"Now What?” How to Ensure Your Resume
Produces Top Results
A
professionally designed resume is an important
component to any jobseeker; however, the overall
effectiveness of the document depends on how and
how often it’s used, marketing strategies
utilized, and the relevance of the content.
Concentrating on these important aspects is key
to ensuring your résumé produces well.
Use your resume as it is designed — not how you
see it. What this means is, if you’ve been
in sales for years, don’t expect to obtain a
position outside of your skill set, such as real
estate leasing, without an in-depth job search
using a resume that focuses on industry
transferable skills. Some of your abilities may
apply to the RE industry (as you may see it),
but without employment history or a clearly
defined resume for “real estate leasing,” the
résumé will not produce good results. Crossing
over into another career is possible but
certainly a move that requires preparation for
you and definitely for the resume.
Persistent actions, not blind submission.
Taking a persistent and consistent approach to
sending a résumé is one aspect of job searching
that few jobseekers take seriously – not
necessarily because of the inability to be
assertive, but rather due to the large task at
hand. Job searching can be exhaustive and
individuals tend to lose initiative after
receiving constant rejection. Sending resumes
out in blocks of 50 per week will allow the
jobseeker to remain very active in the hunt, yet
allow enough time to focus on other strategies.
Suggestion: Focus on a list of companies that
best match your existing skill set and career
focus, rather than applying to help wanted ads
or conducting an exclusive online search. Create
a new list weekly and follow-up with each
employer within 5-8 business days to ensure
receipt and to answer any questions.
Adding an eye-catching introduction followed by
sticky content. Marketing professionals will
tell you that you must have a “hook”: something
that will make the reader act. Relative to job
searching, a hook should cause the reader to
call for an interview or possibly discuss the
candidate with a colleague. There is no clear
definition of what a hook actually can or cannot
be, but it should answer two or more of the
following:
(a)
How is this candidate different from the others
applying?
(b)
Does this candidate’s resume clearly outline and
focus upon the company’s requirements rather
than cloud this information with irrelevant
content?
(c)
Does this candidate possess the educational
requirements specified?
(d)
Does the candidate possess the minimum
knowledge, skills, and abilities to satisfy the
company’s short- and long-term goals?
Your resume should be alive. Envision each
available position as a door lock, and your
resume is the key that will allow you passage.
The resume should be a certain shape and size
for the first lock, but require modification or
a completely new design for the next lock. This
probably isn’t the best metaphor, but I think
you get the idea. Job descriptions from position
to position are rarely identical – especially
for those that require an individual to “wear
many hats.” Take a secretary, for example. The
job responsibilities for a secretary may be
completely different from one employer to the
next. Modifying the top section of the résumé,
generally, is the only upkeep required to ensure
the resume continuously fits the lock of the
door you’re trying to enter. Other
modifications, such as rearrangement of
categories / headers, replacing certain keywords
or key phrases and restructuring employment
details, may also be necessary.
Focus
your job search using networking, online and offline
tactics. Networking is still the tried-and-true king
relevant to an effective job-search campaign. However today,
job seekers are taking their campaigns online due to the
ease of researching a company, locating open positions by
inputting 2 or 3 keywords rather than scanning a Sunday
newspaper), and the quickness of résumé submission. Failed
job-search efforts result because some candidates spend most
of their time concentrating on the two least effective
methods: online and offline (newspaper) applications.
Although these two conduits produce results, they can
eventually require additional time, effort, and resources to
produce the same results as networking. While job searching,
utilize all tactics available to you; however, focus your
best efforts to networking, then strategic offline (targeted
letter campaigns, recruiter contact, and newspaper ads)
marketing, and finally, online submissions.
Taking a serious approach to your job search campaign is
mandatory to securing a favorable return from the resume.
Avoiding some of the largest pitfalls job seekers fall into,
will allow you to conduct a strategic and effective campaign
that’s designed to get a job in the least amount of time.
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Editors and
publishers are welcome to reprint articles
found on Job Interview Advice as long as
the author's byline appears intact and the email
and web address are hyperlinked. In addition,
the phrase Source:
Job-Interview-Advice.net
should appear after the author's byline
and should be hyperlinked as well.
By
Teena Rose, Resume to Referral,
www.resumebycprw.com
Holding top industry credentials*, she’s
authored numerous resumes that are published and
featured within print publications and currently
setting industry standards.
Source:
Job-Interview-Advice.net
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