temporary clerical position, you might mention that in your four-week stint with Anheuser-Busch, you supported both the sales and legal departments by completing a variety of clerical tasks - then describe those tasks in detail. This information lets them know that not only are you qualified to take on a clerical position, but that you also can multitask under the pressure of two departments and complete numerous projects within a short period of time.

List the Companies You've Worked For

If you've been temping for a while, it may feel natural to write down the names of any agencies that you've worked with instead of the companies they've introduced you to. However, it's not a bad idea to list the companies, mainly because this is where you've gained the experience you're now trying to market to the prospective employer.

As a temporary worker, by telling them the companies you've worked for, they can better determine what types of skills you've acquired as well as the likelihood of you successfully completing their projects. However, as a contractor you will not have this concern if you make it a practice to approach companies on your own for work.

Show Them You Can Fit In

Another great way to get your foot in the door as a temp or contractor is by convincing the prospective employer that you fit into their organizational culture. Most times, this means making an effort to research their company for information that will help you understand their goals. By showing them that their goals and your skills and accomplishments are well aligned, they are likely to develop the impression that you will transition easily into their company and get the job done with minimal training.

Working a temporary or contract position can provide you with a great opportunity to highlight how versatile, adaptable, and truly talented you are. So let your resume showcase this dynamic side of your personality when searching for your next short-term position.

Heather Eagar is a former professional resume writer and owner of http://www.ResumeLines.com who is now dedicated to providing job seekers with resources and products that promote job search success from beginning to end.


If you are graduating from college this year, you might be considering taking a break before going to grad school or starting your career. If you are, think about doing something meaningful as you explore "gap year" alternatives.

According to Wikipedia, the term, "gap year" refers to a "prolonged period (often, but not always, a year) between two life stages. This "gap year" is also known as a "year out", "year off", "deferred year", "bridging year", "overseas experience", "time off" and "time out". Taking this time off is actually very popular in Europe and Australia where young adults are encouraged to take a break after high school and before or after college. Graduates are urged to take on meaningful experiences during this time for personal exploration before moving to the next life stage of career or college.

Your graduation from college this year could offer you the same opportunity. You might be thinking about taking the time off, especially if you are not sure what your next career or higher education step should be.

The question to ponder is whether or not taking the "gap year" off a good thing for you?

The answer of course is - it depends. College graduates should weigh the pros and cons of taking this time off and the long term ramifications on future career choices.

Here are some pros for exploring "Gap Year" alternatives:

  1. This break could give graduates the time needed to explore career options.


  2. Students may be tired of school and might get diminishing returns from paying for classes and not doing well.


  3. Graduates might be able to save some money to return to school, get an apartment or some needed transportation.


  4. Traveling can help students explore geographical options and other cultures
Here are some of the cons of taking advantage of "Gap Year" alternatives:
  1. Students may never want to return to college or further their education. This is quite possibly the most common reason for hesitating.


  2. Once away from school, graduates lose touch with college professors and others who could encourage further education or guide career direction.

Some US colleges now understand the increasing urge that high school graduates have for the "gap year" and are now getting on board with innovative programs to meet the needs of these college students.

A recent article in the US News outlines "gap year" plans from Princeton University in New Jersey. Princeton University is planning to send 10 percent of their 2009 incoming freshman overseas for a year to work in the social services. These new college students will actually do all this cross cultural exploration before they even set foot on the Princeton campus for their freshman year.

By: Marcia Robinson and courtesy of BullsEyeResumes College Blog. Robinson coaches, trains, and writes on career, workplace, and education issues for students and career professionals. http://bullseyeresumes-college.blogspot.com

Article courtesy of the Recruiting Blogswap, a content exchange service sponsored by CollegeRecruiter.com, a leading site for college students looking for internships and recent graduates searching entry-level jobs and other career opportunities.

44 Resume Writing Tips

Resume writing is no easy task. Although my resume has served me well over the years, I recognize that most of my jobs were long-term assignments through temporary agencies. Not all employers would request a resume or even require an interview before hiring a temp for one of their offices or departments. Still, when employers did require resumes, mine managed to get me scheduled for an interview. I don't know how. I think it has every resume faux pas imaginable and still I got the interview and, more often than not, got the assignment. Amazing.

Things are different now. A resume has to be top knotch to even be considered. The article "44 Resume Writing Tips" gives job seekers all the secrets of writing a great resume all at once. Most of the tips are very familiar, but there are others that caught me by surprise, like avoid negativity, no pictures, and no lies.

The first tip was the most eye opening for me. The purpose of a resume is to get an interview, not a job. It's the interview that ultimately gets you the job; the resume just gets your foot in the door.

As I said, there is plenty of standard advice like use action verbs, tailor each resume to each employer, and to proofread, then proofread again. They also give advice that some may not have considered like making sure to use a good printer, create a resume that's email-friendly, and avoid fancy design details.

The final word of advice is to seek professional help if the do-it-yourself method is too difficult. There are plenty of Web sites like CollegeRecruiter.com that offer resume writing help in addition to their other services. A simple Google search will turn up a plethora of options for someone who's looking for help writing a resume that's "guaranteed to get results."

Do you have an Egocentric Resume? What's an Egocentric resume, you ask?

Egocentrism - defined by Wikipedia as a) the incomplete differentiation of the self and the world, including other people and b) the tendency to perceive, understand and interpret the world in terms of the self. The term derives from the Greek ego, meaning "I". An egocentric person has no theory of mind, cannot "put himself in other people's shoes," and believes everyone sees what he sees (or that what he sees in some way exceeds what others see.)

So based on Wikipedia's definition, an Egocentric Resume is a resume you've written for yourself as the audience. It makes you feel good. It should - you've written an autobiography and probably summed it up in a page or two.

Egocentric Resumes take different forms. Some give vast amounts of detail about management or projects that the writer was most proud of. Others are understated, stating "just the facts, m'aam." Still others are full of puffery and overly self promoting, but often about accomplishments that are less important to hiring managers.

Continue reading "Do you Recognize These Early Warning Signs of an Egocentric Resume? " »

Most people's first response is....Huh? That's right, if you stop writing cover letters, you'll get more interviews.

Most people have been taught paper-based resume strategies, that encourage writing a static resume and customizing with a cover letter. But this strategy doesn't work in today's world of digital resumes.

I know it's counterintuitive, and goes against everything you were taught, but it's true. I'll prove it to you with one sentence.

EMPLOYERS DON'T INCLUDE COVER LETTERS IN THEIR SEARCH.

Continue reading "Stop Writing Cover Letters and You'll Get MORE Interviews " »

Recently, a number of job seekers have asked me if it's okay to drop undesirable jobs from their resumes. The reasons varied, but most had to do with holding short-term positions, leaving jobs on bad terms, getting fired, and changing careers.

In the past, I would have considered that approach. After all, a resume is a marketing piece and should present only the qualifications that would help "sell" the candidate. Now I'm revisiting this issue, and my advice is that you shouldn't omit positions from your resume just to make your work history look more desirable.

Okay, I shouldn't use absolutes. Someone asked if a job she held for several days can be dropped. Yes, it can! An extremely short-term job is not significant enough to be listed in your employment history. Also, if you're only including employment history from the last 10-15 years or so, of course you can omit older jobs. As is the case for most resume strategy decisions, use your judgment.


Continue reading "Resume Writing Tip: Don't Drop Jobs from Your Resume " »

When applying for a new job, it can sometimes be difficult to explain a huge gap in employment, or lack of relevant employment, when all you have is your resume to do the talking. This is why it is recommended that you include a cover letter with your resume.

But what can a cover letter do for you? It can give the prospective employer insight into who you are as a person, as well as why you want to work for their company. And it can also give you the opportunity to turn what may look like weaknesses on your resume into strengths. Let's look at a few ways this can be accomplished.

Focus on Your Special Skills

If you don't have a lot of jobs to list on your resume, but you do have relevant skills that you've acquired over the years, you can use your cover letter to explain what looks to be a lack of experience. A great way to get started is by creating a list of skills you've developed that match the company's job posting, mission and culture. Next you can use the cover letter to explain how those skills can enhance the company.

For example, you may be an expert typist capable of accurately typing 80 WPM, which is perfect for the data entry position you're interested in. The only drawback is that you didn't gain your expertise from your last 20 years as a housewife and part-time babysitter. Instead, you picked it up while volunteering as your church's secretary over the past decade. In this case, you can use your cover letter to highlight this skill and turn around what might be perceived as a lack of job experience.

Hobbies Are Not Off-Limits

Many people have hobbies that they spend a lot of time focusing on and eventually want to turn into careers. For example, you may love to work on computers and have expertise with both hardware and software applications, which has nothing to do with your string of jobs working in factories.

You decide that you are interested in applying for a position with a small start-up company that needs an entry-level IT technician. You know you're perfect for it but don't know how to prove it. That is, until you remember that you keep up with all of the technology, have taken some classes at a local college, and have years of experience fixing computers in your community. By explaining all of this in your cover letter, you have a chance to showcase the experience you've gained.

Keep Your Explanations Simple

While you want to use your cover letter to fill in gaps in your job history, you don't want the employer to spend too much time thinking about the possibility of you being a weak candidate. So instead of spending a lot of time explaining why your skills and hobbies are stellar, it is a good idea to instead keep this part as brief as you would in any other cover letter.

Having gaps in your work history doesn't have to define your capabilities as an employee. So try using your cover letter to highlight your special skills. You might be surprised by the success that follows.

Heather Eagar is a former professional resume writer and owner of http://www.ResumeLines.com who is now dedicated to providing job seekers with resources and products that promote job search success from beginning to end.

Yuck! Why would you want to bait your resume?

Do you want your resume reader to have a desire to learn more about you? Do you want your resume's reader to see that you're something special, unique, extraordinary, a "must have on my team" player?

Or do you want your resume to look like the hundreds, maybe thousands of other resumes that your employer sees?

Most resume writers and recruiters will encourage you to leave no questions unanswered on your resume, so you look prepared. And most job seekers follow this advice. Sadly, it doesn't work well.

I disagree with that old school advice. I guess it works if you want to look like all the applicants. But who can afford to be average, when you are competing with large numbers for just one job?

Today, you've gotta stand out. Be different.

Bait makes you different.

So what's bait, and how can I get some? I'm not referring to nightcrawlers, minnows, Pillsbury dough, or anything else fish eat.

Bait is a statement that causes your reader to want to know more - and has to talk to you to find out more. A statement where you tell part of the story - the sizzle. But you've 'forgotten' to tell how you got the sizzle.

If you tell an employer that you solved their problem, BUT DON'T TELL THEM HOW YOU DID IT....don't you think they'd want to talk to you, to hear how you slayed their personal dragon?

Continue reading "Bait Your Resume" »


Standing out from the crowd can be a good thing or a bad thing - it depends. Take the ongoing saga of Britney Spears - she certainly stands out in the highly populated celebrity arena but not necessarily with positive spin. Contrast that with Oprah and her mission of giving back - her personal brand consistently conveys caring for others and integrity.

In the crowded job search and careers arena, your resume can also stand out - for better or for worse. In fact, Seth Godin's post "Why bother having a resume?" captured the potential employer's frustration with the overwhelming lack of resume quality. While I do not agree with Seth about totally eliminating resumes (HR folks do still expect to see such a document and application systems are currently set up around collecting and screening resumes), I DO agree that your most critical self-marketing piece (your resume) had better be remarkable.

To learn more about creating a STAND-OUT Resume that will create positive traction for your job search, sign up for this complimentary webinar 3 Steps to a STAND-OUT Resume that I am presenting on Thursday, May 8th at 1:00PM ET for the American Society of Association Executives (ASAE) and The Center for Association Leadership. You'd best hurry as I hear the 200-seat webinar is filling up fast!

By Susan Guarneri and courtesy of CareerHub.com. The Career Hub blog connects job seekers with experts in career counseling, resume writing, personal branding and recruiting.



