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Part 1 - WRITE A RESUME THAT GENERATES RESULTS
Part 2 - HOW TO KNOCK THE SOCKS OFF A PROSPECTIVE EMPLOYER
Part 3 - THE EVIDENCE SECTION - HOW TO PRESENT YOUR WORK HISTORY, EDUCATION, ETC.
Part 4 - A FEW GUIDELINES FOR A BETTER PRESENTATION
Part 5 - I'M NOT SURE THE JOB I'M LOOKING FOR IS THE RIGHT ONE FOR ME
Part 6 - ADD POWER TO YOUR RESUME WITH POWERWORDS
Part 2 - HOW TO KNOCK THEIR SOCKS OFF
Research shows that only one interview is granted for every 200
resumes received by the average employer. Research also tells us
that your resume will be quickly scanned, rather than read. Ten to
20 seconds is all the time you have to persuade a prospective
employer to read further. What this means is that the decision to
interview a candidate is usually based on an overall first
impression of the resume, a quick screening that so impresses the
reader and convinces them of the candidate's qualifications that an
interview results. As a result, the top half of the first page of
your resume will either make you or break you. By the time they have
read the first few lines, you have either caught their interest, or
your resume has failed. That is why we say that your resume is an
ad. You hope it will have the same result as a well-written ad: to
get the reader to respond.
To write an effective resume, you have to
learn how to write powerful but subtle advertising copy. Not
only that, but you must sell a product in which you have a large
personal investment: you. What's worse, given the fact that most of
us do not think in a marketing-oriented way naturally, you are
probably not looking forward to selling anything, let alone
yourself. But if you want to increase your job hunting effectiveness
as much as possible, you would be wise to learn to write a
spectacular resume.
You do not need to hard sell or make any claims that are not
absolutely true. You do need to get over your modesty and
unwillingness to toot your own horn. People more often buy the best
advertised product than the best product. That is good news if you
are willing to learn to create an excellent resume. With a little
extra effort, you will usually get a better response from
prospective employers than people with better credentials. » top
FOCUS
ON THE EMPLOYER'S NEEDS, NOT YOURS
Imagine that you are the person doing the hiring. This person is
not some anonymous paper pusher deep in the bowels of the personnel
department. Usually, the person who makes the hiring decision is
also the person who is responsible for the bottom line productivity
of the project or group you hope to join. This is a person who cares
deeply how well the job will be done. You need to write your resume
to appeal directly to them.
Ask yourself: What would make someone the
perfect candidate? What does the employer really want? What
special abilities would this person have? What would set a truly
exceptional candidate apart from a merely good one?
If you are seeking a job in a field you know well, you probably
already know what would make someone a superior candidate. If you
are not sure, you can gather hints from the help-wanted ad you are
answering, from asking other people who work in the same company or
the same field. You could even call the prospective employer and ask
them what they want. Don't make wild guesses unless you have to. It
is very important to do this step well. If you are not addressing
their real needs, they will not respond to your resume.
Putting yourself in the moccasins of the person doing the hiring
is the first, and most important, step in writing a resume that
markets you rather than describes your history or herstory. Every
step in producing a finished document should be part of your overall
intention to convey to the prospective employer that you are a truly
exceptional candidate. » top
PLAN FIRST
Focus your writing efforts. Get clear what the employer is
looking for and what you have to offer before you begin your resume.
Write your answers to the above mentioned question, "What would make
someone the perfect candidate?" on notebook paper, one answer per
page. Prioritize the sheets of paper, based on which qualities or
abilities you think would be most important to the person doing the
hiring.
Then, starting with the top priority page, fill the rest of that
page, or as much of it as you can, with brainstorming about why you
are the person who best fulfills the employer's needs. Write down
everything you have ever done that demonstrates that you fit
perfectly with what is wanted and needed by the prospective
employer.
The whole idea is to loosen up your thinking
enough so that you will be able to see some new connections between
what you have done and what the employer is looking for. You
need not confine yourself to work-related accomplishments. Use your
entire life as the palette to paint with. If Sunday school or your
former gang are the only places you have had a chance to demonstrate
your special gift for teaching and leadership, fine. The point is to
cover all possible ways of thinking about and communicating what you
do well. What are the talents you bring to the market place? What do
you have to offer the prospective employer?
