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Resume Mistakes
You
want to get a great job, right? You know you
need a resume to get your foot in the door, yes?
Doesn't it make sense to present your
credentials in the most amazing way possible so
that the employer can't help but call you for an
interview? That would seem to make sense, and
yet, resumes end up on the desks of human
resources personnel every day that are
distinctive in their LACK OF ATTENTION TO
DETAIL. Read: They stink.
If you want your resume to be distinctive in its
professional appearance, make sure you pay
attention to the list below.
Everything on this list is common sense. So, why
do so many people make these resume mistakes
every day? One reason is that some job
candidates have no idea how to create a
professional document, nor are they willing to
take the time to learn. Along the same lines,
many people are simply lazy. They do not want to
spend the time to compose attention-getting,
easy-to-read copy, much less proofread their
material once it is written. Employers have no
time to waste on people who are unwilling to
make the effort to ensure their resume is free
of errors. Those are not the kind of people they
are looking to hire.
Take the time to create a professional document
that stands out because it is exactly what
employers are looking for and you will be far
ahead of your competitors for the position you
want.
Are
you ready?
Here, in no particular order, are the most-cited
reasons that resumes end up in the reject pile
without being given more than a cursory glance.
Typos
Proofread your material. Proofread it again.
Spell check it. Have your neighbors, friends,
family and anyone else you can find to review
your resume for you. Ask them to look for typos
and grammar errors. Have them read it for “tense
consistency” (make sure everything is presented
in the same tense).
Font Faults
Do not use small fonts. Do not use too many
different fonts. An employer is going to scan
your resume, not fully read it. If the type is
hard to read or is difficult to follow, no one
is going to spend any time on it at all. Keep
the type at least at a 10 point and use one
font. Make it easy on the person who is going to
be reading it.
Buried Skills
If
your resume highlights job duties but omits the
actual skills you have mastered or the
accomplishments you have made, the person who
reads it ? ahem?scans it - will no not recognize
your special talents and abilities. Make sure
you focus your attention on what you have to
offer as opposed to what your responsibilities
were in your past jobs. Whenever possible,
quantify your statements with numbers. Instead
of saying you helped the distribution center
organize its processes, state "HOW" you helped
them do this. Be specific and use numbers
whenever possible. Vague assertions have no
value.
Format focus vs Content focus
Do not get so wrapped up in the way the resume
is supposed to LOOK that you forget to respond
to what it is supposed to SAY. You can use the
fanciest font in a creative new format, but if
you do not concentrate your efforts on the words
you use, the employer will not care how the
resume looks. You don’t get an interview based
on a cute resume. You get an interview based on
whether or not the employer believes you can do
the job well
Wordy, Verbose, Lengthy, Effusive, Protracted,
Loquacious, Rambling, Long-Winded?
Make your statements clear and concise.
Incorrect Information
Proofreading is not just for the body of the
resume, it is also for your heading, your
objective statement and so on. Proofread
everything. Are your dates accurate? Look for
continuity throughout the text. Does everything
flow nicely. Read your resume aloud and listen
for statements that don't roll off the tongue
easily. It might be a clue that something should
be revised.
Cheap or Colored Paper
You can have the most amazing resume ever, but
if you print it on lavender paper hoping it will
get noticed, you will waste a lot of pretty
paper that could be better used for writing your
aunt or grandmother. The colors you should use
for your paper are: White, off-white,
off-off-white. Do you see a trend? Also, spend a
few extra dollars and buy GOOD, QUALITY paper.
Forget the floppy, wimpy copy paper. Get some 24
lb paper with a watermark. It will make a much
better impression ? and that is what this whole
process is all about, right?
If you want to get an interview, you're going to
have to present yourself as a professional with
a strong attention to detail and willing to go
the extra mile to ensure success.
Doesn't it make sense to present your
credentials in the most amazing way possible so
that the employer can't help but call you for an
interview?
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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.
Carla Vaughan is the owner of
Professional-Resume-Example.com, a web site
devoted to assisting candidates in the
job-search process. She holds a B.S. in Business
from Southern Illinois University and has
authored a book titled, “The Do-It-Yourself
Resume Kit” soon to be available on her site.
Source:
Job-Interview-Advice.net
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