[TriLUG] recommendations for professional resume help
Chris Bullock
cgbullock at gmail.com
Sun Aug 29 12:04:25 EDT 2004
I have a family member that works in HR at a very large employer in
the Raleigh area, and I asked the same questions a few months ago this
is the reply she gave me:
-------begin snip--------
"Have you thought about having your headings for Experience,
Education, and Certifications on different lines? This way the indent
on your bullets wouldn't be so much and there would be more balance.
You might even be able to have your title, then tab and have your
company, then tab and have the dates or something like that."
"As far as resumes go, I think a lot of people are starting to break the
"rule" on that. I'd say to keep it to two pages. I still try to keep
1, but sometimes, that's just completely impossible. No one tosses them
if they're over 1 page. I'd also keep the format in bullets, not
paragraph. No one wants to read a paragraph to get just an overview."
-------end snip-------
hope that helps,
Chris
On Fri, 27 Aug 2004 00:51:56 -0400, Tanner Lovelace
<lovelace at wayfarer.org> wrote:
> Michael Hrivnak said the following on 8/26/04 6:13 PM:
>
> > 1. Be clear and concise. One page only. Make sure it is very well organized
> > so that on first glance, the reader instantly understands what information is
> > where.
>
> I don't think keeping it on one page is as important as being well organized.
> If you need to, continue it onto a second page. I wouldn't go past that if
> I could because with just two pages you can do front and back but with more
> you have to deal with staples and the potential of losing the second page, etc..
>
> > 2. List accomplishments instead of responsibilities. For example: "Software
> > engineer for XYZ Inc. responsible for designing lots of software." vs
> > "Software engineer for XYZ Inc.-- designed ____, _____, and _____ software
> > suites which turned record-breaking profit."
> >
> > 3. Your resume gets a maximum of 30-45 seconds review. Stick to what's
> > important, and if you have any differentiating characteristics, make sure
> > they stand out! Don't be afraid to put key words in bold, even mid-sentence.
>
> Along with this, put a section at the top of the resume highlighting things
> you want to bring out. For an example, see my resume: O:-)
>
> http://wtl.wayfarer.org/resume.html
>
> This allows you to draw out things you want a potential employer to see.
>
> > Contact info across the top, with name in big print in upper-left corner.
> >
> > Start with an "Objective", and make sure it fits with the job to which you are
> > applying! You should review and likely modify this before each use.
>
> Having an "Objective", I think, isn't necessarily a good idea. Why give
> a reason to reject you (i.e. if you don't match the position). I much
> prefer having an "Overview" section where you can draw out items of interest.
>
> > Other sections to consider, in order:
> >
> > Curent Status
> > Accomplishments
> > Work Experience (chronological order from most recent)
> > Degrees/Licenses/Professional Associations
> > References (try to pick people from different parts of your career. If two
> > references know each other well, keep looking.)
>
> Other things to add:
>
> Academic Experience (if you've done interesting projects in school, especially
> grad school)
>
> Personal (if you speak a foreign language, have a license in something, add it)
>
> Open Source Experience (have you worked on an OS project? Put it down...)
>
> > Find some examples online. Particularly look for resumes of people who are
> > responsible for hiring! I'll post mine later if I can dig it up. Post back
> > here when you have something or if you have questions.
>
> I'd also suggest looking into XML Resume: http://xmlresume.sourceforge.net/
> And, go to your local library and check out "What Color is Your Parachute?"
>
> Good luck,
> Tanner
>
>
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