If you are making a career change or are a young person and new
to the job market, you are going to have to be especially creative
in getting across what makes you stand out. These brainstorming
pages will be the raw material from which you craft your resume. One
important part of the planning process is to decide which resume
format fits your needs best. Don't automatically assume that a
traditional format will work best for you. More about that
later. » top
A GREAT RESUME HAS TWO
SECTIONS
In the first, you make assertions about your abilities, qualities
and achievements. You write powerful, but honest, advertising copy
that makes the reader immediately perk up and realize that you are
someone special.
The second section, the evidence section, is where you back up
your assertions with evidence that you actually did what you said
you did. This is where you list and describe the jobs you have held,
your education, etc. This is all the stuff you are obliged to
include.
Most resumes are just the evidence section, with no assertions.
If you have trouble getting to sleep, just read a few resumes each
night before going to bed. Nothing puts people to sleep better than
the average resume.
The juice is in the assertions section. When
a prospective employer finishes reading your resume, you want them
to immediately reach for the phone to invite you in to
interview. The resumes you have written in the past have
probably been a gallant effort to inform the reader. You don't want
them informed. You want them interested and excited.
In fact, it is best to only hint at some things. Leave the reader
wanting more. Leave them with a bit of mystery. That way, they have
even more reason to reach for the phone. The assertions section
usually has two or three sections. In all of them, your job is to
communicate, assert and declare that you are the best possible
candidate for the job and that you are hotter than a picnic on
Mercury.
You start by naming your intended job. This may be in a separate
Objective section, or may be folded into the second section, the
Summary. If you are making a change to a new field, or are a young
person not fully established in a career, start with a separate
Objective section. » top
THE OBJECTIVE
Ideally, your resume should be pointed toward conveying why you
are the perfect candidate for one specific job or job title. Good
advertising is directed toward a very specific target audience.
When a car company is trying to sell their inexpensive compact to
an older audience, they show grandpa and grandma stuffing the car
with happy, shiny grandchildren and talk about how safe and
economical the car is. When they advertise the exact same car to the
youth market, they show it going around corners on two wheels, with
plenty of drums and power chords thundering in the background. You
want to focus your resume just as specifically.
Targeting your resume requires that you be
absolutely clear about your career direction--or at least that you
appear to be clear. If you aren't clear where you are going,
you wind up wherever the winds of chance blow you. You would be wise
to use this time of change to design your future career so you have
a clear target that will meet your goals and be personally
fulfilling. Even if you are a little vague about what you are
looking for, you cannot let your uncertainty show. With a
nonexistent, vague or overly broad objective, the first statement
you make to a prospective employer says you are not sure this is the
job for you.
The way to demonstrate your clarity of direction or apparent
clarity is to have the first major topic of your resume be your
OBJECTIVE.
Let's look at a real world example. Suppose the owner of a small
software company puts an ad in the paper seeking an experienced
software sales person. A week later they have received 500 resumes.
The applicants have a bewildering variety of backgrounds. The
employer has no way of knowing whether any of them are really
interested in selling software.
They remember all the jobs they applied for that they didn't
really want. They know that many of the resumes they received are
from people who are just using a shotgun approach, casting their
seed to the winds. Then they come across a resume in the pile that
starts with the following:
OBJECTIVE - a software sales position in an organization seeking
an extraordinary record of generating new accounts, exceeding sales
targets and enthusiastic customer relations.
This wakes them up. They are immediately interested. This first
sentence conveys some very important and powerful messages: "I want
exactly the job you are offering. I am a superior candidate because
I recognize the qualities that are most important to you, and I have
them. I want to make a contribution to your company." This works
well because the employer is smart enough to know that someone who
wants to do exactly what they are offering will be much more likely
to succeed than someone who doesn't. And that person will probably
be a lot more pleasant to work with as well.
Secondly, this candidate has done a good job of establishing why
they are the perfect candidate in their first sentence. They have
thought about what qualities would make a candidate stand out. They
have started communicating that they are that person immediately.
What's more, they are communicating from the point of view of making
a contribution to the employer.
They are not writing from a self-centered point of view. Even
when people are savvy enough to have an objective, they often make
the mistake of saying something like, "a position where I can hone
my skill as a scissors sharpener." or something similar. The
employer is interested in hiring you for what you can do for them,
not for fulfilling your private goals and agenda.
Here's how to write your
objective. First of all, decide on a specific job
title for your objective. Go back to your list of answers to the
question "How can I demonstrate that I am the perfect candidate?"
What are the two or three qualities, abilities or achievements that
would make a candidate stand out as truly exceptional for that
specific job?
