Education Ahmadiyya

  • Home
  • About
  • In The Know
  • Our Services
  • Scholarships
  • Career Guidance
  • Endorsements
  • Contact
banner

How to Write a Résumé That Doesn't Annoy People

David Silverman for the Harvard Business Review.

A Google search for “résumé” results in over 178,000,000 hits, whereas “possum” nets only 5,340,000. Thus the documentation of work experience is 33 and 1/3 more popular than arboreal marsupials. But what does this really tell us? Not much, but neither does the average résumé that comes across my desk. Some excerpts:

“Administered resolution of issues and implementation of ideas surfaced by individuals.”

“Partaking in meetings designed to enhance collaboration, identify and develop strategies to ensure success regarding the accomplishment of goals.”

“Experienced leader with superior interpersonal skills and business acumen talented at building productive relationships across a global organization.”

Huh?

We all know that there are more jobs being lost than created, and that an opening will get dozens, if not hundreds, of applicants. But in our fear to avoid saying anything that might get our résumé tossed out of the pile, we end up saying nothing at all. As a result, the hiring manager feels like she’s reading tea leaves, not CVs. One feels forced to come up with arbitrary rules to narrow the field. Nobody with an objective statement, no résumés longer than 3 pages, no serif fonts.

I’m not immune. Personally, I look at the width of the dashes. Microsoft Word will helpfully attempt to make a hyphen, n-dash, or m-dash based on the spacing you use when writing. Many people don’t know this, and they don’t notice that their dashes are all different lengths. Does this mean they are more or less qualified to be a project planner? I don’t know, but it’s easy for me to say, “If you don’t know that your own résumé is inconsistent, how can you be expected to supervise a multi-million dollar project?”

Other people have their own peccadilloes. The best you can do is try to achieve the maximum content with minimum peculiarity. Here’s a list of nine things to make your résumé stand a better chance of survival:

1. Get the formatting right. Line up bullet points, dates, headings. Wacky spacing will get you questioned about skills that have nothing to do with what you can do on the job. And please learn to put dates flush against the right margin. The right-aligned tab stop remains a mystery as deep as an ocean for many resume writers.

2. Insert dates for everything. If you’ve got a gap, explain it in your cover letter. But don’t leave the dates off a job or a degree. Maybe you’re worried they’ll think you’re too old or too young — but at best you’ll look sloppy. At worst, sneaky. 

3. Fill up on the buzzwords. 
Yes, buzzwords are typically “bad” for clarity, but you have to get past the HR department first, and they’re screening for matches with the words in the job description. Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX), consumer goods industry, certified project manager, SPL, BMN, FLB…whatever it is that matches the requirements, put it in.

4. Choose verbs that mean something. ”Assisted,” “Worked on,” “Contributed to” and so on don’t convey much to a prospective employer. Instead, say what you did: “Wrote,” “Designed,” or “Managed.” The more specific, the better.

5. Rewrite your résumé for each job application. If you really want a job, your prospective employer isn’t going to be impressed by your inability to adjust one 3-page document to meet their needs. Highlight the top 3 to 7 things you’ve done that match up with the requirements of the job.

6. State career objectives or outside interests — but be very careful. Do you know that they’re looking for a “motivated team player who wants to excel in international fashion and likes skiing and hot tubbing?” Great, put that in. Otherwise, save the non-job stuff for the cover letter. Or better yet,the interview.

7. The further into your past, the less detail you should have.
 Don’t have 13 bullets on a job from 10 years ago.

8. Keep it short.
 A five-page résumé may be justified, but you’ve got to make it clear through headings and organization why you need so much space. If you’ve got a list of publications or industry conferences you’ve spoken at, great, but put it at the end as a separate section. Consider the résumé of a CEO. He doesn’t need to say that he “attended meetings, assigned work” and whatever other tasks. He ran a company. One line.

9. No typos. Your résumé is like the restroom in a restaurant — as Anthony Bourdain says, the one room everyone sees. And if you can’t keep that clean, what’s it like in the kitchen?

What do you think? Are there things you see in résumés that cause you to toss them in the “probably not” pile? Have you ever had your résumé prevent you from getting a job?

    • #resume
    • #jobs
    • #internships
    • #education
    • #college
    • #high school
  • 11 months ago
  • 52
  • Comments
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

52 Notes/ Hide

  1. insertwithere reblogged this from educationahmadiyya
  2. closetocanada likes this
  3. rolodexofwriting reblogged this from adventuresofastudentteacher
  4. authenticenglish likes this
  5. probabilitiesofcircumstance likes this
  6. misscloudiercee likes this
  7. adventuresofastudentteacher reblogged this from insideateachersmind
  8. ireallydontknowwhattocallthis reblogged this from educationahmadiyya and added:
    David Silverman for the Harvard Business Review. A Google search for “résumé” results in over 178,000,000 hits, whereas...
  9. creatividadtiempolibre reblogged this from educationahmadiyya
  10. sarah1223 likes this
  11. charliegolden likes this
  12. rowedowntheriver likes this
  13. elsilvero likes this
  14. omfg-itsatumblr likes this
  15. jennyandthebetss likes this
  16. fadiazizov likes this
  17. kls987 likes this
  18. meghanjh likes this
  19. theresloveintruth likes this
  20. extraordinarily--ordinary likes this
  21. morethanameaning likes this
  22. itsbeenraining1 reblogged this from educationahmadiyya
  23. mollyodwyer likes this
  24. icoyai likes this
  25. shpunkey likes this
  26. andsoshespins likes this
  27. insideateachersmind reblogged this from educationahmadiyya
  28. teacherousroadsahead likes this
  29. kateann6 likes this
  30. markct likes this
  31. dudewrath-the-exalted reblogged this from pencilblots
  32. michelleb57 likes this
  33. clearxeyes likes this
  34. exposed-thoughts likes this
  35. monarchydestiny reblogged this from educationahmadiyya
  36. thehistoryminors likes this
  37. morganstein likes this
  38. m50other likes this
  39. henryjbarajas reblogged this from pencilblots
  40. hellzyeahholly likes this
  41. convoswithmyself reblogged this from pencilblots
  42. pencilblots reblogged this from educationahmadiyya
  43. pencilblots likes this
  44. giraffehearts5 likes this
  45. observethinklovegivecreate likes this
  46. englishmajormade likes this
  47. bravewimp likes this
  48. This was featured in #Education
  49. educationahmadiyya posted this

Recent comments

Blog comments powered by Disqus
← Previous • Next →
Pre-High School
— Parenting
High School
— The SAT
— Senior Year
— College Applications
— Scholarships
College
— Scholarships
Post-College Education
Jobs
—The Resume

Presentations
How To's

Keep up to date with our scholarships & other resources.

,

loading tweets…

  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Questions?
  • Submit
  • Mobile
Effector Theme by Pixel Union