Do You Create Employer Value? Or do you just take up space?

Employers today have problems that need solutions. That's why they hire staff, because their problems require too much manpower or specialized knowledge for the hiring manager to solve on their own.

What kinds of problems you ask? Problems reaching sales goals, or expanded sales forecasts, problems lowering costs, problems increasing production, labor problems, tax problems, technology problems, getting goods & services to market problems, making that great idea into a better mousetrap problems - those kinds of problems.

Candidates that clearly demonstrate how they can help solve employer problems create value, and are aggressively recruited. Candidates that don't demonstrate a track record of solving specific problems end up with a long job search and either unemployed or underemployed.

Continue reading "Do You Create Employer Value? " »



It seems like every new client I get sends me a resume with a long section at the top of the resume that precedes actual work experience. Sometimes the top section is labeled, "Profile" or "Executive Profile" or "Summary" or even "Objective". Apparently there are some resume reviewers/writers who insist on including some sort of header section. I don't really get it.

As someone who has worked a variety of recruiting and hiring capacities including in-house recruiter, headhunter, and hiring manager I would be the first to say that when I was making recruiting or hiring decisions I never really read those sections. Except as a way to possibly eliminate candidates that is. If you list an "Objective" section it is, by definition, a limiting statement. You probably won't be considered for any job that falls outside of the definition you list. That is fine if you really only want to be considered for a specific job or for a job in a specific industry. But if you expect for someone reading the resume to consider you for a similar, but not exact job, you are being awfully optimistic.

Sections labeled "Profile" or "Summary" are often just a list of subjective statements that represent the opinion that the resume owner has of him or herself. In which case they are useless. Why would a recruiter care that you think you have great people skills or that you think you are a gifted communicator unless the statement is backed up by specific accomplishments in the resume? News flash: EVERYONE describes themselves as having "great people skills". Guess what? Few people actually have great interpersonal skills. And generally if you do have great communication or people skills that becomes pretty obvious when someone reads your accomplishments if those skills have helped you to achieve results for your employer.

Continue reading "Using Profiles, Summaries, and Objectives on Resumes" »


I'm sometimes asked if people should write their own resumes. After all, who knows more about the job seeker's accomplishments than the job seeker himself? So I've compiled this list of the top ten reasons why you shouldn't write your own resume:

Top Ten Reasons Why You Shouldn't Write Your Own Resume

10. Last time you wrote your resume, it was confused with your six-year-old's homework assignment.

9. Your self-composed resume left you amongst the long-term unemployed.

8. You struggle with how to word your Objective section and keep coming back to the old standby, "Seeking a challenging position with a growth-oriented company."

7. The latest version of your resume leads with your 1972 babysitting gig.

6. You're using an IBM Selectric to format your resume's layout.

5. You think keywords have something to do with the Dewey Decimal System.

4. Your son's resume is more impressive than yours, and he has never held a job.

3. You're trying to sum up a long-term career history on a one-page resume.

2. You were always the first to be eliminated in spelling bees, but there's always spellcheck, write?

And the #1 reason why you shouldn't write your own resume...

1. Hiring managers have an uncontrollable bout of the giggles when reading your resume.

Best wishes.


By Kim Isaacs and courtesy of ResumePower blog.


In this guest post, Cynthia Shapiro, career expert and author of the best seller Corporate Confidential:50 Secrets Your Company Doesn't Want You To Know - And What To Do About Them, offers some insider tips for resumes.


We all want to make it to the top of that teetering pile of resumes atop the hiring managers' desks. With 400,000 workers laid off in March and 7.8 million unemployed, competition for the top jobs is fierce. But there are a few insider tips that can help you get picked as the top candidate.

1. Be Bold

Think of your resume as a one-page billboard, not a biography. Use lots of white space, bold type and bullet points, and get rid of that vague "objective."

Be specific about your big accomplishments, not your basic job duties. For example, if they ask for "stellar sales skills," say you increased your last employer's sales by 10% within a 3-month period.

2. Be the perfect fit

Mirror the ad's language in your cover letter and resume. If they ask for someone "passionate about customer service," use those words.

Many companies use software that looks for key words to identify top candidates; usually those are the same words as you'll see in the ads.

Even if they go through the resume pile the old fashioned way, by hand, careful wording will make you stand out and appear to be a perfect match.

3. Get out of the slush pile

If your resume ends up with everyone else's, it's less likely to get noticed. In addition to the one you've faxed or emailed, call the company receptionist and get the name and title of the hiring manager (make sure you ask for spelling). Do the same for the manager of the open position.

Mail an old-fashioned 100% cotton or linen paper resume with professional cover letter to both these people, in an envelope marked "personal." This way it will go directly to their in-box.

Don't email or fax it to them, or it will just end up back in the slush pile. Even if your mailed-in resume does end up with a stack of others, it will be folded differently and will feel different to the touch; more weighty, thus more important.

4. Avoid the No. 1 mistake

Make sure your cover letter and resume language exudes confidence. Too many candidates sound like they're asking or even begging for consideration. You're not asking, you're making them aware of all the wonderful things you have to offer.

If you're not excited about what you have to offer, why should they be?


Article by George Lenard, the originator of George's Employment Blawg, has over twenty years of experience in all aspects of labor and employment law, including preventive law as well as litigation. His special interests include employment discrimination, sexual harassment, and noncompetition agreements. He is currently a managing partner with Harris, Dowell, Fisher & Harris, L.C., in St. Louis, Missouri, and lives in the suburb of University City with his wife and family.

Earlier this week I received the following email from a client/friend of mine:

Hey Liz,

I hope you're doing well and business is still booming. I wanted to ask your opinion of something. After nine months, it has come to my attention that a former colleague/friend has plagiarized large sections of my resume (the one you helped me with). I offered it to her to use as a template when our employer was downsizing. We have been competing for the same contract jobs and she has recently undercut me for $10 less per hour on a 6-12 contract gig working with client of our former employer. The client assumed we had the same background and experience because we worked for the same employer and because she copied my resume. She's even posted part of it on LinkedIn along with other falsifications.

Any thoughts/ideas about what I can do?

Thanks,
Brad

My response was this:

Dear Brad,

I am so sorry to hear about this. If I could sue this woman for copyright infringement I would. This happened once before when another client did exactly what you did and shared his new resume that I wrote with a co-worker. The way I found out is that the co-worker/idiot who plagiarized his resume had the nerve to contact me to ask if there was "anything I could do to improve his resume" - I told him that he had already copied my work enough and that unless he wanted to pay me for the work he had copied that we had nothing to talk about.

In the future I recommend that you not show co-workers your resume because you really can't trust people not to screw you the way this woman has done. Plus, since you paid for the resume I would think you wouldn't want to give away the contents for free. I always get pissed when I find out that someone has plagiarized my resume work but I don't think there is much I can do about it short of copyrighting every resume I write and that probably wouldn't make my clients happy. This woman will get what's coming to her...what comes around usually goes around.

Regards,

Liz

The point of this post is: keep your resume to yourself unless you don't mind if ambitious co-workers copy your work or, possibly, take credit for your accomplishments. A huge part of the service I provide is helping my clients to target and articulate accomplishments. Do you want your co-worker to see the way you have described your success on a project and say, "Hey, I worked on that project too so I am going to put that great sentence on my resume."? What if, like my friend Brad, you wind up competing with this co-worker for the same job?

There are many ways to support friends and co-workers that don't involve giving away your resume so think defensively and don't share personal information that others could use to boost their careers at the expense of yours.

By: Liz Handlin, Ultimate Resumes Blogspot

Article courtesy of the Recruiting Blogswap, a content exchange service sponsored by CollegeRecruiter.com, a leading site for college students looking for internships and recent graduates searching entry-level jobs and other career opportunities.


Resume Hell is where all the poor sad resumes go that never see the light of day. Do you want to be in Resume Hell?

Or would you like to rise above Resume Hell?

It's really not that hard, because the vast majority of resumes do the same thing, make the same mistakes, and say the same thing. So if you take a different approach that's thoughtful and distinctive, it's not hard to rise above the rest into the daylight.

Continue reading "How to Rise Above Resume Hell " »


Mostly when I write resumes for clients, they have very few changes or revisions. But the most common change request is for more words.

This "worditis" is a common disease among job seekers. It's the desire to tell all the details of your work history in your resume. It can take the form of adding lots of extra bullet points ('you didn't mention the IT project I worked on in 1987'), it can be a desire to add details to projects that are already listed ('I think we need to point out the ad campaign ran for 5 weeks in 6 major markets'), or it can manifest itself in the need to list every skill ever acquired.

But no matter what form it takes, it IS a disease and it must be beaten! No busy recruiter wants to read a pile of dense, wordy and long-winded documents. If you include too much information, the likelihood is that none of it will be read.

Think of your resume as a brochure rather than the product catalog. It should communicate your key selling points in an attractive, easy-to-read format. It should tell the reader who you are, clearly and concisely, and compel him to take action (in this case, calling you in for an interview.) During the interview process, you will have lots of time to explain the details of your projects and to outline all the great things you've accomplished. Your resume is not the place for that.

But how do you choose what to include and what to omit? Two suggestions:

1) Put yourself in the shoes of the person who will read your resume. Ask yourself what his or her chief concerns are. What do they want in a new employee? What problems do they need to be solved? What opportunities do they need to capitalize on? Look for clues in the job posting, or just use your general knowledge of your industry and field.

2) As you write your resume, ask yourself 'does this piece of information make it significantly more likely that I will get an interview, given what I know about my target audience?' If the answer is 'no,' out it goes!

Less really IS more in a resume. By creating a concise, easy-to-read document that gives an overview of your accomplishments, you will make it so much easier for recruiters to understand the value that you bring.


By Louise Fletcher and courtesy of CareerHub.com. The Career Hub blog connects job seekers with experts in career counseling, resume writing, personal branding and recruiting.

Have you ever sat down at your computer with tons of information to include in both your cover letter and resume but didn't know where to go from there? Many people get stuck at this stage because they're afraid they might use the wrong words to describe their skills and accomplishments.

If you've felt this way, you're not alone. However, there are simple ways you can avoid having your resume and cover letter sound too weak, limited, or vague.

About the Author:
Heather Eagar is a former professional resume writer and owner of
http://www.ResumeLines.com
who is now dedicated to providing job seekers with resources and
products that promote job search success from beginning to end.

Tell Them What You Did - Not What You Should Have Done

When creating a cover letter or resume, some people get in the habit of using passive words and phrases that sound more like a description of what they should have done on the job rather than what they actually accomplished. For example, the phrases "responsible for" or "duties included" draw a picture of what your previous employer wanted you to do, but don't tell whether you actually accomplished their goal. A good way to turn this problem around for the better is by using action verbs like managed, wrote, collaborated, and demonstrated followed by specific tasks you completed. This will help you provide your prospective employer with a good example of your current skill level.

Empty Words - Proceed with Caution

The following list of words are good to use under some circumstances, but should be used with caution: aggressive, creative, determined, flexible, competent, logical, independent, successful, well-organized, and meticulous. Stating that you are all of these things does not explain how you are any of them, which essentially gives them empty meanings until they are applied to specific actions you've taken. So instead of using them to describe yourself, try using them to describe a campaign you initiated, event you organized, sales strategy you implemented, or team you developed. That way you'll give your prospective employer insight into your true skills and capabilities based on past experiences.

Don't Forget about Keywords

Because so much of the job search process relies on Internet applications or online job databases, it is a good idea to focus on specific keywords that will make your resume and cover letter more searchable on the Internet. So in this case, you will want to veer away from words that have nothing to do with the field you're looking to work in. For example, if you want to work in the fashion industry, there's no need to use a lot of words focused on cars, clocks, cups, telephones, pencils ... you get my drift? You will instead benefit from using keywords like fashion, textile, fabrics, garments, and other words that you imagine employers in your specific industry will be typing in during their online resume search.

