Advertisement
It can be daunting to write a killer resume. It?s the first impression a hiring manager will have of you and your only chance to compel that person to invite you in for an interview. Too many people focus solely on resume structure and buzz words, allowing sloppy editing to curtail their chances of scoring an interview. You can have all of the right ingredients?experience, skills, education?and still not hear back from companies because your resume isn?t edited well. We all make mistakes, but in a tight job market when employers can afford to be choosy, they?re not going to green light a resume with two spelling errors over one with zero. The tips below can help you put the finishing touches on your resume and give you a leg up in the hiring process.
Tip #1: Read it Out Loud
Not because the hiring manager will, but because reading a document aloud?word for word?is one of the best ways to spot common grammatical errors. It forces you to really pay attention to everything on the page, helping bring to light mistakes like subject-verb agreement, which will hopefully sound ?off? to your ear; words that were left out or mistakenly inserted during rounds of revisions; or any inconsistencies with dates or job descriptions.
It?s also a great way to hunt for mistakes that aren?t caught by your computer?s spell check. You would be amazed at how many human resource professionals receive resumes from experienced ?mangers? (rather than managers).
Lastly, reading your resume out loud can help you get a feel for whether your resume is too long, which is much more common than one that?s too short. Many people think that longer equals better, but it simply tells readers that you don?t know what?s important or how to write concisely?not exactly a great introduction. If you get to the end and think, ?That took longer than I thought it would,? you might want to think about tightening it up a bit.
Tip #2: Don?t Leave Room For Doubt
Your resume needs to be concise, but it shouldn?t be so bare that you leave questions in the mind of the hiring manager?or worse yet, a bad taste in her mouth. When it comes to abbreviations or acronyms, the rule of thumb is ?when in doubt, spell it out.? Extremely common business-related terms like CEO or HR are fine, but anything that gives you even a moment?s hesitation should be spelled out?especially in a job title. One hiring professional recently complained about the number of resumes she sees with ?ass. manager? as a job title. It?s pretty clear that writing out ?assistant? is a classier move.
Worse than that, however, is the possibility that someone on the receiving end of your resume isn?t familiar with the acronyms or abbreviations you use. Even if you assume correctly that everyone in your industry knows what TSR means, the human resources professional who first looks at your resume may not. And if he doesn?t know that producing a high Total Shareholder Return is a good thing, he might move on to someone who takes the additional three seconds to spell it out for him.
Tip #3: Wait a Day
This tip is similar to the advice given to jilted lovers who want to mail an angry letter to their ex: sleep on it. No matter how many times you review your resume the day you finish it, it?s wise to take another look at it the following day. After you?ve read the same material over and over, you begin to lose the ability to pick out flaws, but when your eyes are fresh, you may be amazed at what you find. Similarly, always ask a trusted friend to look over your resume before sending it. No matter how firm your grasp of grammar, there?s always someone you know who has a firmer grasp. That?s the person you want to review it.
Related Videos :
- Joyce Carol Oates On Writing Characters
Complete video at: fora.tv Critically acclaimed author Joyce Carol Oates discusses how a writer develops realistic characters, using examples from her novel “The Gravedigger' s Daughter.” —– Joyce Carol Oates talks about “The Gravedigger' s Daughter.” A family desperate to escape Nazi Germany settles in upstate New York, where the father is demeaned by the only job he can get: gravedigger an cemetery caretaker. What follows is a tale of unspeakable tragedy, - Escape The Fate The Structure Falls Lyrics
Lyrics: Save the scars Hide your face I' ve done Read your mind Well, my perception on deception And this will to lie is changing It' s ripping me and tempting me To give you this gun But all the time that you have lied I' ve known what you done So save the scars and hide your face Keep your form and keep your pace Don' t lose control, - Terence Tao Structure and Randomness in the Prime Numbers UCLA
Lecture for a general audience: Terence Tao is UCLA' s Collins Professor of Mathematics, and the first UCLA professor to win the prestigious Fields Medal. Less than a month after winning the Fields Medal, Tao was named a MacArthur Fellow. The following month, Tao was named one of “The Brilliant 10″ scientists by Popular Science magazine, which called him “Math' s Great Uniter” and said that “to Tao, the traditional boundaries between different mathematical - Soilwork Structure Divine
Song: Structure Divine Artist: Soilwork Album: A Predator' s Portrait lyrics: Cause I can' t find pleasure anywhere, this life is strangling me if I would turn myself inside out would I find peace of mind, would I find peace of mind? And when the silence remains And all the fields stays the same It isn' t different from the power that it holds Now, - The World s Smallest Writing
The World' s Smallest Writing (January 29, 2009) Stanford physicists have written and stored the University' s initials, “S” and “U, ” in patterns of electron waves, creating the world' s smallest writing. The researchers have reclaimed the bragging rights for smallest writing, first claimed by Stanford in 1985 and lost to IBM in 1990. Stanford University: www.stanford.edu Story from Stanford News Service: news-service.stanford.edu Stanford
