|
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
Is Your Resume Recruiter Friendly?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If you are in the middle of a job search,
recruiters can be either your friend-or your foe. They have the
power to keep you out of the hiring process or to introduce you
to corporate hiring decision-makers. The quality of your resume
plays a key role in determining how recruiters will treat you in
the job market. It pays to make sure your resume is recruiter friendly.
There are three elements to a recruiter-friendly resume:
- Focus
- Core competencies or transferable skills
- Accomplishments
If your resume lacks any of these crucial elements, then you are
probably not capturing the attention you deserve, and you are missing
out on important interview opportunities.
1. Focus: Since recruiters' time is at a premium, they must
know your career focus within seconds of opening your resume. If
your career focus isn't clearly stated, you can't assume the reader
will take the time to search through your resume for clues. Most
recruiters consider "Career Objective" statements worthless if they
contain no real information about the specific position you are
looking for and the industry expertise you offer. The best objective
statements are concise and to the point.
2. Core competencies or transferable skills: Once a recruiter
understands your focus, he/she will want to know if you have the
required core competencies or transferable skills to accomplish
the job. A thorough research of employer job descriptions will help
you identify the core competencies your resume must feature.
You'll capture and hold recruiter attention by including only those
core competencies relating specifically to your focus. Be careful
not to muddy up your personal marketing message by including extraneous
skills. If you remember the all-important rule of relevancy, you'll
go a long way toward keeping the reader's attention on your key
skills.
3. Accomplishments: Once your resume has made it through
the initial screening for focus and skills, the recruiter will want
to know how you stack up against other candidates. Remember, with
record-high resume response to job openings, recruiters need good,
solid reasons to recommend you for consideration over the mountain
of other candidates. Clear, concisely stated accomplishments are
the best way to distinguish yourself from your competition.
Whether the recruiter works for one corporation or represents many
corporate clients as a third-party recruiting consultant, he or
she must be able to give valid reasons for promoting you as a viable
candidate. You can make their job infinitely easier by including
the information they need-and bring your resume to the top of the
candidate pile. When your resume sells itself, you gain advantage
points, and make the recruiter look good as well.
For optimum impact, write accomplishments that illustrate the strength
of your core competencies, transferable skills and focus. An accomplishment
is only valuable to your resume if it promotes the skills your target
employers are looking for. Remember the rule of relevancy as you
craft each of your accomplishment statements.
In today's extremely competitive job market, employers rely heavily
on recruiters to screen out all but the top few applicants. With
a recruiter-friendly resume you'll beat out your competition as
the employer's first choice to interview.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Deborah Walker, CCMC
Resume Writer ~ Career Coach
Read more articles and see resume samples at: 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.
|