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CAREER
Baby Boomers, Beware!
Don’t Let Your Resume Date You!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If you’re a job seeker of the Baby Boom
generation, you may be feeling a little left out by the job market.
You’re certainly not ready to retire, but the young recruiters you
send resumes to don’t seem to respond to your skills and experience.
If you’re feeling symptoms of age discrimination, you should know
that your resume could be the culprit, categorizing you as out of
date and over the hill.
There are three ways your resume can put you in the over the hill
category. Your resume is due for an update if it contains:
1. Outdated technology skills
2. Outdated industry or occupational terminology
3. Outdated resume trends
Don’t despair if your resume is out of date. You can perform an
extreme resume makeover by using the tips below.
1. Make sure you are up to date on your industry’s technology.
Check multiple job descriptions within your industry to see what
technologies employers really want. Determine which technologies
are missing from your resume. Then decide what you need to learn
or do in order to fill that technology gap. Consider adult education
classes, college classes, or even online learning.
You should be aware that technology terms are often used as keywords
to filter the best resumes from electronic databases. If your resume
doesn’t have them, it may never be seen. Make sure your technology
skills aren’t leaving you behind.
2. Make sure your resume is using current terminology.
If you have just been adding to the same old resume over the years,
then your early entries may be using outdated terms. One way to
bring your resume up to date is through publications from your industry’s
professional associations. If you don’t belong to any professional
associations, you might be missing out on the latest industry-speak.
Another good resource is job descriptions. Search job descriptions
in your field for recurring terms. Learn to use the current terminology
for your industry correctly and effectively.
3. Make sure your resume reflects today’s trends in resume format
and style.
Ten or fifteen years ago, the old-fashioned reverse-chronological
format may have worked for you. But now that you have more experience,
it may not be the best choice. The more advanced hybrid format may
be much better at promoting your skills and expertise, providing
you with a more professional presentation. With the hybrid resume,
potential employers will form an impression of you based on your
best accomplishments, not just your most recent job description.
You should also realize that some of the old resume rules just don’t
apply any more. For example:
· “Limit your resume to one page.”
This is a really old idea that limits your ability to show all of
your skills and
expertise.
· “End your resume with References
Available Upon Request.” You don’t need to say that; it’s assumed.
· “You should show every job you have
ever held and give each equal importance.” Your employment history
should only go back as far as it related to your current employment
objectives. Think of your resume
as a marketing piece that highlights the best parts rather than
as a tell-all.
· “Your resume should go back no
more than ten years.” Don’t use an arbitrary number to determine
how much to include
on your resume. Use the rule of relevancy to decide how many of
your jobs to include.
· “One resume should handle everything.”
Not anymore! In addition to tailoring your resume to different
fields or industries, you’ll also need to tailor the way that you
save it.
You’ll want to have (1) a standard Word format (for printouts and
as email attachments), and (2) a Plain Text version for online forms.
This will save you a lot of time in repairing lost formatting, which
often occurs when cutting and pasting a Word document into a text-only
form.
Let your experience work for you rather than against you. Using
these tips to update your resume can make a noticeable difference
in interest from employers. And your new resume will be a better
reflection of your hard-earned skills, talents, and expertise.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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.
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Phone: 719-578-1225
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