5 Tips to Ensuring Your Resume Produces
Top Results
By
Teena Rose, a highly endorsed, highly referred resume
writer with Resume to Referral. You can reach her at (937) 325-2149 or
via her website. Teena provides daily job alerts — which many of her
clients love! Also, act quickly to get a free copy of her book, Get Job Leads Fast Using Twitter.
A professionally written resume is
an important component to any job search. The overall effectiveness of the
document however depends on certain variables; such as how/how often the resume
is used, the types of marketing/submission strategies, and the continued relevance
of the resume’s content. Concentrating on these important aspects (and others)
ensures the resume will produce the all-important interviews that we strive for.
You see the resume one way, but hiring managers see it
differently.
1. Use your resume as it is geared — not
how you see it.
You see the resume one way, but hiring
managers see it differently. It’s true. You quickly spot all the things that
match the hiring company’s job requirements, but all too often, hiring managers
painstakingly look for those skills that you see so easily. For example, think
about an experienced purchasing agent. Hiring managers will only see purchasing
skills in the resume, unless the proper steps have been taken to gear the
resume appropriately. Crossing over into another career is doable, but
certainly a move that requires preparation from you — and definitely for the resume
as well.
2. Persistent actions, not blind
submission.
Taking a persistent and consistent
approach to submitting your resume is one aspect of job search that few
jobseekers take seriously – not necessarily because of the inability to be
assertive, but rather due to the large task at hand. Job searching can be
exhaustive, and individuals tend to lose initiative after receiving any degree
of rejection. Submitting one or two resumes every day or so allows the
jobseeker to remain active in their search, yet allow enough time to focus on
other aspects of their lives.
Job searching can be exhaustive, and
individuals tend to lose initiative after receiving
any degree of rejection.
Need tips for focusing your job-search efforts? Start by building a
list of industry-specific employers that best match your skill set and current career
focus. Avoid applying to anyone and everyone — what some might call a spitball
approach. Create a new list each week, submit your resume and introduction
cover letter accordingly, and follow-up with each at some point over the next
5-8 business days to ensure receipt of your submission. By conducting follow-up,
you put yourself on the phone with a company rep, which also enables you to answer
any questions they may have about your skill set, resume, or whatever.
3. Add an eye-catching, action-provoking
introduction to your resume.
Marketing professionals will tell
you that the best marketing material has a “hook”: something that will make the
reader take action. Relative to job searching, a hook should cause the reader
to call for an interview, or possibly discuss your candidacy further with a
colleague.
There is no clear definition of what
a hook actually can or cannot be, but it should answer two or more of the
following:
(a) How is this
candidate different from the others applying?
(b) Does this
candidate’s resume clearly outline and focus upon the company’s requirements,
rather than cloud this information with irrelevant content?
(c) Does this candidate possess the educational requirements specified?
(d) Does the candidate possess the minimum knowledge, skills, and abilities to
satisfy the company’s short- and long-term goals?
4. Your resume should be a “key.”
Envision each available position as
a door lock, and your resume as the key that allows you passage. The resume
should be a certain shape and size for the first lock, but require modification
or a completely new design for the next.
No surprise, job roles vary from one
company to the next, and are rarely identical. Some require a straightforward
set of job duties, while other companies need their employees to “wear many
hats.” Take a secretary, for example. The job responsibilities for a secretary vary
tremendously. Modifying the top section of the resume is generally the only
upkeep required to ensure the resume continuously fits the lock of the door
you’re trying to enter. Yet other modifications, such as rearrangement of
categories/headers, replacing certain keywords or key phrases, and the restructuring
of employment details, may be some of the additional changes that are needed. The
idea is to continuously customize the resume to “fit” the employer’s point of
entry.
5. Present your resume to your network —
both online and offline.
Networking is still the
tried-and-true king relevant to an effective job-search campaign. Today,
however, job seekers are taking their campaigns online due to the ease of
researching hiring companies, locating job openings using only 2 or 3 keywords in
their favorite search engine, and resume submission.
“ ... spitballing your efforts has
proven time and time again to be a huge waste of time.”
Although establishing and building
an online network can be time-consuming, spitballing
your efforts has proven time and time again to be a huge waste of time. Experts
believe jobseekers that don’t leverage their networks ultimately spend extra
time, effort, and resources to produce the same results that come from networking.
Taking a serious approach to your
job search campaign is mandatory to securing a favorable return from the resume.
Avoiding some of the largest pitfalls that many job seekers
fall into, will enable you to conduct a strategic and effective campaign that’s
designed to get a job in the least amount of time.