Learning the words and phrases you want to avoid on your resume and cover letter will help you to provide more accurate information regarding your career skills. So think in action verbs, avoid empty meanings, and choose industry-specific keywords. Doing this will definitely benefit your job search in the long run.

Looking for a new job? Start with a GREAT resume.

Here's what it takes . . .


Pack your resume with words that spell P-O-W-E-R! Consider the list on the left. Then compare with the list on the right. Which words speak to you?

StartedInitiated
MadeCreated
FinishedCompleted
DidHandled
Sent Delivered
HelpedDelegated

Continue reading "Punch Up Your Resume--With Power-Packed Words!" »


Nearly everyone has some sort of gap in employment at some point in their career. The days of "lifetime employment" are all but extinct. While most gaps are relatively short, up to a few months, sometimes they end up being much longer. Or perhaps it's not really an employment gap but a career gap - what do you do if you're seeking to re-enter a career after an extended time doing something else?

Susan Ireland addresses this question well here:

Career Gap on Resume

Question

I was a Landscape Architect with over a 15 years experience, licensed and educated with a degree in the field. (It is a fairly narrow profession). I faded out of that career in 2001 and became a self-employed, on-line bookseller with every intention of not going back into L/arch.

However, I have changed my mind! I am eager to re-enter the profession because I miss the challenge, the people and working on creative projects.

My question is: Do you think I should "expose my gap" in L/arch in the cover letter, in my resume or at the interview?? There is no way I can hide this fact, nor do I want to... In the architectural field we usually show a portfolio at the interview and I have nothing to show after 2001... Being a bookseller does not mean I was unemployed, it's just that most of these firms will want to know who I am presently working for and what projects I am working on. Personally, I do not consider it a working gap, but a career gap. What do you think? -- Cliff

Answer

Cliff, you are right to consider this a career gap, not an employment gap. Here's what I suggest you do:

Use the chronological resume format. As the first entry at the top of your Experience section put:

2001 - present, Freelance Landscape Architect (concurrent with online sales venture)
- Mention a few landscape projects that you've done during this time (I'm sure you didn't keep you hands out of the soil or off the drawing board!) The projects can be ones at your own home or ones you volunteered for in the community. Don't forget to include interesting projects you consulted on like that hillside landscaping in your neighbor's backyard, the redeign of your aunt's rock garden, and other projects you gave advice for.
- Briefly refer to administrative aspects of your online business that are relevant to working for a landscape company. Maybe you designed marketing pages, used your database skills, or your customer service talents to enhance business.
- If your online book business specialized in selling landscape-related books, include something about that.

For the rest of the article, go here

Article by David B. Wright and courtesy of Jim Stroud, "The Job Search Strategist" providing strategies, tips and tutorials on how to find work and advance your career.


Newspapers, blogs, sales letters, and other marketing documents use headlines to draw readers in and make them want to continue reading.

Using the same concept as headlines for sales copy (Michel Fortin's blog post on the subject is a must-read), adding one to your resume can give you an edge over other candidates.

If you're boring employers to tears with a ho-hum "Objective" section that focuses on you and your needs, try using a headline instead and see if that makes a difference in your resume's response rate. I bet it does!

The goal of a headline is to capture the reader's attention, so it should contain your value proposition. Don't even try to create one unless you can succinctly express why the employer should hire you. Once that is clear in your mind, you can create a headline that gets noticed and makes the hiring manager want to read the rest of your resume.

Have you replaced your "Objective" section with a headline? If so, I would love to hear how it's been working for you. Feel free to post a comment below or send me an email .

To your success.


By Kim Isaacs and courtesy of ResumePower blog.

Many people took me up on my offer to critique their resumes for free -- here's the thread: Free Resume Critique

When reviewing the resumes, I noticed that the documents shared common problems and issues -- regardless of the career field. The free critique offer is now closed, but you can improve your resume by following these tips:

Top 10 Ways to Improve Your Resume

1. Proofread. This should be a no-brainer, but almost all resumes had typos and formatting inconsistencies. Make sure your resume is perfect, and hire a professional if you're not confident in your proofreading skills.

2. Remove "Fluff." One of my pet peeves is the use of flowery resume language. If you're a results-proven, detail-oriented leader with excellent verbal and written communication skills, I'm talking to you. This type of language makes hiring managers' eyes glaze over and doesn't do much to "sell" your credentials. Instead of saying that you have these skills, prove it with examples of past successes throughout the resume.

3. Add a Headline. A Headline calls out your objective as well as one or two of your top qualifications, and is a modern twist on a traditional "Objective" section.

4. Add a Summary. If you don't have a Qualifications Summary, write one -- immediately! The summary can present the top reasons why employers should contact you -- your value proposition. If you lead your resume with a compelling summary, employers will be more likely to read the rest of your resume.

5. Include Important Skills. You can create a separate "Key Skills" section or incorporate your skills in the Summary section. Either way, an easy-to-skim, bulleted list of your job-related skills will appeal to hiring managers.

6. Add Accomplishments. And while you're at it, quantify them (if possible) so employers can understand the impact of your work.

7. Avoid Using Personal Pronouns. Employers know that your resume is about you, so write in an "implied" first-person voice.

8. Focus on the Last Ten Years or So. If your work history is extensive, keep in mind that most resume reviewers are concerned about your recent employment. You can keep the early positions, but cut down on the amount of space used and consider summing it up in an "Early Career" section.

9. Add an Online Folio. If you don't already have one, create an online career folio or blog that can bring your branded message to life. Once you have established an online presence, you will increase your chances of getting found when an employer or recruiter Googles you.

10. Ditch the "References Available" Line. Employers expect you to have references if you're in a job search, and this line is just wasting space at the end of the resume.


By Kim Isaacs and courtesy of ResumePower blog.

When I'm asked for resume advice, I'll often first ask...what's your resume's hit ratio, or response rate? Usually, this question is answered by the sound of crickets.

It surprises me, especially Finance and Technology professionals whose professional lives revolve around measuring and interpreting data, don't think to measure the effectiveness of their resume. Isn't it natural to track how well your resume works for you?

At a minimum, couldn't you easily track how many callbacks, interviews, and offers each version of your resume generates?

An effective resume generates a 25% direct-employer (non-headhunter) response rate. If you're getting less, than your resume works against you. But most job changers don't have a clue how to measure this.

There are two alternatives I'd suggest. One is a do it yourself solution, and the other is a web service.

Do it Yourself: Build a spreadsheet to track results. List date sent, company, contact person (if known), source, next follow up, and check boxes for Phone screen, Interview, 2nd Interview, Offer. Include a column for notes.

Keep a running average of (phone screens + interviews)/resumes sent. Make sure not to double count Phone screens and interviews if you have both for the same job. Also, it's a more effective measurement when you only track direct employers, and leave known outside recruiters out of the equation, as known recruiters give a much higher % of callbacks than direct employers.

Web Service: There's a great web service called JibberJobber, run by Jason Alba. Jason built JibberJobber as a way to track metrics of his own job search, then started letting others use it. It became so popular, that his promotion through social media caught on and he created a successful web business from the idea.

JibberJobber brings a recruiter's dashboard to the job seeker. This tool keeps manages job search stats, resume versions, recruiting and job seeking contacts, personal network contacts, and organizes your job search like a CRM organizes a sales forces' efforts. You can even import networking contacts through social networks like LinkedIN. JibberJobber simplifies your search, can point you in the right direction, keep track of next steps, and best of all, it's free for a limited version.

Which one to use? It depends on personal preference. While the structured detailed approach of JibberJobber works well for those who are very disciplined, an Excel spreadsheet allows you the free form style of doing it yourself, ability to customize and track the statistics that make the most sense to you, and an unlimited database size for free (JibberJobber charges a small monthly fee once you reach a minimum size).

Either way you prefer, track your resume results. And if your resume isn't generating a 25% direct employer response rate, talk to professionals to get resume advice.

Article by Phil Rosenberg, President, reCareered & Rainmakers Global and courtesy of reCareered blog.

Last year I started working with a client whom I will call "C". C is a very successful senior level sales executive who is now in his mid 40s. Like many other people, C has reached that point in his career when he is taking stock of what he really wants to do. He is a great pharmaceutical sales guy - momentum and talent have helped him to navigate a lucrative career and to stay with the same company through a couple of mergers. C has come to the conclusion that pharmaceutical sales isn't what it used to be. Constant reorganizations make it hard to make as much money and generally create frustration and aggravation for some of the salespeople.

I helped C with his resume and I put him in touch with superstar executive coach, Brooke Vuckovic. Brooke has a PhD from the University of Chicago and is a professor at the Kellogg Graduate School of Management. She works with top executives to help them to figure out the answer to the question, "What's next in my career?" C has decided that it might be time to explore a job with a start-up if he can find the right opportunity. So, he is in the process of researching companies to try to find an opportunity that he is excited about.

C called the other day and asked me to help him update his resume in advance of attending a big industry conference. He heard about a couple of trailblazing entrepreneurs who have a unique product that he is uniquely qualified to sell because of his particular industry knowledge and contacts. So, in addition to resume updates, we talked a lot about how to approach the people he wanted to meet and we did some online research so that C would be prepared for his meeting.

Then C headed off to the conference. The day after the conference I got an email from C to call him right away...that he had big news. When I called I half expected him to tell me that the entrepreneurs he was meeting had offered him a job on the spot. He is a super talented guy so it wouldn't have surprised me if that had happened. But, that is not what C wanted to say.

C told me that after having spent nearly 20 years in pharmaceutical sales he had never gone to a conference and made as many contacts as he did that day. He said he had great conversations with industry leaders and got about 30 business cards from folks he planned to follow up with. His point was that when he opened himself up to working with a professional coach and a resume writer he was stepping out of his comfort zone but that by taking that step he opened more doors for himself than he could ever have imagined.

There is a saying that if you keep doing what you have always done you will get the same results that you have always gotten. The opposite is also true: if you do something different than what you have done before you will probably get different results. In the past, C took a more passive approach to his career which was pretty easy since his skills got him promoted regularly. Now, he is aggressively pursuing options that he is choosing for himself and he can't believe the results he has gotten so far.

I am sure as a salesman, C did a lot of networking with industry contacts in order to sell products. But networking for a job requires a somewhat different focus in that you are seeking out an opportunity for yourself rather than for a product or for your company. My friend Thom Singer has written a couple of great books about networking and I know he just gave a speech at South By Southwest Interactive about networking at conferences. Thom's advice? Walk up to someone and say "Hello" and see what happens from there. So simple, so easy, yet it can seem so difficult when you are at a conference but as C found out the rewards of doing so are many.

By Liz Handlin of Ultimate Resumes.

Article courtesy of the Recruiting Blogswap, a content exchange service sponsored by CollegeRecruiter.com, a leading site for college students looking for internships and recent graduates searching entry-level jobs and other career opportunities.

It's almost that time of year again, when newly graduating seniors hit the job market in search of a paycheck.

I don't know about you, but everything I know about job hunting I learned after college. Like how to network and write an effective resume, for example.

So, to give you graduating seniors a leg up, I interviewed two career experts to uncover 5 ways for new grads to find a job faster. This is the stuff I wish they taught in school ...

  1. Cast a wide net "In a declining economy such as we face now, you have to expand your options. If you've looked only at large corporations, start looking at small businesses, non-profits, universities, government jobs -- a huge area of job growth -- and other types of employers," advises Lindsey Pollak, Author of "Getting from College to Career: 90 Things to Do Before You Join the Real World."

    Often, jobs at smaller and non-profit organizations are harder to find, requiring more networking on your part. However, you'll face less competition from other job hunters who are not willing to put in the effort.

  2. Persist without being a pest
    Follow-up is one of the most important elements of any successful job search, especially for new grads lacking traditional experience. "'No' may really mean 'not right now,'" says Pollak. "Getting a job is often about timing, so stay on employers' radar screens. But instead of saying, 'Hi, I'm just calling to follow up,' try to add value in each communication, and only follow up once every two weeks or so."

