There are clear differences between a good resume and a
great resume.
. A good resume is a glorified
application. This type of resume explains to the hiring
manager the following information in this order: Dates of
employment, companies, and titles held, and job functions.
It concludes with when and where you received your education.
It is good because the hiring manager can get a clear summation
of your past experience and education.
. A great resume is a marketing brochure.
This resume highlights the scope and depth of your experience.
It describes the expertise you have developed through your
career that relates to your future employer’s needs.
A great resume communicates a compelling reason for the
prospective to need and want your services.
Good resumes identify where you went to school, the jobs
you have had, and your responsibility in those jobs. Great
resumes extract the relevant accomplishments from your past
experiences and highlight them. This prompts the interviewer
to ask about them with the future in mind.
Good resumes also pave the way for great interviews. A well-crafted
resume will prompt the interviewer to target specific areas
that are most relevant to the open position. A resume that
lists everything you have ever done requires you to be prepared
to talk about all these things in an interview. It is difficult
to prepare for such an extensive interview and can lead
the interview astray.
Create a Great Resume
Once you have adopted a future-focused orientation, you
are ready to create your resume. The presentation of your
information, the layout, and the language you use to communicate
value are extremely important. There are only two things
you can be sure a hiring manger will do when reviewing your
resume: (1) Hiring managers will
begin reviewing a resume by starting at the top, and they
will read the lines from left to right. (2)
Their first impression will have the greatest impact and
will influence how they perceive you. It creates the lens
through which all other information is filtered.
Based on these principles, it is essential that most relevant,
important information be presented at the top along the
left side of your resume. The least important information
should be at the bottom and along the right side.
Resume Format
In order to transform your resume from a good resume to
a great resume, concentrate on using your layout and language
most effectively. Here’s how.
Headings
The main heading is where you provide contact information
for the hiring managers. Your main heading lets them know
who you are and where you ca be reached. This section should
be designed like a professional letterhead. Resumes are
formal documents, so you should not use abbreviations here.
Example:
Fran C. Smith
1153 Terry Avenue – Atlanta, Georgia 30306 –
francsmith@aol.com–
404-555-1234
The main heading highlights your name and provides the contact
information on one line, followed by a divider line. This
format saves space that can be dedicated to communicating
more of your strengths. Notice that it is not necessary
to label the phone number or e-mail address; these items
are understood. Be as concise as possible.
Use the same heading on your references page, cover letters,
and thank-you letters. By creating a professional-looking
letterhead, you offer a consistent image to the hiring manager.
It also allows the hiring manager to quickly access your
contact information on every document.
Section headings are titles you assign to different areas
of your resume. For example, your employment section will
have one heading. Your education and community activities
sections will have their own headings.
Section headings are extremely important. A section name
influences how the hiring manager perceives the information
within the heading. If you use your first section heading,
you communicate your needs to the hiring manager. You are
saying to the hiring manager: “My objective is to
get a job”.
If your first section is a summary of qualifications, your
section heading communicates the value you offer the hiring
manager. You focus the reader on the ways you will meet
the company’s needs. This heading also tells the hiring
manager you are indeed “qualified” for the position.
You summarize the qualifications that will be explained
in details in the remainder of the resume.
A summary of qualifications should be confined to three
high-impact statements.
. The first statement should highlight
your years of experience in the profession and industry.
. The second statement should identify
the areas of expertise you want to emphasize.
. The third statement should identify
personal attributes that are important to the role and company.
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Example:
Summary of Qualifications
Offers more than 10 years of progressive advancement in the
manufacturing industry, serving as an operations executive.
Demonstrates a proven record of success in leading as many
as 250 associates, streamlining business processes, and managing
multiple projects delivered on time and within budget. Possesses
exceptional communication skills and the ability to develop
high-performance teams.
While “Summary of Qualifications” is the best
section heading to begin your resume, there are several exceptions
to the rule. If you fall into one of these exceptions, then
you need to consider beginning your resume with an objective
statement.
