Thursday, July 1, 2010

Sample Resume

A sample resume. These are the main parts of a resume that should always be included. Style and additional sections are up to individual preferences, but a resume should never be more than two pages long.

Name

Address. email. phone.

Objective

Skills

Experience
Company Name, location. Dates employed.
Duties, responsibilities, and accomplishments.
(salary optional)

Education
Name of college, major. (GPA optional). Date graduated.
relevant courses and accomplishments.


Clubs and Organizations (if applicable)

Monday, June 28, 2010

Common Resume Mistakes

As a recruiter, reviewing hundreds of resumes a week, patterns begin to emerge, and can get extremely annoying. The following are some resume mistakes that I come across much too often.

  • No proofreading - Far too many people don't edit their resumes, and even those that do cannot catch every mistake. Every good writer has someone else review their writing, and a resume is no different. After writing, reviewing, and editing, there are bound to be mistakes that are not caught. Having someone else, who has good writing skills, edit your resume is a necessity because they can catch mistakes that you miss. Its a good idea to have more than one person review your resume after you have edited it yourself.
  • Not deleting unused parts of templates - There are many templates available on all kinds of word processors. They are a great place to start a resume and organize it. However, if the unused parts of the template aren't deleted and "[insert company name here]" is on the resume when submitted it for a job, the recruiter will not consider it, and this happens frequently. This would also be taken care of if the resume was proofread.
  • Unnecessary information - There is often unnecessary information included on resumes, many times this information also identifies a protected class such as age, ethnicity, or gender. This information is not supposed to even enter a recruiters mind due to EEO laws. This information is unprofessional to use and such identifying information should not be included. Pictures should also not be included since they show the same information, and are very unprofessional, even if the picture is professionally done. Sensitive information such as social security numbers, drivers license numbers, and date of birth, should NEVER be put on a resume, simply for the safety and security of your own identity; not to mention including it shows the recruiter that your dumb.

Friday, April 16, 2010

Resume Dos and Don'ts

Working as a recruiter I review dozens of resumes every day, and it amazes me how many simple mistakes people make. A resume should specify what position you are pursuing and include your work experience, skills, and education (not necessarily in that particular order). Your resume is your first foot forward, and should be the best. My biggest piece of advise is to proof-read your resume, and have a few people you know do the same; the more people that edit your resume the better.

  • Make sure you include a valid phone number and email address where you can be reached
  • Include an objective that clearly lists what field and position you are pursuing
  • When listing your experience include the company name, months and years worked, position held, and responsibilities and accomplishments. This should be detailed yet brief.
  • Education should include the name and location of the school, and what you majored in. GPA and year graduated is optional
  • References should be professional, and be from a supervisor or manager
  • Resumes don't have to be a maximum of one page long, but you want to keep it as short as possible; four or more pages is usually excessive