    One way to add value is to use Google Alerts (Google.com/alerts) to stay current on industry news and trends. The service is free and emails you daily updates of the latest Google results (blogs, news, etc.) based on the topics you choose. Then, presto! You have a valid excuse to email or call employers about the relevant articles you find online.

  3. Get experience -- any way you can
    Employers today expect -- and in many cases demand -- that you have hands-on work experience when you graduate from college, according to Peter Vogt, author of "Career Wisdom for College Students: Insights You Won't Get in Class, on the Internet, or from Your Parents."

    "If you don't have the right experience, you need to get some, be it through a post-graduation internship, working for a temporary staffing agency, or perhaps even volunteering," says Vogt.

    While this may come as a nasty surprise, especially if you've spent four years and five or six figures getting a degree, it might be necessary. Especially if the economy continues to slow down. So you should have a Plan B that includes temping, interning or volunteer work. Some sites to check out are Net-Temps.com, Kellyservices.com, Manpower.com and Volunteermatch.org.

  4. Your resume probably stinks -- fix it
    This unpleasant fact comes from my own experience reading hundreds of resumes from new grads over the years. To be specific, there are two things missing from most entry-level resumes: focus and results.

    First, to give your resume focus, include an Objective at the top, with a specific job title. If you can't focus on one job, tell readers the three skills you want to use (not 5 or 11). You must do the thinking for the reader and make it clear exactly what you want to do.

    For free resume-writing help, send your resume to 5 people and ask them if they can figure out what job you want. If they can't, employers can't.
    Revise as necessary.

    Second, to give your resume results, add up all the time or money you saved or made in every position you've held since high school -- paid or unpaid.
    Then, include those totals in your resume and put them up front, where they can't be missed.

    Wrong example: "Duties included, but were not limited to, filing, faxing, answering phones and greeting clients as receptionist."

    Right example: "Saved 24 staff hours per month ($2,880 per year) by devising new filing system while handling receptionist's duties."

  5. Get used to competition
    Many new grads overlook or ignore this obvious fact, according to Vogt.

    "As a student, you were graded on your efforts alone. If you scored 90 percent on a test, you got an A -- no matter how anyone else did. As a job hunter, employers grade you against your peers. Suddenly, a performance that might otherwise have earned an A might earn you an F -- failure to get hired -- because another candidate else did just a little better," says Vogt.

    To compete in today's job market, start with your mindset. Whether you're writing resumes and cover letters, preparing for interviews, or out there networking, keep reminding yourself that good enough is ... not. According to Vogt, "Your #1 job-search thought at all times must be this: How can I outdo my peers?"

By: Kevin Donlin is President of Guaranteed Resumes and the creator of GetHiredNow.TV. Since 1996, he has provided job search assistance to nearly 10,000 people. Author of "51 Ways to Find a Job Fast -- Guaranteed," Kevin has been interviewed by USA Today, The Wall Street Journal, CBS Radio and others. His latest product, The Instant Job Search System, is available at http://www.collegerecruiter.com/guaranteed-resumes.php

Article courtesy of the Recruiting Blogswap, a content exchange service sponsored by CollegeRecruiter.com, a leading site for college students looking for internships and recent graduates searching entry-level jobs and other career opportunities.


The "CIO" had an interesting article by Phil Rosenberg in which he elaborates on what he calls "the dead zone." The dead zone is basically what happens to resumes which are sent in, but never read. With the advance of technology, many multinationals now use computer programs to screen applications to retain only the ones which match specific criteria.

Many job seekers don't know this or are just too lazy to tailor their resumes. They might not know this, but this contravenes to one of the key rules of resume writing, which is to research the employer (including the employer's recruiting practices) and write your resume accordingly. This means that if a company only accepts applications online, it may be wise to assume that a computer program will be used to screen your application. What Phil Rosenberg suggests is that you include specific keywords in your resume and customize your resume for the specific position. That way, your resume will not end up lost in the digital world.

The Dead Zone - Why 97% of Resumes Are Never Read, CIO.com


Article courtesy of WorkBloom, an employment blog incorporating a comprehensive career resources section, including the largest database of professionally written resume and cover letter samples on the Web.

If you are an IT professional and are looking for a job, then you have lots of competition. That means you can't leave your job search to chance. You need a professional resume - one written by an IT resume services company.

When you work with IT resume services, you'll get a well-written resume targeted specifically to high-tech employers.

More to the point, your resume will get RESULTS.

Let IT Resume Services Do the Work

Should you prepare your own resume - or would it be better to let a specialist do it for you? There are many IT resume services to choose from - and no matter which one you pick, it would be well worth your time and money to invest in their services.

By using a company whose only job is preparing IT resumes, you'll have the confidence that your resume will do what it is supposed to do - get you the interview.

What you will need to do is approach an IT resume services with your requirements and a complete profile of your qualifications, skills, and experience. Then leave the rest to them.

Because they have the knowledge, expertise and contacts in the IT industry, they'll be able to locate the job you want, but may not be able to find on your own.

IT Resume Specialists

Remember, your resume will likely be one among thousands lying on the recruiter's desk. Will it catch his or her attention? Does it focus on the company's needs? Do you fit the bill? By hiring an IT resume service, you'll leave the preparation of your resume to the experts - and avoid worrying if your resume is up to par.

IT resume services handle everything from the cover letter to the resume itself. Once you submit your profile details, they will craft a resume that will appeal to technical employers - and you'll get interview calls purely on the strength of your resume.

When you leave your IT resume to the experts, you'll get a final document of excellent quality and one that sells your technical skills and abilities. The language, precision, and presentation will leave no doubt in employers' minds that you are the candidate they are looking for.

If you are an IT professional looking for a new position, you can save valuable time by contacting an IT resume service. You could have a new job sooner than you think!

Ideas for improving the standard-traditional resume have been ongoing, and for good reason. Candidates need something to help differeniate themselves and employers continue to search for improved ways to make well-informed candidate selection decisions, especially at the top of the candidate selection funnel.

Video resumes have recently been the buzz, and it's my opinion that most people have concluded that there are some serious issues that prevent them from going mainstream.

There are two issues in making improvements to the standard-traditional resume. One concerns "content" and the other is about "delivery."

Determining what additional content would improve today's resumes is not particularly difficult. Just look at what some employers are asking their short-listed candidates to provide. For example, some request that an assessment of some type be completed. Some will conduct a background check to verify education and/or credit.

If the candidate inserted this scientifically based and/or information that's been verified by a reputable third party in the resume they're using today, would it be helpful to all constituencies (candidates, employers, ATS vendors, recruiters, et al)? The short answer is likely "yes, it would."

However, any improvements to the standard-traditional resume must be in MS Word because integration into past, present, and future hiring processes is a key issue. It's one reason why video resumes were not successful.

The big issue / problem is content "delivery." Since it must be in MS Word, how can the trusted third party insert the information into the candidate's resume and expect that no one edit or alter the contents?

The answer to the delivery issue is a digital signature. Once the scientifically based or verified data is inserted into the candidate's resume, the trusted third party vendor digitally signs it. The digital signature provides proof of data integrity as well as provides all reviewers with bullet-proof document alteration detection.

Science (assessments) and technology (asymmetric cryptography) can be utilized to improve the standard-traditional resume.

By: Tom Schmidt, http://www.resumefit.com

Article courtesy of the Recruiting Blogswap, a content exchange service sponsored by CollegeRecruiter.com, a leading site for college students looking for internships and recent graduates searching entry-level jobs and other career opportunities.

Reprinted courtesy of TheCareerNews.com

IRVINE, CA -- Does your resume begin with an objective? Many recruiters and hiring managers don't like objective statements because they focus on the needs of the job seeker rather than the needs of the potential employer. Consider trying something different.

Continue reading "Does your resume begin with an objective statement?" »


Seth Godin is one of my favorite bloggers and but in this post about resumes, he's only 50% right.

Seth's looking for an intern and he doesn't like the resumes he's seeing. They're bland and boring and they don't tell him why these candidates are remarkable. Well, that means they're like 99.9% of all resumes out there (which is why people like me get paid to write the other 0.1%).

Seth goes on to say that he wants evidence of what makes a person remarkable:

If you don't have a resume, what do you have?

How about three extraordinary letters of recommendation from people the employer knows or respects?
Or a sophisticated project they can see or touch?
Or a reputation that precedes you?
Or a blog that is so compelling and insightful that they have no choice but to follow up?

Some say, "well, that's fine, but I don't have those."

Yeah, that's my point. If you don't have those, why do you think you are remarkable, amazing or just plain spectacular? It sounds to me like if you don't have those, you've been brainwashed into acting like you're sort of ordinary.

I absolutely agree that those things are important - that's why I often include glowing LinkedIn testimonials when I write resumes. It's why I advocate for those clients who are good writers to start blogging. It's why I create online portfolios where people can show off their extraordinary work.

That's the 50% that's right.

Continue reading "Seth's Half Right" »

Posting your video resume on YouTube is supposed to get you noticed, according to some. One article on video resumes says that you can search "resume" on YouTube and you'll get 15,000 results-but that of course, only about seven of them are any good. In fact, one of the main arguments for video resumes seems to be that "everyone is doing it, so we might as well get used to it." That's not much of an argument.

In theory, employers like the idea of being able to see someone before they invite them in for an interview. It gives them more information and saves time. In practice, it doesn't work out so well. Employers are leery of video resumes just like they are of pictures attached to a resume-because it opens up the possibility of being accused of discrimination. Viewing video resumes is time-consuming, and candidates often don't edit information like they should-see It's Time to Hit Pause on Video Resumes. Video resumes have an excellent chance of ruining a candidate's chances simply by being done badly. One article quotes a human resources person saying that "many video resumes come across like auditions for American Idol"-not exactly the professional image most candidates want to project.

The solution for these issues is, of course, video interviews.

A system utilizing video interviews allows hiring managers to sift through written resumes first (also a time-consuming process, but considerably faster than viewing video resumes) before inviting candidates to interview through a webcam. Hiring managers only have to spend time previewing candidates they're already interested in. That saves candidates and managers time when it comes to scheduling face-to-face interviews.

Video interviews standardize the process. Employers know what they're getting because they asked the questions. Each candidate receives the same questions and the same time to answer them, (which also means employers will know how much time it will take to review them). Combining that setup with the fact that the candidates were chosen for interview through a traditional written resume, eliminates any potential charges of discrimination.

By: Carl Chapman, Interview on Demand

Article courtesy of the Recruiting Blogswap, a content exchange service sponsored by CollegeRecruiter.com, a leading site for college students looking for internships and recent graduates searching entry-level jobs and other career opportunities.

No-one can deny the importance of a résumé in a job search. Despite the invention of web portfolios, online applications, and leadership profiles, you will find that a well-written résumé is still a highly effective tool for interviewing, networking, and relationship building purposes. [Editor's note: resumes are an important part of our Video Career Profile for jobseekers]

For executive jobseekers, the job search arena is a whole different playing field. The compensation is higher, but the competition for C-level positions is fiercer than that of the average jobseeker. As senior-level executive positions shrink, a powerful executive résumé /portfolio can give you an edge over your peers.

When taking a close look at résumé s on the whole, there are distinctive features that are unique to the executive résumé. While information like job responsibilities, areas of expertise, accomplishments, and technical skills will always apply to any jobseeker, the executive must also demonstrate leadership capabilities, industry insights, revenue-enhancing performance, and staff management in his or her résumé. In addition, the executive résumé should be targeted, highly-customized, and clearly describe the executive's personal attributes.

Sounds like a tall order, right? So how exactly do you begin to put the pieces together?

Building Block #1: Know Where You Are Headed. Regardless of what circumstances bring you to a job search, you must be clear on the type of positions, companies or industries you will be targeting. Before I even critique a client's résumé, I always begin by getting a solid understanding of what positions they are considering and the companies that interest them.