The person in the above example recognized that the prospective
employer, being a small, growing software company, would be very
interested in candidates with an ability to generate new accounts.
So they made that the very first point they got across in their
resume.
Be sure the objective is to the point.
Do not use fluffy phrases that are obvious or do not mean anything,
such as: "allowing the ability to enhance potential and utilize
experience in new challenges." An objective may be broad and still
somewhat undefined in some cases, such as: "a mid-level management
position in the hospitality or entertainment industry."
Remember, your resume will only get a few seconds attention, at
best! You have to generate interest right away, in the first
sentence they lay their eyes on. Having an objective statement that
really sizzles is highly effective. And it's simple to do. One
format is:
OBJECTIVE: An xxx position in an organization where yyy and zzz
would be needed (or, in an organization seeking yyy and zzz).
Xxx is the name of the position you are applying for. Yyy and zzz
are the most compelling qualities, abilities or achievements that
will really make you stand out above the crowd of applicants. Your
previous research to find out what is most important to the employer
will provide the information to fill in yyy and zzz.
If you are applying for several different
positions, you should adapt your resume to each one. There is
nothing wrong with having several different resumes, each with a
different objective, each specifically crafted for a different type
of position. You may even want to change some parts of your resume
for each job you apply for. Have an objective that is perfectly
matched with the job you are applying for. Remember, you are writing
advertising copy, not your life story.
It is sometimes appropriate to include your Objective in your
Summary section rather than have a separate Objective section.
(Examples to follow.) The point of using an Objective is to create
a specific psychological response in the mind of the reader.
If you are making a career change or have a limited work history,
you want the employer to immediately focus on where you are going,
rather than where you have been. If you are looking for another job
in your present field, it is more important to stress your
qualities, achievements and abilities first.
A few examples of separate Objective sections:
- Vice president of marketing in an organization where a strong
track record of expanding market share and internet savvy is
needed.
- Senior staff position with a bank that offers the opportunity
to use my expertise in commercial real estate lending and
strategic management.
- An entry-level position in the hospitality industry where a
background in advertising and public relations would be needed.
- A position teaching English as a second language where a
special ability to motivate and communicate effectively with
students would be needed.
- Divemaster in an organization where an extensive knowledge of
Carribean sea life and a record of leaving customers feeling they
have had a once-in-a lifetime experience is needed.
» top
THE SUMMARY
The "Summary" or "Summary of Qualifications" consists of several
concise statements that focus the reader's attention on the most
important qualities, achievements and abilities you have to offer.
Those qualities should be the most compelling demonstrations of why
they should hire you instead of the other candidates. It gives you a
brief opportunity to telegraph a few of your most sterling
qualities. It is your one and only chance to attract and hold their
attention, to get across what is most important, and to entice the
employer to keep reading.
This is the spiciest part of the resume. This
may be the only section fully read by the employer, so it should be
very strong and convincing. The Summary is the one place to
include professional characteristics (extremely energetic, a gift
for solving complex problems in a fast-paced environment, a natural
salesman, exceptional interpersonal skills, committed to excellence,
etc.) which may be helpful in winning the interview. Gear every word
in the Summary to your targeted goal.
How to write a Summary? Go back to your lists that answer the
question, What would make someone the ideal candidate? Look for the
qualities the employer will care about most. Then look at what you
wrote about why you are the perfect person to fill their need. Pick
the stuff that best demonstrates why they should hire you. Assemble
it into your Summary section.
The most common ingredients of a well-written Summary are as
follows. Of course, you would not use all these ingredients in one
Summary. Use the ones that highlight you best.
- A short phrase describing your profession
- Followed by a statement of broad or specialized expertise
- Followed by two or three additional statements related to
any of the following:
- breadth or depth of skills
- unique mix of skills
- range of environments in which you have experience
- a special or well-documented accomplishment
- a history of awards, promotions, or superior performance
commendations
- One or more professional or appropriate personal
characteristics
- A sentence describing professional objective or interest.
Notice that the examples below show how to include
your objective in the Summary section. If you are making a career
change, your Summary section should show how what you have done in
the past prepares you to do what you seek to do in the future. If
you are a young person new to the job market, your Summary will be
based more on ability than experience.
A few examples of Summary sections:
- Highly motivated, creative and versatile real estate
executive with seven years of experience in property
acquisition, development and construction, as well as the
management of large apartment complexes. Especially skilled at
building effective, productive working relationships with
clients and staff. Excellent management, negotiation and public
relations skills. Seeking a challenging management position in
the real estate field that offers extensive contact with the
public.