Exception 1:
Clarity.
If you are making a transition by applying for a position
that diverges from your past experience, an objective statement
is needed, since your skills are not an obvious or solid match
for the position. Use the objective statement to clarify your
interest in the position and show that your skills are transferable.
Exception2:
Intent.
If you do not use a cover letter to introduce your purpose
in sending the resume, an objective statement is appropriate.
The objective statement communicates the purpose of your resume.
In this circumstance, the objective should be very direct
and specific to the prospective company and position.
Additional section headings that are useful in constructing
a resume that communicates value to a hiring manager include:
. Areas of Expertise
. Career Highlights
. Professional Achievements
. Key Accomplishments
These sections follow your summary of qualifications. They
emphasize specific strengths you have developed throughout
your career. These sections provide an opportunity to bring
a special attention to experiences that are most relevant
to the hiring manager, regardless of when and where they occurred.
For example, if you want to convey that your experience is
a key asset even though your leadership experience has been
in a different industry, you can emphasize this in a leadership
experience section. This way, the hiring manager focuses on
your leadership qualifications first before reading about
it later in the context of the industry.
Be careful not to give too much information in this section.
For example, if you create areas of expertise section, ideally
confine your expertise to four areas and not more than six
areas. Listing too many areas dilutes the depth of expertise.
The same holds true for accomplishments and achievements.
Focus the hiring manager’s attention on your most important
accomplishments by creating three strong statements.
Select a high-impact section heading for your employment section.
Do not use “Employment History” or “Work
Experience”. These headings are vague and generic, the
terms
employment and
work define virtually
every type of job available, form soda jerk or paperboy to
corporate CEO or marketing director.
Instead, create a compelling section heading that optimizes
your experience. The following section headings are appropriate
for professional resumes. They communicate a career path,
versus a series of jobs.
. Career Progression
. Career Advancement
. Professional Experience
Now you are ready to arrange the most important information
at the top left page and least important information at the
bottom right. Start with what is most compelling to the hiring
manager. Begin with your professional title or your industry
and company name. Then list location and your dates of employment
to the right.
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Example:
| Marketing Director |
|
| XYZ Industries, Atlanta, Georgia |
June 1992-June 2002 |
Resume Length
There are differing opinions regarding the appropriate length
of a resume. The general rule regarding resume length is:
. One page for less than 10 years of
professional experience
. Two pages for more than 10 years
professional experience
However, this rule can vary depending on your circumstances.
For example, say you have more than 20 years of professional
experience. If the last 10 years are the most relevant substantial,
then a one-page resume that highlights this experience may
be more appropriate.
This conversation between an author and his editor illustrates
why you should pay attention to your resume length.
Editor: I like your book except
for the ending.
Author: What’s wrong
with the ending?
Editor: It should be closer
to the beginning.
More is not better in resume writing. Your objective is to
keep the hiring manager’s attention focused on your
skills that add immediate value to the company. If you describe
every experience and function of your entire career, you risk
diverting the focus away from parts of your resume that are
most important.
Additionally, if you put every single experience on your resume,
you have to be prepared to discuss every single experience
in the interview. As a result, your interview will be more
difficult to prepare for and you run the risk of being asked
about experiences that are not relevant to the position. You
may be perceived as “not a good fit” because,
based on your resume, the hiring manager asked about the wrong
skill, rather than what was needed for that particular position.
Resume Content
Transform your resume from a description of job functions
to a series of accomplishment statements that are of interest
to the hiring manager. To do this, read your job function
statements and ask yourself:
. What was the purpose of this responsibility/project/task?
. How was this job function relevant
to the company?
. Did this function save time, save
money, increase revenue, improve a process/policy/infrastructure?
The answers to these questions are typically the most important
elements of the resume to the hiring manager and need to be
communicated clearly.
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