Tuesday, November 12, 2019
10 Mistakes Youre Making on Your Resume
10 Mistakes Youâre Making on Your Resume 10 Mistakes Youâre Making on Your Resume Chances are good that youâre making a few of these common mistakes on your resume. How many are you guilty of?1. Relying on outdated sources of advice. Resume conventions have changed dramatically in the last 20 years. If youâre reading a book that insists you use an objective on your resume or that you canât exceed one page, chances are good that youâre reading something outdated (or listening to someone who hasnât hired recently).[See The Death of the One-Page Resume?]2. Including every job youâve ever had, no matter how irrelevant or long ago. A resume isnât meant to be an exhaustive accounting of every job youâve ever held. Itâs a marketing document designed to present you in the strongest, most compelling light. That means you donât need to include every job youâve ever had, or the part-time work you did on top of your regular job last year, or even your degree in an irrelevant field if you donât want to. You get to decide what you do and donât include. The only rule is that you canât make things up.3. Listing only job duties, rather than accomplishments. Resumes that really stand out go beyond what your job description was and instead answer this question: What did you accomplish in this job that someone else might not have?4. Including subjective descriptions. Your resume is for experience and accomplishments only. Itâs not the place for subjective traits, like âgreat leadership skillsâ or âcreative innovator.â Hiring managers generally ignore anything subjective that an applicant writes about herself, because so many peopleâs self-assessments are wildly inaccurate; theyâre looking for facts.5. Leaving out volunteer work. Sometimes during the course of an interview, I discover someone has highly relevant experience they didnât include on their resume because it was volunteer work and they thought it âdidnât count.â It counts! Your accomplishments are your accomplishments, even if you did the work âpro b onoâ rather than for pay.[See 9 Tips to Make Your Resume Stand Out.]6. Including inappropriate information. Information about your spouse or children, your height or weight, or your salary history doesnât belong on your resume. (And yes, people really do include these things.)7. Getting creative at the expense of clarity. If youâre thinking of trying something âcreativeâ with your resume, like unusual colors or a non-traditional design, make sure your desire to stand out isnât getting in the way of the whole point of resume design. Hereâs what most hiring managers want from a resume: a concise, easy-to-scan list of what youâve accomplished, organized chronologically by position, plus any particularly notable skills, all presented in a format that they can quickly scan and get the highlights. Thatâs it. Creativity, while a nice trait, doesnât trump those requirements, so make sure whatever format you use works in those ways.8. Having tiny inconsistencies. If you w ant to come across as someone who takes care in your work and is attentive to detail, pay attention to the small things: Do you have periods after some bullet points but not after others? Do you use consistent verb tenses throughout? Do you randomly start using a different font or type size? These things seem nitpicky, but even small inconsistencies can jump out to an attentive reader.9. Sending your resume without a cover letter. If youâre applying for jobs without including a compelling cover letter- customized to the specific opportunity- youâre missing out on one of the most effective ways to grab an employerâs attention. A cover letter is your opportunity to make a compelling case for yourself as a candidate, totally aside from whatâs in your resume.[See 5 Job-Hunting Ideas You Haven't Tried.]10. Believing every piece of resume advice anyone gives you. Yes, it may sound funny coming from me, but the reality is that you can give your resume to 10 different people who are all qualified to give resume advice, and youâll get 10 different sets of recommendations: Use this font, use that font, donât go over one page, two pages are fine, objectives are required, objectives are silly- it can be enough to drive you crazy.The reality is, there are few hard and fast universal rules aside from the obvious (no typos, no illegible fonts, no 10-page rambles, no inappropriate sharing of your personal life). But there are trends- conventions that are gaining majority support. For instance, most hiring managers agree that functional resumes are frustrating and possibly hiding something. And two-page resumes have become completely acceptable these days. But even these trends arenât flat-out rules. The best you can do is to get a feel for the types of things people care about and why and make choices that make sense for you and the job you want.
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