It cannot be stressed enough that a one-size fits all résumé does not work, it makes you appear unfocused and the reader is left to guess about your career aspirations. Bottom-line - it ends up in the trash pile. [Editor's note: I did an article on building executive resumes which you might find interesting as well.]

Building Block #2: Decide How You Want To Be Perceived. This portion of building the résumé is especially important for individuals seeking to advance from general management roles to senior-level or C-level responsibilities. What personal strengths and career-defining achievements are most valuable to your target audience? Do you want to be perceived as the finance guru or the innovative leader? Each person is different and those distinguishing features and unique value propositions have to be reflected on paper. This is generally very thought-provoking, but the information you can extract is well worth the effort when it is translated into your executive résumé.

Take the time to develop a list of your personal attributes - enlist help from your mentors, colleagues, peers, and family to help give you feedback on those areas. A company is interested in hiring a real person, not just education, credentials, and technical skills.

Building Block #3: Include Only Relevant Information. Gone are the days when creating a résumé meant rehashing every job you held in your life. Most likely, as an executive you will have a minimum of fifteen years or more experience. Do all those experiences relate to your target market? Are you still holding on to your first position or internship since college?

Understandably, having consistency and longevity on your résumé will work in your favor, but the goal is to have a two-to-three page résumé, not a book! In addition, if you have done a variety of training courses, list those programs that would highlight your knowledge and proficiency in areas that your target market wants.

Building Block #4: Gather The Facts, Get The Numbers. Your executive résumé must tell the reader what you have done, but in "big picture" snapshots with active words that bring the résumé to life. There is a huge difference between saying "Manage daily activities for real estate portfolio for investment management company and supervise staff members." and saying instead "Challenged to deliver 10% return on $700 million investment portfolio in unpredictable real estate industry. Oversee all daily activities including ROI maximizations, client relations, loan negotiations, and investment dispositions. Recruit, train, and coach 50 employees.

In three short sentences, without going through the painful step-by-step details, the reader is able to capture what the jobseeker does, the breadth of the work responsibilities, the challenges, and the overall scope of the desired outcome. Being able to incorporate quantitative facts and figures can really enhance the executive résumé. You probably won't remember intricate details from ten or fifteen years ago, but does some research, make logical estimates, and call up old co-workers to get the facts.

Building Block #5: Accomplishments: The Icing On The Résumé. Once you have communicated to the reader what your responsibilities are in a three-to-five line paragraph, it's time to show how you made a difference. In every consultation I conduct, I find that clients can underestimate what they have done. Sure, they can tell you their responsibilities or the company's annual/quarterly goals, but when it comes to summarizing the level of impact they have made - they sometimes stumble. An accomplishment or an achievement can be identified by those actions you took to overcome a challenge or resolve a problem that your company was facing.

An accomplishment does not always mean you scored $1 million in sales. While more impressive accomplishments relate to revenues and profits, your accomplishments can relate to customers, work productivity, cost reduction, and business expansion as well. Again, if you can quantity or qualify those accomplishments, they add more zest to the final document.

Building Block #6: Compiling Your Core Competencies. In this section of the résumé, you will pull together a list of keywords relevant to your target industry, your direct experience, your leadership capabilities, and your technical/business skills. Incorporating keywords throughout the résumé in addition to the core competency section helps you to "speak" the same language as the hiring company. For assistance with finding the right keywords, visit association websites, talk to contacts in the industry, and research company literature and websites.

Building Block #7: Handling the Dates. Anyone who has more than 20 years' experience has to address the issue of age when seeking new employment. A general (and safe) rule of thumb to follow is to avoid listing any employment or education dates from the 60's and 70's.

When making reference to number of years of experience instead of saying "30 years' experience in government relations" say "20+ years' experience or even 15+ years' experience." You have to be prepared to answer in an interview exactly what the "+" equates to in years.

Building Block #8: The Final Layout. After hours of hard work and information gathering, you begin the final assembly and layout of the résumé. In general the sections should go in this order: Name/Contact Information, Title Header (indicating your job title), Executive Summary or Profile, Core Competency Areas, Career Progression, Education & Training, and Memberships.

Getting prepared to develop a new résumé is never an easy task especially if you haven't done a one in a long time. Don't overwhelm yourself with the entire process - start by working on one section at a time before pulling it all together.

By: Abby M. Locke, Executive Director of Premier Writing Solutions (www.premierwriting.com), a Nationally Certified Resume-Writer and Personal Brand Strategist who helps senior-level professionals and C-level executives achieve personal success with customized, branded executive resumes and career marketing documents.

Article courtesy of the Recruiting Blogswap, a content exchange service sponsored by CollegeRecruiter.com, a leading site for college students looking for internships and recent graduates searching entry-level jobs and other career opportunities.


You can't.

Leadership is a skill that you can only demonstrate in person.

So why do professional and managerial career changers take up valuable resume space trying to convince their reader that they are leaders?

I find that managerial career changers want to define themselves as leaders. Not for their audience, the hiring manager, but for themselves. Since many experienced job changers write egocentric resumes (writing for themselves as the audience, not the hiring manager), this shouldn't come as a surprise.

Hiring managers don't search for leadership on resumes, they search for it in person. They assume leadership by your title, years of experience, and accomplishments. Hiring managers don't believe when a candidate says they are a leader - they've heard that many many times. Hiring managers believe when someone demonstrates accomplishments.

When writing your resume, consider who your audience is. Are you writing it for yourself? Or for the hiring manager?

Article by Phil Rosenberg, President, reCareered & Rainmakers Global and courtesy of reCareered blog.

Most job seekers write their resume for the hiring manager. That's it.

Did you realize that your resume has up to 4 audiences, not just one? Miss what's important to any one of those audiences and you'll be passed over for interviews and offers.

Here's how it works:

Audience #1 - The Resume Database: How can a database be an audience? Simple...large and midsized companies input all resumes into their database, whether sent via email, hand delivered in paper, sent to a company's website, or sent by a recruiter. Your resume gets sent to the database even if you've met the hiring manager, in most cases.

Companies use a resume database to pre-screen and micro-target candidates, to efficiently find resumes with desired skills. Companies also document hiring practices for the EEOC - How can a company discriminate in hiring, when they search ALL resumes, ranking for keywords? This practice drives most candidates nuts, because they don't understand why, or how to effectively deal with resume databases.

Most companies get hundreds or thousands of resumes for each position posted. Keyword searches pre-screen to the top 2-3%, who move to audience #2.

Audience #2 - The HR Clerk: Let's say you used Resume Search Optimization, and your resume earns review by humans. Congratulations! Your resume was ranked in the top 2-3% of resumes submitted!

You've graduated to the HR clerk, who provides a human screening before passing a group of resumes she's approved to the hiring manager. To keep things efficient, this is usually assigned to a low level clerk, who's an HR generalist. This person generally does not have experience in the job that she's reviewing, unless of course the job is in HR.

This HR clerk's job is to manually review resumes for lots of jobs for the company, and they look at hundreds of resumes each day. After a while they all start to look the same.

The HR Clerk is manually looking for a list of keywords, to see where they appear, and to see if the computer picked applicants that the Hiring Manager will want to see.

The average time spent reviewing a resume is 15 seconds, and it's usually reviewed on screen, not printed. The successful job seeker grabs the HR clerk's attention in 15 seconds.

Audience#3 - The Hiring Manager: The hiring manager gets 10-15 resumes from HR, and usually ranks them mentally. Out of 15 resumes, there are usually 2-3 that the hiring manager is really excited to see. Smart hiring managers schedule these first. But even if you are the first interview, and the favored candidate, had great rapport, the hiring manager still has to interview the rest (EEOC, remember?).

Your resume is your first impression to the hiring manager. In addition, your resume can be used to strategically place information that the hiring manager will question - in an interview. Smart job seekers can use this as an opportunity to "bait" the interviewer to ask questions that will demonstrate strengths.

Audience #4 - The Hiring Manager's Boss: The hiring manager's boss, team, or peers will often be asked to review top candidate resumes, even if they have never interviewed the candidate. This is often used as a "gut check" or to gain buy-in from other stakeholders.

Does your resume address all 4 audiences?


Article by Phil Rosenberg, President, reCareered & Rainmakers Global and courtesy of reCareered blog.

15 seconds.


That's how long the average reviewer spends on your resume, before making an interview/no interview decision. That's IF your resume gets beyond a database search.


To put it in perspective, think about what you can do in 15 seconds: Brush your teeth, kiss your significant other, uncork a bottle of wine, pour a beer, load the washing machine, pour coffee, tie your shoes, put on your shirt, tie your tie, or watch Monty Python's Slapping Fish Dance.


So how can you maximize your 15 seconds of fame?


First of all, don't assume that the first person to read your resume is the hiring manager. The hiring manager is busy, and often has someone from HR, or an admin do a visual pre-screening.


Write your resume to grab even a person who's not in your field, and show them you are perfect for the job. Club them over the head with relevant examples, and customize your resume to the specific job. Job seekers who get indignant and feel that the reviewer "should know what this means", end up in the don't interview pile.


Remember your 15 seconds are likely on the screen, so that means your goal is to get the pre-screener to press page down. Put the sizzle above the fold.


Forget big paragraphs about objectives or summaries. You've only got 15 seconds.


So how will you use your 15 seconds...will it be your first 15 seconds with a new company? Or your last?


Article by Phil Rosenberg, President, reCareered & Rainmakers Global and courtesy of reCareered blog.

Friends Don't Plagiarize Friends' Resumes

Earlier this week I received the following email from a client/friend of mine:

Hey Liz,

I hope you're doing well and business is still booming. I wanted to ask your opinion of something. After nine months, it has come to my attention that a former colleague/friend has plagiarized large sections of my resume (the one you helped me with). I offered it to her to use as a template when our employer was downsizing. We have been competing for the same contract jobs and she has recently undercut me for $10 less per hour on a 6-12 contract gig working with client of our former employer. The client assumed we had the same background and experience because we worked for the same employer and because she copied my resume. She's even posted part of it on LinkedIn along with other falsifications.

Any thoughts/ideas about what I can do?

Thanks,
Brad

My response was this:

Dear Brad,

I am so sorry to hear about this. If I could sue this woman for copyright infringement I would. This happened once before when another client did exactly what you did and shared his new resume that I wrote with a co-worker. The way I found out is that the co-worker/idiot who plagiarized his resume had the nerve to contact me to ask if there was "anything I could do to improve his resume" - I told him that he had already copied my work enough and that unless he wanted to pay me for the work he had copied that we had nothing to talk about.

In the future I recommend that you not show co-workers your resume because you really can't trust people not to screw you the way this woman has done. Plus, since you paid for the resume I would think you wouldn't want to give away the contents for free. I always get pissed when I find out that someone has plagiarized my resume work but I don't think there is much I can do about it short of copyrighting every resume I write and that probably wouldn't make my clients happy. This woman will get what's coming to her...what comes around usually goes around.

Regards,

Liz

The point of this post is: keep your resume to yourself unless you don't mind if ambitious co-workers copy your work or, possibly, take credit for your accomplishments. A huge part of the service I provide is helping my clients to target and articulate accomplishments. Do you want your co-worker to see the way you have described your success on a project and say, "Hey, I worked on that project too so I am going to put that great sentence on my resume."? What if, like my friend Brad, you wind up competing with this co-worker for the same job?

There are many ways to support friends and co-workers that don't involve giving away your resume so think defensively and don't share personal information that others could use to boost their careers at the expense of yours.

Article by Liz Handlin and courtesy of Ultimate Resumes



I was working with a client the other day who included lots of subjective descriptive statements and quotes from various people he has worked for on his resume. I tried to stop him, I really did. I explained that subjective statements are usually ignored by recruiters and, therefore, have no place on a resume. Perhaps I didn't make a compelling enough case for him. So lets think this through.

