|
Search
Website
Home
Calendar
of Events
Contact Us
Board of Directors
Board Login
Education
Course Descriptions
Class
Schedule Cert.
Maintenance Instructors
Events
& Programs
Membership
User
Login
Company Coordinators
Career/Jobs
Articles
& Papers
Selected
Links
Current
News Links
Feedback
  
 
|
CAREER
Avoid the Top 5 Resume Mistakes
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Over the years as a recruiter, career
coach and resume writer, I’ve seen the consequences of poorly written
resumes. Unfortunately, many don’t seek professional career help
until they experience the frustration of a long and fruitless job
search. For most, their problems began by committing the top five
resume mistakes: lack of focus, absence of marketing strategy, no
accomplishments, lack of keywords and incorrect format. Avoid those
mistakes by following these five simple resume rules.
#1 Start with a clear focus.
The most effective resumes leave no doubt as to the job seeker’s
career objective. I learned early in my recruiting days that employers
turn down perfectly qualified candidates when the resume’s focus
is diluted. A one-size-fits-all resume gives the impression that
the job seeker is uncertain of his career goal. An employer once
told me that if a candidate is interested in two completely different
positions, he must not be very good at either. If you have more
than one career objective you need more than one resume.
#2 Think like a marketing professional.
Job seekers rarely see their search for what it is—a sales campaign.
The best sales people use powerful marketing materials to help gain
access to top decision makers. Think of your resume as marketing
material designed to create a powerful first impression leading
to a multitude of job interviews.
To translate your career history into an effective marketing piece,
first consider your reader’s buying motives. Every word on the page
should demonstrate how you can solve their problems, save them time
or money, increase their net profit or improve customer relations.
Once you understand your resume as a marketing piece, you are a
long way toward fulfilling the third resume rule.
#3 Include accomplishments that demonstrate your selling points.
On any major job board, 95% of all resume lack accomplishments.
These all-important statements allow employers to visualize your
contribution to their organization. Accomplishments motivate employers
to call you before their competition finds you. For top effectiveness,
state accomplishments quantifiably as dollars, percents or raw numbers.
Quantified statements are more credible, concrete and objective.
Time spent developing strong impact statements yields bargaining
power at salary negotiation since you have dollarized your worth.
#4 Use appropriate key words.
Resumes are read by both humans as well as computers. A resume lacking
in key words runs the risk of being read by neither. Those who write
the job description also screen resumes. In the 15 seconds they
give each resume, more attention is paid to resumes using the same
words found in the job description. It’s only human nature.
The high volume of resumes that employers receive make candidate
tracking software essential. More often than not, a submitted resume
is stored electronically and retrieved latter by key words. Even
the best candidates miss out on excellent opportunities due to lack
of resume key words.
To ensure your resume includes important key words, find 7-10 job
descriptions off any major job board that fit your career focus.
Don’t consider geographic location, you’re only using these as examples.
Next, identify and highlight the recurring key words. Sprinkle these
words liberally throughout your resume wherever appropriate. By
including the right words, you’ll catch their attention more often
and get interviews quicker.
#5 Use correct resume format.
Basically, there are three resume formats; chronological, functional
and hybrid. Once you understand which format best supports your
career objective, you’ll know which to use.
The chronological is best known and easiest to write. It allows
the reader to quickly identify the “what” “where” and “when” of
your work experience. This format works well if your objective is
to remain in the same industry or occupation and when your most
recent experience demonstrate your best accomplishments.
The chronological is not the best for showcasing transferable skills.
If you wish to cross industry or occupational lines, a better format
is the functional which places transferable skills and relevant
accomplishments at the beginning of your resume allowing a stronger
first impression. One problem with the functional is that, if not
carefully crafted, the resume is confusing; causing the reader to
believe the candidate has something to hide.
A solution to the sometimes confusing functional format and the
often limiting chronological format is the hybrid format which combines
the best of both. It allows the best showcase for skills and accomplishments
while maintaining ease of reading. This is no doubt the best format
for job seekers of all levels, however, the most difficult to write.
Once your resume is focused with marketing strategy using powerful
accomplishments and keyword and showcased in the most effective
format, you are well on your way to gaining your career objective
quicker and with greater confidence.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Deborah Walker, CCMC
Resume Writer ~ Career Coach
To see resume samples and read more job-search tips visit www.AlphaAdvantage.com
Email: Deb@AlphaAdvantage.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
...................................................................................................................................................
Any opinions, findings, and conclusions
or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of
the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of APICS.
Neither APICS nor the author(s) assume, and hereby disclaim, any
liability for any loss or damage caused by errors or omissions,
whether such errors or omissions resulted from negligence, accident
or other causes.
APICS Pikes Peak Chapter P.O. Box 486 Colorado Springs, CO 80901
Phone: 719-578-1225
APICS
Logo is a Registered Trademark ®
Unique daily website visitors since June 1, 2005
Mission
Statement Privacy
Statement
All
contents © 2007. All rights reserved.
|