- Over 10 years as an organizational catalyst/training design
consultant with a track record of producing extraordinary
results for more than 20 national and community based
organizations. A commitment to human development and community
service. Energetic self-starter with excellent analytical,
organizational, and creative skills.
- Financial Management Executive with nearly ten years of
experience in banking and international trade, finance,
investments and economic policy. Innovative in structuring
credit enhancement for corporate and municipal financing.
Skilled negotiator with strong management, sales and marketing
background. Areas of expertise include (a bulleted list would
follow this paragraph.)
- Health Care Professional experienced in management, program
development and policy making in the United States as well as in
several developing countries. Expertise in emergency medical
services. A talent for analyzing problems, developing and
simplifying procedures, and finding innovative solutions. Proven
ability to motivate and work effectively with persons from other
cultures and all walks of life. Skilled in working within a
foreign environment with limited resources.
- Commander - Chief Executive Officer of the U.S. Navy,
Atlantic Fleet. Expertise in all areas of management, with a
proven record of unprecedented accomplishment. History of the
highest naval awards and rapid promotion. Proven senior-level
experience in executive decision-making, policy direction,
strategic business planning, Congressional relations, financial
and personnel management, research and development, and
aerospace engineering. Extensive knowledge of government
military requirements in systems and equipment. Committed to the
highest levels of professional and personal excellence.
- Performing artist with a rich baritone voice and unusual
range, specializing in classical, spiritual, gospel and rap
music. Featured soloist for two nationally televised events.
Accomplished pianist. Extensive performance experience includes
television, concert tours and club acts. Available for
commercial recording and live performances.
» top
SKILLS AND
ACCOMPLISHMENTS
In this final part of the assertions section of your resume, you
go into more detail. You are still writing to sell yourself to the
reader, not to inform them. Basically, you do exactly what you did
in the previous section, except that you go into more detail.
In the summary, you focused on your most special highlights. Now
you tell the rest of the best of your story.
Let them know what results you produced,
what happened as a result of your efforts, what you are especially
gifted or experienced at doing. Flesh out the most important
highlights in your summary.
You are still writing to do what every good advertisement does,
communicating the following: if you buy this product, you will get
these direct benefits. If it doesn't contribute to furthering this
communication, don't bother to say it. Remember, not too much
detail. Preserve a bit of mystery. Don't tell them everything.
Sometimes the "Skills and Accomplishments" sections is a separate
section. In a chronological resume, it becomes the first few phrases
of the descriptions of the various jobs you have held. We will cover
that in a few minutes, when we discuss the different types of
resumes. When it is a separate section, it can have several possible
titles, depending on your situation:
- SKILLS AND ACCOMPLISHMENTS
- ACCOMPLISHMENTS
- SUMMARY OF ACCOMPLISHMENTS
- SELECTED ACCOMPLISHMENTS
- RECENT ACCOMPLISHMENTS
- AREAS OF ACCOMPLISHMENT AND EXPERIENCE
- AREAS OF EXPERTISE
- CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
- PROFESSIONAL HIGHLIGHTS
- ADDITIONAL SKILLS AND ACCOMPLISHMENTS
There are a number of different ways to structure "Skills and
Accomplishments" sections. In all of these styles, put your skills
and accomplishments in order of importance for the desired career
goal. If you have many skills, the last skill paragraph might be
called "Additional Skills."
Here are a few ways you could structure
your "Skills and Accomplishments" section:
1. A listing of skills or accomplishments or a combination of
both, with bullets
Example:
SELECTED SKILLS AND ACCOMPLISHMENTS
- Raised $1900 in 21 days in canvassing and advocacy on
environmental, health and consumer issues.
- Conducted legal research for four Assistant U.S. Attorneys,
for the U.S. Attorney's office
- Coordinated Board of Directors and Community Advisory Board
of community mental health center. Later commended as "the best
thing that ever happened to that job."
2. A listing of major skill headings with accomplishments under
each. The accomplishments can be a bulleted list or in paragraph
form. The material under the headings should include mention of
accomplishments which prove each skill.
Example:
SELECTED ACCOMPLISHMENTS
National Training Project / Conference Management.
- Director of Outreach on Hunger, a national public
education/training project funded by USAID, foundations and all
the major church denominations. Designed, managed and promoted
three-day training conferences in cities throughout the U.S.