How many people have you met who, for example, think they have "great communication skills"? I have met hundreds of people who would describe themselves as great communicators but few who, in my opinion, actually are. So, it follows that if I am trying to hire someone to fill a job that requires great communication skills I will need more than a sentence on a resume to convince me that you are, in fact, a great communicator and that it's worth my while to invite you in for an interview so I can see for myself. So how do you get that point across? Results-oriented accomplishments/examples are the best way to demonstrate what you can do.

Continue reading "Prove It" »


Resumes are my passion -- I enjoy writing about resume strategies and educating people about how to create a winning resume. But I've found that it's one thing to read an article or a snippet of advice that may or may not apply to you, and quite another to get customized feedback on how to improve your document. I also think that people are faced with very different challenges, and need advice that is tailored for their special situations.

Are you sending your resume out and then listening to the crickets chirp as you get no response?

Do you feel like you might be missing opportunities because your resume doesn't "sell" your credentials?

Are you watching other job seekers get interviews and offers, while you sit by the phone and wait for it to ring?

It's probably not you -- it's probably your resume! Don't let that little old document stand in the way of your success. It's worth taking the time to polish that baby up and see how your job search can change. The best advice I can give is that you should hire a certified professional resume writer to create a resume that works for you. If you're not going to do that (but you should if you can), I'm offering to review your resume for free on on this blog post:

Free Resume Critique from Kim Isaacs, ResumePower.com

I will close this offer in the near future, so if you haven't already done so, feel free to post your resume for a free review. If you decide to submit your resume, please follow the instructions for posting your information anonymously.


By Kim Isaacs and courtesy of ResumePower blog.


You're probably aware that hiring managers cannot ask discriminatory questions during interviews. But this legal protection isn't too useful in preventing discrimination before the interview. If your resume contains personal information unrelated to your job target -- your race, nationality, ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, etc. -- you might fall victim to discrimination, even if you're qualified for the position.

Your resume is a marketing tool designed to get your foot in the door, so every bit of information on it should be selling your value to potential employers. Follow these guidelines to ensure your resume only contains personal information relevant to your job target.

Personal Information That May Be Omitted

  • Affiliations, Volunteer Work, Extracurricular Activities and Hobbies: You may leave out organization names that disclose your cultural background, religious affiliation, sexual orientation and other possible targets of discrimination. List only experiences that help sell you as a candidate for your targeted job.
  • Languages: Listing your native language may reveal your nationality. Include only languages that add to your qualifications for the job. In certain cases, knowing a second language is a plus and should be included on your resume.
  • Personal Information: With the exception of federal or state jobs, which may require this information, and entertainment jobs, for which personal attributes would be considered bona fide qualifications, your date of birth, marital status, nationality, etc., should be omitted.

Personal Information That Should Be on Your Resume

  • Your Name: You can't pick a new name in hopes of getting more interviews unless you have legally changed it.
  • Your Employers: If you worked for the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation, for example, you shouldn't hide your employer's name and misrepresent your work history.
  • Schools Attended: Even if your postsecondary school has a religious affiliation, you should include the school name in your Education section.
  • Work Experience or Training in Foreign Countries: Include all work and educational experiences, as long as they are relatively recent.

Deciding What to Include

  • Think About It: Will revealing the information in question highlight skills that would qualify you for the position? For example, if you're pursuing a management position and held leadership roles with religious organizations, consider including these experiences.
  • Target Your Audience: If you're applying for a position with the American Civil Liberties Union, for instance, your resume may highlight your cultural background, involvement in related organizations and diversity-related accomplishments. If you don't know the organization's culture or the hiring manager's possible biases, omit personal information that will not add to your qualifications.
  • Bear in Mind the Prospective Employer's Geographic Location: In some communities, involvement in civic or religious groups is highly desirable and including your related experience on your resume would enhance your credentials.
  • Evaluate Your Personal Preferences: The this-is-me-take-it-or-leave-it attitude may leave you hungry when looking for a job in a world where discrimination still exists. You don't want to lose a chance at your dream job because of a hiring manager's possible biases. You may or may not report to the person once hired, anyway.

By Kim Isaacs and courtesy of ResumePower blog.

Thinking of lying on your resume? Don't do it. In the most recent example of resume fraud, Robert Irvine, host of Dinner: Impossible, was fired for "embellishing" his resume with claims that he made Princess Diana's wedding cake and worked in the White House kitchens.

Creating an inaccurate picture of your competencies and accomplishments will only hurt you in the end and the punishment will either come in the form of a lost interview opportunity or worse, a lost job and a damaged reputation.

Everyone has success stories that are powerful enough to convey their value-add to an employer. But you need to put in the time to think introspectively about your achievements before you can develop a winning resume. Think about how you have helped the companies you supported make money, save money save time, grow the business, keep the business, bring a new product to market, or complete projects on time and on budget. Use numbers, dollars, and percentages to validate your accomplishments whenever possible.

Authenticity is probably the most important quality you can display to a prospective employer. Without trust, you will never be able to build the rapport necessary to win over the hiring manager and secure the job.

Stay true to yourself, and keep it real. Create a resume and interview strategy that highlights your strengths and does not include any fabrications. Once this is achieved, you can confidently interview and find the position that is best suited for you.

Article Posted By Barbara Safani and courtesy of CareerHub.com. The Career Hub blog connects job seekers with experts in career counseling, resume writing, personal branding and recruiting.


Marketers know that one of the most powerful ways to sell a product or service is to offer first person testimonials. ("I'd just like to tell you that my bathroom has never looked cleaner than it does now that I use new Zap!")

This power comes from the fact that we know the marketers will tell us his product is great. He wants us to buy it! But when an outside authority steps up and says they love it, we pay more attention. We see the strategy used everywhere - quotes from famous authors appear on book sleeves, political candidates line up endorsements from influential people, and Geico uses real customer stories in its TV advertising.

So why aren't you doing the same on your resume?

Continue reading "The Power of Testimonials" »


I just received an e-mail from a reader about Razume, a new online community where users can anonymously post, rate and review resumes. The service provides a fast and easy way to collect valuable feedback from knowledgeable sources like recruiters, and it's free for job seekers. It's discreet too: users are encouraged to hide contact information on resumes so that the boss won't know you're looking.

While I'm not crazy about the name (I thought Razume meant that other people will make fun of your resume, a la the Razzie Awards, but it actually means "they understand" in Serbian), Razume is a great option for those who have created their resume in a vacuum and want to test it out in the real world. I would caution you, though, against taking feedback too literally or seriously. You don't really know who's on the other end of the feedback chain even if the person claims to be a recruiter or career coach. In the world of Web 2.0, everyone has an opinion and doesn't hesitate to share it, but even well-meaning Razume chums might have little credibility or knowledge when it comes to critiquing a resume in your particular field.

I still think that the best person to look at your completed resume and instruct you on how to refine it is someone who is currently working in a similar job, either as a colleague or a hiring manager. If you can find that person on Razume or another social networking site, great. But other networking vehicles like third-party associations and informational interviews can work as well.

Article by Alexandra Levit and courtesy of Water Cooler Wisdom blog.


In a previous blog I discussed the purpose of a resume, which is to get enough of the right attention to land that phone or face-to-face interview. But sometimes a resume isn't enough or...maybe it's too much.

I read and screen resumes for a living. Nothing is more frustrating than trying to fill a job and a getting stuck on a resume four pages long with enough detail to cover more ground than a Presidential candidate covers during an election. Resume reading can be very subjective, but it doesn't have to be. In this blog, I will show you how to remove the subjective aspect of getting your resume noticed and get an instant interview using a method I coined as the "You Want I Have" intro.


Continue reading "How to Gurantee More Interviews!" »

A friend sent this to me...I thought you might enjoy a little comic relief.

http://www.geocities.com/whisperzz.geo/busjokes.html

Some of these are old jokes that have been circulating for a long time. Still, whether you think they're funny or not, you can learn from them.

ALWAYS spell-check and proofread your resume and anything else you send to a prospective employer. For example, in the "Resume blunders" section on that page, spell-check would not catch "ruining" as a misspelled word, even if you meant "running". The same goes for "composer" and "composure".

Also send your resume to yourself via email before sending it to any employers. Sometimes formatting issues can arise that make the document all but unreadable. I received a resume this afternoon that was riddled with page breaks, column breaks, and garbage characters. With all the page breaks, the person's resume ended up being 138 pages long! His contact information didn't show up until page 13! That person's chance of making it through the initial screening process are virtually zero.

Remember that your resume and cover letter are supposed to be a representation of your best work. Carelessness can cost you your dream job before you even have a chance to interview for it.

To your success,

David B. Wright
Author, Get A Job! Your Guide to Making Successful Career Moves


Article by Jim Stroud, "The Job Search Strategist" providing strategies, tips and tutorials on how to find work and advance your career.

I model my resume on the resumes of consultants I work with. But in general a resume should be clear and should give a manager glancing over it a good idea of your technical capabilities. I've seen managers raving about 1 page resumes, but I don't agree that a 1 pager does justice to someone's experience.

Furthermore, there is always a mixed review on cover letters, I don't really pay attention to them since they don't say anything to me. Your resume should spell out what, where, and how. Chances are that if you do not have something in your resume a cover letter will not save you from the trash pile. I have also received quite a few resumes with the cover letter addressed to the wrong company. What do you think happens to that resume?

Font's should be conservative, Arial 10-12pt, single spaced, regular round bullets, no underlines, bold only the job title, company name and date, and the heading can be a little bigger. Make sure your education is clearly marked on your resume. I noticed many Indian consultants do not put the school name; one consultant did not put that she went to IIT, a school comparable to MIT in the US and a huge advantage at certain firms. Place your most current education first, even it is not yet completed, unless you did not complete the degree at all.

Use action words such as develop, lead, recruited, gathered, analyzed, managed. Do not write prose "I was responsible for blab la bla... " boring and slow. You want your resume to be crisp and sharp.

Include your numbers! Especially if you do sales where numbers are important.

Feel free to email me for any questions! Comments are welcome. You can take a look at my resume for an example.

By: Gene Leshinsky, The Boston Technical Recruiter

Article courtesy of the Recruiting Blogswap, a content exchange service sponsored by CollegeRecruiter.com, a leading site for college students looking for internships and recent graduates searching entry-level jobs and other career opportunities.


This is a guest post by Kate Gatto.

Razume is an online community that lets you upload your resume and get it reviewed by a community of users who have also submitted their resumes. This lets you get comments and suggestions for improvements on your resume in an entirely anonymous atmosphere.

Your privacy on Razume is 100% guaranteed. As a matter of fact, it's mandatory. You are forced to block out any identifying information on your resume when you submit them for review. Which is great if you don't want your boss to know that you're getting ready to go back on the market. However, it's lousy if you're hoping to do your search under the radar while making connections.

Razume might want to consider hiring the Resume Hunter.

Continue reading "Free Resume Feedback From Your Peers " »


I loved Norma's post on the Monster Blog about the right way to go after an internal transfer, and I'm glad Norma pointed out the importance of updating your resume to "sell" yourself for an internal move.

If you're trying to move up within your company, check out this article that includes strategies for an internal promotion: Resume Writing Tips for an Internal Promotion

For lateral transfers, I would add that it's important to demonstrate transferable skills that are relevant to the new position. Find out which skills are important in the job you're targeting, and incorporate your matching skills and accomplishments in the resume. It's also important to show that you've successfully met diverse job challenges and that you quickly learn and master new skills.

Best wishes,

Kim Isaacs

P.S.: You guys are keeping me busy with free resume reviews! My schedule is starting to get pretty hectic, so I might have to close this offer in the near future. If you would like a free review of your resume, hop on over to this thread and post your resume in the "Comments" section -- before it's too late. Thank you!

By Kim Isaacs and courtesy of ResumePower blog.


I just interviewed a recruiter who told me that he throws away resumes that contain just one typo or spelling error. No second chances there!

While not all recruiters are that much of a stickler, it makes me wonder how many job seekers are losing opportunities because they didn't proofread their resumes. When you think about it in the context of lost wages or lost opportunities, the importance of proofreading your resume hits home.

