Help With Writing a Resume

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You're hired.

Writing a resume is often a daunting task. That said, it is crucial when the goal is to obtain employment. While a great resume won't necessarily get the job, a poor one stops you dead in your tracks. Understand the process from a hiring manager's point of view, put in some work upfront, and you will set yourself apart from the herd and take that first step toward the offer letter.

  1. General Guidelines

    • 1. Keep in mind that a hiring manager will spend less than 20 seconds scanning your resume.

      2. Don't think in terms of "This is what I've done." Write from the perspective of "This is how I will bring value to your company."

      Following those two general principles and these specific tips will guarantee you a killer resume.

    Skip the Objective

    • Objectives on a resume are worthless. Your objective is to get the job. That's why you sent your resume. Anything written here is fluff, and fluff hurts. Leave out anything that doesn't immediately speak to your ability to provide value in that specific role.

    Provide a Bullet-Point Summary

    • Place this at the top of the first page, centered, underneath your contact information. Remember, you have less than 20 seconds to get the reader to see your value, and you are competing against a stack of hundreds of other resumes. Use this section to highlight your career. Great achievements, quantifiable results, awards, etc. Keep it short, no more than a third of the page. You will go into more detail in the next section.

    Use Keywords and Tailor Your Resume to the Job Description

    • Point of note here: Be honest. Period. Dishonesty is a waste of time for everyone. With that out of the way, it is absolutely essential to understand the job description and requirements, and show that your experience matches up. If this is too difficult, you are applying for the wrong position. Notice key words in the description and use them appropriately in your resume. This allows resume parsing technology to grab your resume from the stack when applying online.

      A good tip here is to keep a master, functional resume that lists your entire work history in great detail. When applying for a specific position, take the relevant parts from the master, and whittle it down to display results specific to the job.

    Provide Quantifiable Results

    • A typical resume displays the job-seeker's past responsibilities. A killer resume displays the job-seeker's past results. This is easy for sales professionals, slightly more difficult for others. However, results are always quantifiable and you need to be able to articulate yours.

    End with Education

    • Unless you've just graduated from college and have no work experience, save this section for last. Hiring managers want to see relevant experience first and education is always secondary. Forget the GPA, too. Too much can be read into your GPA, good or bad, and it is a question you can answer in the interview. Got a 3.4? Why didn't you study more? Got a 4.0? You must not have had a life.

    Summary

    • The big picture here is that a killer resume is a powerful sales tool and first foot in the door. Managers are overwhelmed by resumes. Many are bad, some are good, few are killer. Results speak for themselves, and putting yours in an easy-to-read format will pay dividends.

    Additional Tips

    • Use a cover letter as an extra sales tool. (Most people don't bother to send a cover letter. Set yourself apart).

      Keep the format clean and simple. Results should stand out, not fonts, templates, colored paper or pictures.

      Have someone proofread for you. Don't let spelling or grammar mistakes overshadow solid experience.

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