How to Improve Your Resume
Important Tips to Improve Your Resume (CV)
All it took was a few minor adjustments to turn the disheveled
teacher into "not a total Betty, but a vast improvement." The same
principle can be applied to your resume. Look at your resume: Would you
still be compelled to read it if it wasn't your own, or would the vast
array of typos, unusual fonts, long sentences and obscure language turn
you away?
While your resume may not be a full-on Monet (meaning, up close, it's a
big old mess), it may simply need some minor tweaking in order to get
noticed. Take these five small steps to see big result
- Spell check... the old-fashioned way.
Spelling and grammar errors can be the kiss of death for
resumes: They show employers that you don't pay attention to detail.
Computer spell-check programs don't always pick up these errors, so
make sure you proofread it yourself before handing it in. For
insurance and a fresh perspective, have a friend look it over, too.
- Put it in reverse chronological order
Organize your resume to reflect your most recent job at the top and
include dates of employment. Employers tend to prefer these over
functional resumes, which can be great if you're switching career
paths, but otherwise make it difficult to determine when you worked
where and can hide employment gaps.
- Simplify your language.
Keep your sentences short and
don't worry about fragments.
Leave out personal pronouns like "I," "my" and "me." Saying, "I
performed" this or "I demonstrated" that is redundant. Who else
would you be talking about if not yourself?
Omit the articles "a," "an" and "the." Instead of "Coordinated the
special events for the alumni association," simplify it to say,
"Coordinated alumni association special events."
Take out terms like "assisted in," "participated in," and "helped
with." If you assisted in managing client accounts, simply say,
"Managed client accounts." You can explain later what this role
entailed.
Change passive statements to active verbs. Saying "Coordinated
client meetings" instead of "Ensured client meetings were
coordinated" adds punch and clarity to a job description. Exclude
words like "responsibilities" and "duties" under job listings.
Your resume should focus on accomplishments, not tasks.
- Eliminate clutter.
Format your resume for consistency and easy reading. Bold, italicize
or underline important headlines (just don't do all three at once --
that's overkill). Create a bulleted list -- not a paragraph
formation -- for job descriptions Use a standard font like 11 point
Times New Roman or Arial.
Fancier fonts are not only harder to read, but they may become
garbled in an e-mail format.
Combine series' of short, odd jobs into one listing. (For example:
"1999-2002 Barista -- Village Cafe, Starbucks, Seattle's Best...")
- Read it aloud.
Reading your resume aloud will help you identify areas that need
improvement or clarification. If something doesn't sound right to
you, it won't sound right to a hiring manager
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