I would also say it's an excellent investment to hire a writer if you're not comfortable with your own proofreading skills. You will probably see an enormous ROI.

All the best,

Kim Isaacs

P.S. - I'm thrilled that people are submitting their resumes for a free critique on this thread. If you would like your resume reviewed, submit your resume as a comment on that thread, and I'll review ASAP.

By Kim Isaacs and courtesy of ResumePower blog.

You may well say, "Branding is all well and good, but what do I do when many people share my brand?" It's tricky. For instance, every IT manager and her sister want their brand to be that they view IT as a business partner and really understand the business side of IT. That is what employers are looking for, and many IT job seekers mean it when they say they understand the business side.

But how do you come across as really meaning it? Here's one way. By stories. One resume client had grown up in a family business and absorbed business through his pores. So finding a way to get that information into a cover letter was a good idea. It gives added credibility to his "IT plus business savvy" brand. Also, he wanted to be presented as a business executive with a passion for IT. So, he is distinguishing himself on the passion scale, on the unusual emphasis of business before IT, and on his roots making him who he is. It works for him. The reader is going to "get it" that this is an authentic brand.

So, when competing in a crowded employment market where it's too easy to be a clone of everyone else, think about story, think about emphasis, and think about passion. Give them a reason to remember YOU.

By Jean Cummings and courtesy of CareerHub.com. The Career Hub blog connects job seekers with experts in career counseling, resume writing, personal branding and recruiting.

A resume reveals so much more than your professional experience, education and career goals. It can tell a prospective employer about the kind of leadership you offer. Although many people spend a great deal of time working through various font sizes and deciding whether to do a chronological or functional summary, they often forget to think through how others will respond to the non-factual aspects of their resume.

The editorial issues are certainly important. A prospective employer likes to review a neat, accurate resume which responds to the qualities and strengths he or she would like to see in the next member of the team. Although a less-than-perfect resume, or cover letter, may simply be an oversight, a prospective employer will almost always take a mediocre resume as a signal of lack of interest and professionalism. He or she will probably choose not to invite you in for a face-to-face meeting. On the other hand, a perfectly neat but uninspired resume will not exactly guarantee you a personal interview. In the end, the well-crafted resume is most likely to gain positive attention.

A well-crafted resume will present you as a thoughtful, energetic and creative leader. It will usually point to subtle, often sought after, abilities. A resume can tell a prospective employer whether you are tuned into industry issues, have a positive, "can-do" attitude and whether you operate strategically. A strong resume can frequently be made more appealing by emphasizing successful outcomes and by showing your ability to manage a range of responsibilities, while recognizing others' contribution and accepting occasional disappointments.

You will likely pique a prospective employer's interest by paying attention to less-than-obvious cues others may get from your resume. In addition to the factual details of your education and experience, your resume gives you a wonderful opportunity to tell your professional life story. It can be a forum for describing how and why you have evolved over time. Not all of your professional story is about titles, compensation and the number of direct reports you have managed. A big part of the "story-behind-the-resume" has to do with how you have assessed and given direction to others in complex situations. In the end, an inviting resume tells a prospective employer that he or she will be comfortable working with you primarily because you have strong skills and, as importantly, because you are the kind of person who responds positively to challenges.

For example, does your track record indicate that you have gained your peers' support and outstanding results? How do you describe and respond to ambiguous or challenging situations in the workplace? Do you hide them (seen by many as dishonest), or do you acknowledge them openly? Do you distance tricky situations, letting others take the fall, or are you quick to point to lessons learned and new skills acquired? What about your level of creativity? Does your current resume show that you are able to think "outside-of-the-box" and get buy-in from others? Do you give others credit for the part they have played in your success? Does your resume describe you as a "team-player" or as a high-achieving "loner"? How you project your leadership skills will have a big impact on how other perceive you. A positive presentation will encourage them to meet you in person.

The next time you review your resume, certainly check for typos, spacing and format. Make sure that you have highlighted relevant experience, and that you have used fonts and descriptions to good advantage. Also, pause to ask a few questions. Ask yourself, "What will people think of me when they read this?" "Would I hire someone who handed me this resume?" "What questions might my next boss raise about my ability to lead?" "How will he/she perceive my successes?" "How have I described my challenges?" Ask these kinds of probing questions and get honest feedback from friends and colleagues whom you trust. Listen carefully to their suggestions and responses. This feedback, which goes way beyond the font used in what you report, will move your resume to the next level. As you read your resume critically to identify those entries which may need to be revised, you will discover fresh ways to present your work history. You will also find many opportunities to explain how you have overcome challenges and motivated others to exceed expectations.

When your resume is neat, accurate and reflects your people skills, you stand the best possible chance of being invited in for further discussions. Take the opportunity. Give your resume the upgrade which comes with careful editing and wait for positive things to happen.

By: Karen Alphonse, execSearches.com

Article courtesy of the Recruiting Blogswap, a content exchange service sponsored by CollegeRecruiter.com, a leading site for college students looking for internships and recent graduates searching entry-level jobs and other career opportunities.

Caveat : You need to download Yahoo Toolbar

Yahoo has so many search fields/commands like intitle, inurl, link, site, linkdomain etc and the two most useful for recruiters/sourcers would be intitle and inurl.

What they do?

intitle: To find a specific keyword as part of the indexed titles.
inurl: To find a specific keyword as part of indexed URLs.

Lets start with intitle command and asking Yahoo to search for J2EE and swing with keyword "resume"which brings me more than 16k results.

J2EE Swing.jpg

How about using inurl?
Searching with inurl:resume j2ee swing

inurl-J2EE Swing.jpg

That gives me more than 27k results. Lets stick with inurl for the moment.

By the way did you noticed the "more from this site" button? Click on it and it will show you the home page of the site. Wow you got 6 more resumes there.

Finding the resumes were easy but how about saving or storing them?

Right click on one of the search results and click "Bookmark this link". You can create a separate folder for your resumes and even tag them or add notes.

J2EE Bookmark.jpg

Now this folder goes along with you anywhere you have access to internet even if you don't have Toolbar in that particular computer. Wasn't that easy? Watch this 2 min video showing the entire process mentioned above.

By: Rithesh Nair, www.ResearcherSecrets.com

Article courtesy of the Recruiting Blogswap, a content exchange service sponsored by CollegeRecruiter.com, a leading site for college students looking for internships and recent graduates searching entry-level jobs and other career opportunities.

A few weeks ago, a career changer posted a message on a Resume Tips board and explained that he is using "the world's shortest resume," admittedly created using a Microsoft Word template.

Can you hear me gasping?

His message has been bothering me not only because I know he will have a difficult job search (career changer after 39 years in his field), but also because he's not alone -- many others are trying to achieve major job transitions using inferior job search documents.

If you're apologizing for your resume, you need to improve it!

If you're using a resume that's not the best representation of you, you will pay with a longer and more frustrating job search and possibly lost wages.

Job searching is hard enough for people on a steady career track, and although some can get away with throwing a resume together using a Word template, most require a well-strategized document that markets them effectively. This is even more true for career changers.

Don't have the skills to write a resume that will open doors? Bite the bullet and pay for a professional resume service. There are many talented resume writers available to take on the headache of creating your resume. Whether you take the time to learn how to write a winning resume and do it yourself, or hire a professional resume writer -- please make your resume a priority. You'll enjoy a more successful job search (and I'll rest easier!).


By Kim Isaacs and courtesy of ResumePower blog.

Whether writing your resume, cover letter, or executive leadership profile, having an informal networking lunch with a colleague, or sitting in the boardroom during an interview, it is critical that you speak the language of the position you are seeking and NOT the language of the last job you held. What does that mean?

Continue reading "Speaking the “Right” Language for Your Next Job" »


Provided By: Associated Content, Inc.

When searching for a job, it is important that you have the right tools in hand to get the job done. One of the most important tools is to have a great resume. It is imperative that you have a resume that is free from errors...whether it be spelling or grammatical.

Continue reading "Creating Your Resume" »

Simple Steps Can Give Your Resume the Polish of a Professional

Provided By: Associated Content, Inc.

Resumes have a unique style of writing that's part shorthand, part advertising copy, and part personal essay. Some of the rules of correct English apply but many don't. Here's how to master this specialized communication in a way that gives your resume more power and persuasion.

Be Direct
Don't worry about being fancy or "businesslike" in your resume.

Continue reading "Five Ways to Improve the Writing in Your Resume" »

An article this week in the Net-Temps Crossroads e-newsletter discusses words to avoid in online resumes, such as personal pronouns (these should be avoided in all versions of your resume), negative words (again, should be avoided in all versions), and big-sounding words that will make you sound stilted or even stupid, and possibly end up backfiring in an interview when it is clear you do not really know what they mean.

The article also advises avoiding use of industry acronyms, a point on which I disagree. Certainly you will want to spell out any acronym at least once on its first usage, but particularly for those in technical professions, acronyms can be the very thing that a recruiter or hiring manager will search for in a resume database. On the other hand, liberal sprinkling of internal acronyms specific to a particular company does make a resume harder to read and as the author says, "start to look like secret code."

The much-discussed topic of keywords is something you will want to understand before posting your resume online or e-mailing it in response to a posting. As pointed out in a recent Resume Writer's Digest article, "Just as job-seeking clients use keywords to narrow down the range of possibilities in their job search, hiring managers and recruiters also use keywords to identify and select candidates that meet their requirements." Once your resume disappears into one of these huge databases, the only way that it will emerge is by generating a "hit" on a keyword search. For this reason, you'll want to make sure that your resume includes abilities, functional skills, academic degrees and certifications, technical terms, business processes, industries, etc. that are relevant to the types of positions that interest you.

Keyword density is another factor to be aware of. Some of the newer automated database search systems apply sophisticated tools and algorithms to rank-order results based on how often they appear in the document. But don't load up your resume with bogus repetition of your keywords, or today's systems will either toss your resume out or put it at the bottom of the list. Do be sure that your keywords appear prominently in context within your profile or summary as well as within the body of your work experience section.

A consideration when e-mailing your resume is making sure that spam filters to do not screen out your document inadvertently. If your email system has a spam filter, email the resume to yourself and see if it makes it through. Try sending it to friends and associates with different spam filtering software. An article on CareerJournal.com as early as 2004 indicated that losing resumes in spam filters was becoming a growing problem, and it certainly has not gone away. An employment recruiter quoted in the article said that a review of her spam filter had found among 756 ads and other spam 8 resumes, all set for automatic deletion. "The mere presence of words such as "free," "expand," "trial," "mortgage," or exclamation points" could trigger a spam filter. Even seemingly innocuous words or phrases taken out of context can run afoul of a spam filter. One man received an automated response that said his resume had been deleted because it contained a specific obscenity, which the response detailed. Mr. Hunter changed "magna cum laude" to "with high honors," and it sailed through just fine. This only left him wondering how many times his resume had gone straight to the cyber space "circular file."

On a related note, be sure to check your own spam filter. One gentleman quoted in the CareerJournal.com article said that he was just about to delete an e-mail in his spam folder that was from a recruiter at a major high-technology company, and "almost fainted" when he saw the company line and signature. He very nearly missed the opportunity for an interview with that company.

By Laurie Smith and courtesy of CareerHub.com. The Career Hub blog connects job seekers with experts in career counseling, resume writing, personal branding and recruiting.

Michael asks, "I recently started a job that I absolutely hate. I don't want employers to think I'm job-hopping, so I'm thinking of leaving the job off my resume. Is this the right thing to do?

Continue reading "Resume Writing Tip: List Short-Term Job? " »

Stand out from the crowd, even if your career has taken an unwanted turn!

Are you unhappy in your current job and wishing you can return to a former career? Chances are, you can!

You might feel like you’ve been out of your field for so long, you wouldn’t be desirable. But there are resume and cover letter strategies you can use to make a seamless transition back to the career you loved.