Planned and managed 32 nationwide training seminars and a
five-day annual conference for university vice-presidents and
business executives.
Program Design: Universities.
- Invited by Duke University President Terry Sanford to
develop new directions and programs for the University's Office
of Summer Educational Programs, first Director of Duke's
"Pre-college Program," first editor of "Summer at Duke."
Designed and successfully proposed a center for the study of
creativity at The George Washington University.
3. A list of bulleted accomplishments or skill paragraphs under
each job (in a chronological resume).
Example:
Director of Sales and Marketing
DELAWARE TRADE INTERNATIONAL, INC. Wilmington,
DE
- Promoted from Sales Representative within one year of
joining company to Director of Sales and Marketing. Responsible
for international sales of raw materials, as well as printing
and graphic arts equipment. Oversaw five sales managers. Was in
charge of direct sales and marketing in 17 countries throughout
Europe and the Middle East.
- Recruited, trained and managed sales staff. Developed
marketing strategy, prepared sales projections and established
quotas. Selected and contracted with overseas sub-agents to
achieve international market penetration.
- Negotiated and finalized long-term contractual agreements
with suppliers on behalf of clients. Oversaw all aspects of
transactions, including letters of credit, international
financing, preparation of import/export documentation, and
shipping/freight forwarding.
- Planned and administered sales and marketing budget, and
maintained sole profit/loss responsibility. Within first year,
doubled company's revenues, and produced $7-9 million in annual
sales during the next eight years.
BASIC RESUME FORMATS
There are three basic types of resumes: Chronological,
Functional, and "combined" Chronological - Functional. To see what
these styles look like, get a resume book. They are usually
terrible guides for how to write an excellent resume, but they are
good to see different formats. We would love to show you what
complete resumes look like but your web browser would probably do
unspeakable things to the formatting. »
top
CHRONOLOGICAL
The chronological resume is the more traditional structure for
a resume. The Experience section is the focus of the resume; each
job (or the last several jobs) is described in some detail, and
there is no major section of skills or accomplishments at the
beginning of the resume. This structure is primarily used when you
are staying in the same profession, in the same type of work,
particularly in very conservative fields. It is also used in
certain fields such as law and academia. It is recommended that
the chronological resume always have an Objective or Summary,
to focus the reader.
The advantages: May appeal to older, more traditional readers
and be best in very conservative fields. Makes it easier to
understand what you did in what job. May help the name of the
employer stand out more, if this is impressive. The disadvantage
is that it is much more difficult to highlight what you do best.
This format is rarely appropriate for someone making a career
change.
FUNCTIONAL
The functional resume highlights your major skills and
accomplishments from the very beginning. It helps the reader see
clearly what you can do for them, rather than having to read
through the job descriptions to find out. It helps target the
resume into a new direction or field, by lifting up from all past
jobs the key skills and qualifications to help prove you will be
successful in this new direction or field. Actual company names
and positions are in a subordinate position, with no description
under each. There are many different types of formats for
functional resumes. The functional resume is a must for career
changers, but is very appropriate for generalists, for those with
spotty or divergent careers, for those with a wide range of skills
in their given profession, for students, for military officers,
for homemakers returning to the job market, and for those who want
to make slight shifts in their career direction.
Advantages: It will help you most in reaching for a new goal or
direction. It is a very effective type of resume, and is highly
recommended. The disadvantage is that it is hard for the employer
to know exactly what you did in which job, which may be a problem
for some conservative interviewers.
COMBINED
A combined resume includes elements of both the chronological
and functional formats. It may be a shorter chronology of job
descriptions preceded by a short "Skills and Accomplishments"
section (or with a longer Summary including a skills list or a
list of "qualifications"); or, it may be a standard functional
resume with the accomplishments under headings of different jobs
held.
There are obvious advantages to this combined approach: It
maximizes the advantages of both kinds of resumes, avoiding
potential negative effects of either type. One disadvantage is
that it tends to be a longer resume. Another is that it can be
repetitious: Accomplishments and skills may have to be repeated in
both the "functional" section and the "chronological" job
descriptions. » top
» Go On to Part 3 - THE EVIDENCE SECTION - HOW TO PRESENT YOUR WORK HISTORY, EDUCATION, ETC.
This resume writing guide is an excerpt
from
our national bestselling book, The Pathfinder: How To
Choose or Change Your Career
for a Lifetime of Satisfaction and Success.
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