Effective
Recruiting
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Employers
Job Hunters
Book
Table of Contents
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ERS
11268 Centennial Dr.
Ste. 201
Whitmore Lake, MI 48189
810.231.2863
fax 231.2328
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Create a Powerful
Resume
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Your resume is the marketing tool to sell a product
and you are the product.
A resume needs to provide reasons a company should hire you.
A powerful resume will pique a hiring companys interest in you and compel the
firm to request an interview. It also shows articulation, maturity, judgment, writing
style, and motivation.
In your resumes:
- State your accomplishments and achievements.
- Provide information on your background .
- Show how you have or can affect the bottom line.
- Reveal specific resources you bring to a company.
- Demonstrate vividly how the company will benefit by hiring you.
You must show you are an achiever.
Resumes contains these
parts in this order:
Personal contact information (top of the resume)
Name - full name; place nickname in paranthese
Addresses - campus and home
(one address
place al information in the center of the page)
Phone, fax, pager, cellular numbers - campus and
home
Email
Web address.
Objective or positioning
statement
State the specific occupation, location, industry you are seek - "Seeking
an environmental corporate law position in California" State only
attributes that apply.
Tailor your statement to fit the company to which you are sending the resume.
Avoid general, non-specific statements that could apply to any position - "Seeking a position to utilize my skills"
Refrain from statements longer than two lines
Resumes with strong positioning statements always make it
into a good pile".
Education (If you have no
substantial work experience, list your education first.)
List each school and its location in reverse date
order
Indicate your degree, the month and year of your graduation
Prior to graduation use phrase:
"Bachelor of Science Expected graduation December
2001"
(Spell out all degrees
Bachelor, Master or Doctorate)
Include your major, minor and/or overall grades
State your grade with your major and/or minor -
"Biology major 3.6/4.0; French minor 3.2/40"
Indicate academic accomplishments
Include coursework only if it is occupation related
Include projects, papers or activities that relate to a specific job
List exchange programs or foreign study programs
List scholarships, awards or other academic related honors
Present academic or campus clubs and organizations
State titles and duties including accomplishments;
"President
of debate team" shows ability to conduct a powerful dialogue to sway an
argument
Indicate athletic activities with awards and achievements
Refrain from listing high school information unless
spectacular and related to an occupation. Included this information in an
"Additional" section not in the college education section
Work Experience
List all work experience in reverse date order
Place date under major heading (Work Experience); if appropriate indicate internship,
part-time or co-op next to the date.
Indicate company name and location on the same line to the right of the date followed by
job title on second line
Select duties that illustrates a skill you want to showcase with a quantifiable
accomplishment . "Averaged $20K per sales call ."
Quantify each statement/bullet with a figure, if possible, to provide a clear picture of
your accomplishments.
Describe your duties in real terms, not in language found in
job descriptions. e.g. "Weekly catalogued $20K worth inventory and filled 100+
purchase orders." not "Responsible for inventory."
Use action verbs to describe what you accomplishments and how you affected the company's
revenue. Show that you made a difference.
Demonstrate your increased responsibilities
Combine similar jobs into one bullet in an "Additional" section or eliminate
if it doesnt provide important supplemental hiring data.
Additional
- Present community, organization, affiliation, or athletic activities that show teamwork
or achievement.
- State special interests, skills or abilities, such as foreing language proficiency,
computer skills, reader to the blind, or toastmaster
- Include certification, license, training, or conference participation that gives you a
boarder skill base.
- Other terms may be used in place of "Additional" based on presented
information -"Skills", "Activities".
What Recruiters Look For
Recruiters spend a maximum of 30 seconds reviewing a
resume. Make your resume easy to read or skim. Prepare a hard copy resume for
surface mailings or interviewing. Submit an electronic resume when a text or scannable
resume is requested or when faxing a resume.
HARD COPY RESUME
Prepare your resume with attention to visual
presentation to attract the reader and use action verbs to keep the reader focused on the
attributes you want to showcase. Make resumes easy to read by aligning titles and
dates, using lines with bullets that are not longer than two lines. The reader's eyes are
able to quickly follow a logical sequence of events.
Use powerful action verbs refrain from repeat
usage of same verb.
Create a one-page resume with one inch margins never
less than .5". Use enough white space for contrast and easy reading.
Refrain from writing a resume in paragraph format, it forces
the recruiter to read each word.
Use easy reading fonts and size; e.g. Arial, Halvetica that
is at least 10 point font.
Refrain from fancy text, borders, graphics or colors.
Use smooth textured paper in shades of beige, ivory, cream,
light blue or gray.
Hold up the resume to see how it looks is it visually
balanced, pleasing to the eye?
ELECTRONIC RESUME
Text that is easily transferred into a database by a
scanner is the most important element of an electronic resume concentrate on key
words. Current scanners are more sophisticated in picking up various graphics or fonts,
but they still have limitations and some companies haven't upgraded this technology.
Therefore, to make sure your important words are captured:
- Refrain from any type of graphics, borders, fancy text, all capitalized, italicized,
bolded or unlined words.
- Avoid unusual placement of information e.g. contact information at the bottom of
a page or column presentation of information.
- Use simple fonts and 10 to 12 point font.
- Copy a resume on plain white paper (no water marks) when submitting via fax.
- Add a key word section that includes any pertinent words that are not incorporated
elsewhere on the resume. Include synonyms for the key words to ensure proper capture.
- Replace the key word section with a summary showcasing your experiences and skills, if
this is more appropriate.
Objective or
Positioning Statements.
Popular beliefs may indicate to omit an objective statement. Objective statement allows
readers to focus on what you want. Resumes not containing statements forces readers to
guess what you want to do.
Incorporate targeted field of interest, area of expertise orf unique ability.
Personal Data
- Refrain from including personal information e.g. birth date, marital or health
information or attaching a photograph.
- Include work status, if non-U.S. citizen.
References
- Refrain from including the statement "References available on request". Hiring
companies always ask for references dont waste value resume real estate with
a useless statement.
Relocation
- Indicate mobility on the resume if trying to move from a "home" location with
"Able to relocate" in your additional section and show different work locations
to prove the desire to move.
Personal Pronouns
- Avoid pronouns -- resumes never contain personal pronouns.
Length
- Avoid more than one page unless significant work experience, consolidate to one
page for any entry-level position.
- If necessary, second page must contain name, phone number and page 2 as the header.
Content
- Research occupations and/or companies to which applying.
- Review job descriptions for your skills and abilities to incorporate into resume.
- Present data that is impressive to organizations based on your company research.
- Call attention to skills or abilities that a company needs.
- Produce an occupation-focused resume. If necessary create a resume for each occupation.
- Avoid using jargon, acronyms and abbreviations, unless standard within industry
interviewing.
- Use presence tenses past tense only on past experiences.
- Position bullet points in most significant order ones with most impact.
- Read each bullet to determine conveyed added value, if not remove.
- Date gaps provide some explanation within the resume
Skills/Abilities
- Computer abilities are expected of todays graduates wordprocessing,
spreadsheet and database know-how is necessary.
- Languages are more important to international companies
be able to conduct business in another language, speaking is more important.
The Bs of a Resume
Be Boastful
Present your accomplishments this is not
the time to be timid or reluctant to take credit for an activity.
Be Clear Create statements that explain complex ideas clearly.
Be Concise
Use as few words as possible to present each bullet.
Be Conscientious Make sure no typos, misspellings, or
use of poor grammar.
Be Factual
State only accurate information; this is not the time
to embellish. |
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