Follow these tips, and please post a comment if you have other strategies that have worked for you:

Continue reading "Resume Writing Tip: Return to a Former Career " »

Another career change resume came across my desk today, and the job seeker used a functional format…as usual.

Career changers seem to be lured in by the potential benefits of a functional resume, which focuses on relevant skills and downplays employment history. The attraction makes perfect sense, but the problem is that employers often don’t like functional resumes. In fact, this style has been used for so long to hide undesirable aspects of a person’s work history (job-hopping, gaps, career change, incarceration?), that hiring managers may assume there’s a problem as soon as they see a functional resume.

Not a good way to make a positive first impression: “What’s the matter with this guy?”

Continue reading "Career Changers: Avoid Functional Resumes " »

If you’re considering international employment opportunities, then you MUST know the following:

Continue reading "Executive Resume Strategies for Global Employment Opportunities" »


Provided By: Associated Content, Inc.

Cover letters can be a little tricky. They can also stress job seekers out.

Most use the second paragraph in their cover letters to sum up their resumes. As you'll see, this is a mistake. There are better ways to write the second paragraph.

WARNING: You may think you need to be a phonics or grammar geek to get this right.

Continue reading "Cover Letters: The Second Paragraph" »


Provided By: Associated Content, Inc.

Cover letters are one of the biggest job-seeking stress producers. What do I put in it? How do I start? How long should it be?

Relax!

Here's an easy formula for the first paragraph: Mention the job title and requisition number (if applicable), how you heard about the position (or who referred you), and state your belief that your skills set seems to fit well with the stated job description.

Continue reading "Cover Letters: The First Paragraph" »


Provided By: Associated Content, Inc.

Once you've written a polished resume that's sure to impress potential employers, you should focus on your cover letter. Too many people underestimate the importance of this vital component to their resume.

Continue reading "Cover Letters: Why They're Important and How to Use Yours to Make an Impression" »


Provided By: Associated Content, Inc.

Choosing a resume format should not be taken lightly, and you should consider the best way to showcase your job history, employment and skills. How you're potential employers view your resume will have a high impact on whether or not you get the job, and if you use a format that does not complement your experience, you won't enjoy optimum results.

Continue reading "How to Choose a Resume Format" »

I received an email from Ron today: “Kim, I converted my resume to plain text and it looks terrible! Is there any way I can keep some of the formatting from my MS Word resume, like bold and bullet points?”

Continue reading "Resume Writing Tip: Got The ASCII Resume Blues?" »

Business is learning it. Apple's done it. Ikea and Target have ridden this horse all the way to the bank. What is it? Design. Not as accessory to the brand but integral to it. Roger Martin writes in Fast Company, "Design, in short, is becoming an ever more important engine of corporate profit: It's no longer enough simply to outperform the competition; to thrive in a world of ceaseless and rapid change, businesspeople have to outimagine the competition as well. They must begin to think--to become--more like designers."

What does this signify for job seekers writing their resumes? That it's a good idea to pay attention, not just to content, but to how you get your message across visually. Using a Word template? Hiring authorities have seen thousands of them. Using a traditional style of resume may just fail to capture attention. If you are seeking a $100K+ job, do you think an ordinary design is going to help? Make no mistake, if your resume design looks cheesy, you are not apt to be taken as seriously as someone whose resume conveys, through its design and content, that the person has a sought-after value proposition.

Continue reading "Want Your Resume to Look Standard? Think Again" »

Do you want to make your resume more compelling? Add testimonials.

Why?

Continue reading "Power Up Your Resume: Add Testimonials " »

1. Write to the future. Resume writing is not about rehashing your past history and listing what you’ve done and where. Rather, resume writing is about writing to the future, to the job that you want or the career path that you wish to pursue. This is a critical consideration throughout every phase of writing your resume and conducting your job search. Clearly define your objectives, identify the skills and qualifications you’ve gained through your past experience that support your current goals, and then focus your entire search on these elements. Don’t position yourself as someone who wants to be a sales professional; rather, position yourself as someone who is a well-qualified sales professional with excellent skills in presentations, negotiations, closings, incentive planning and more. (If you’ve worked as a military recruiter, you’ve certainly done all of these things and more!)

Continue reading "Best Practices in Resume Writing For Veterans" »

Reprinted courtesy of TheCareerNews.com

BROOKLYN, NY -- A well-written resume provides an excellent starting point for the interviewer to work from as they follow your achievements and successes through your resume. Your resume is designed to create a desire on the interviewers behalf to get to know you. They have seen what you can do but they want to hear the details and listen to you speak about your career and achievements.

Continue reading "Well-Written Resumes: Enhance Your Career Profile " »


Provided By: Associated Content, Inc.

At the moment, there is a number of various resume making programs in the software market, especially on the internet. A user can choose between two main types of such software: online applications and desktop tools.

Continue reading "Online Resume Writing Software Vs. Desktop Resume Creating Tools. What Should You Choose?" »

First impressions are everything. Does yours resume represent you as the consummate professional you are?

Before you send it off, take a few moments to put it through the professional’s “Resume Checklist”. The extra few minutes spent here could make all the difference to your resume’s impact and your subsequent job search success.

Continue reading "How can I tell if my resume rates?" »

Reprinted courtesy of TheCareerNews.com

DENVER, CO -- It's your resume - therefore it is your story, right? It may be your resume and your story, but to attract an employer's interest you must tell it from an employer's perspective. Put yourself in the role of the hiring manager for the position you seek before you start writing your resume.

Continue reading "Think like an employer when writing your resume" »


Provided By: Associated Content, Inc.

Need Help Writing Your Resume?

As a freelance writer, I’ve helped numerous individuals in all types of fields prepare successful and dynamic resumes. When you need help writing your resume, it’s important to have some good sources at your fingertips.

Continue reading "Help Writing Your Resume" »

WHAT ARE KEY WORDS?

"My expertise is in process mapping, SAP technology, productivity improvement, operations redesign, team leadership, and supply chain management. Who am I?" If you guessed that I’m the Vice President of Operations (or something similar), you’re right! Those few words above communicated a very specific message about "who am I." That is precisely what key words are all about. Ten years ago, no one had even heard of key words, yet they’re nothing new. Previously known as buzz words, key words are words that are specific to a particular industry or profession and have two vital purposes in your job search:

Continue reading "Key Words That Work" »

You knew about website optimisation but did you know that resumes are now being scrutinised by similar technologies?

Continue reading "What is Resume Optimisation?" »

I held out for a long time before signing up for TiVo / Digital Video Recording (DVR), but now I don’t think I can live without it. I save a lot of time fast-forwarding through commercials and stupid parts of TV shows.

The ability to skip segments that don’t interest me is similar to a hiring manager’s ability to skip resume sections — or bypass a resume completely. Here are a six tips to avoid this fate:

Continue reading "Resume Writing Tip: Don’t Let Your Resume Get Skipped " »


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If you ever had to sift through a stack of resumes for potential candidates seeking a position you needed to fill yesterday, you've probably winced at cliché resume objectives like the following: "Seeking a challenging career with a progressive organization which will utilize my skills, abilities and education and allow for my professional growth within the company."

Although well written, it tells a busy recruiter nothing about you, your skills, specific goals or your potential value to the organization.

Continue reading "Writing a Bullseye Resume Begins with a Targeted Resume Objective!" »


Provided By: Associated Content, Inc.

During the past six months, a new practice adopted by many companies when considering college students and recent college graduates for jobs and internships has received increasing press coverage: screening of applicant profiles on popular social networking sites like Myspace, Facebook, and Friendster.

So for all of the members of the x and y generations recently initiated into the job market or who soon will be, I have a question: have you ever "Googled" yourself to see what might come up?

Continue reading "Your Resume: It May Include More Than You Intend to Submit" »

Reprinted courtesy of TheCareerNews.com

LONG ISLAND, NY -- Fluff. That is what most job seekers believe keywords are on a resume - something that takes up white space. The reality is, however, that keywords are an integral part of the resume process for the following reasons:

1) Most resumes today aren't initially read by human eyes, but rather by a scanning system. This is how this works: a clerk at the hiring organization scans resumes into a computer. When a position becomes available, a Human Resources Representative goes into the computer system and punches in the appropriate keywords. The resumes that are retrieved by the computer dictate who is called in for interviews. This means that you can conceivably qualify for a position but your resume may never be reviewed because it lacked the right keywords.

2) When searching online job boards, decision-makers search for prime candidates using keywords. To help you visualize how the process works, consider how you search on the Internet. You search for what you are looking for using a specific keyword, and the websites that most closely match your specific requirements will appear on the first page. It's no different when hiring managers search for qualified candidates on online job boards.

Article by Linda Mitias, CareerStrides.com, and reprinted from TheCareerNews.com. Get the latest breaking News, Tips and Tools for your job search, Free!

Bulleted lists are often used on resumes to highlight specific talking points and areas of achievement. But too frequently bullets are misused and they end up diminishing the impact of the talking points rather than enhancing them. Here are a few common mistakes candidates make when using bullet points on their resume.

Continue reading "Sudden Death From Too Many Resume Bullets" »

Create POWERFUL Resumes, Cover Letters, Leadership Profiles, Career Biographies, Executive Branding Statements & More

Most professional writers share a common love for language - for words, their meanings, their patterns and their uses. I can remember studying Latin two hours each day in 10th grade (I won't tell you what year that was!) and then taking a Greek and Latin word roots class in college. Fun, very informative and an easy A! Since those days, I find myself reading business dictionaries, searching out new words, experimenting with the alternative use of existing words and so much more. Yes, I'm a word addict and proud of it!

One of my favorite word categories is verbs. I simply love them! Verbs give us power - power to write documents that are well-positioned and that communicate a vast amount of information with just the use of a simple verb or two. A recently coined new phrase, "key verb," is an excellent description of how these verbs can be used to your advantage when writing resumes, cover letters, branding statements, leadership profiles and other job-search communications.

Now, let's explore the use and meaning of some of my favorite verbs.

Continue reading "Writing With The "RIGHT" Words" »

We received a call this morning from someone looking for a sample resume for a recreational coordinator. She was aggravated because she searched all of our resume samples and couldn't find one for her career. Our client services director told her that the samples are meant to illustrate our work and shouldn't be copied. She responded with, "I see, so if I were a technology or an admin person I would have a sample to copy." She thought it was unfair that her field wasn't represented in our samples gallery.

I'm writing about this not because I'm surprised by her attitude, but because I'm not surprised at all. We frequently get calls and emails asking for free samples. If you are looking for free resume samples on the internet or have a document adapted from a sample you found online, here are a few problems:

Continue reading "Are Resume Samples Really Free? " »

With more than 35 million resumes posted online how can you get your resume to the top of the virtual pile? With today's employment world made up of online automated searches, keywords and resume scanning, job seekers have an opportunity and a challenge. The competition is overwhelming, but working smart to impress employers and meet them where they're searching is critical. Following are ten tips for getting your resumes noticed online:

Continue reading "10 Tips for Getting Your Resume Recognized On-line" »

If you've upgraded to Word 2007, the program will automatically save your file in .docx format. However, many employers have not yet upgraded their systems and won't be able to open .docx files unless they've installed a compatibility pack (or use a free file conversion program such as Zamzar).

It's not worth taking the chance that your resume will be skipped because of the extra trouble converting the file. Instead, save as a regular .doc or .rtf file before sending to hiring managers.

By Kim Isaacs and courtesy of ResumePower blog.

THE CREATIVE WRITING TEST Strategies for Showcasing Your Personal Brand

Create a professional identity

A professional identity is not the same as a job title. The professional identify conveys your personal brand and the scope of your responsibilities through a few targeted words. When placed in bold near the top of your resume, your identity calls attention to your candidacy much the same way that a catchy headline on the front page of a newspaper grabs the attention of the reader.

Offer a mission statement or personal quote

Continue reading "Does Your Resume Pass the Hiring Manager's 30 Second Test (Part 2)" »