5 Things Your Résumé Is Not

Sep 06, 2015 19:29




я курсивом выделил важные словосочетания. Ask yourself what a résumé is and isn't? Fundamentally, it is important to recognize that your résumé is your marketing document. Its purpose is to garner enough interest in you to get an employer to think: "This person may well have the capacity to do the work associated with the job that needs to be filled." And once an employer has reviewed your résumé and initiated contact with you for a phone or in-person interview, it has successfully fulfilled its purpose.

When you speak with recruiters or others who regularly review résumés, you'll learn that the vast majority of people have ill-conceived notions of what makes a résumé compelling. * know - find out - learn - get to know - recognize. разница

To help you evaluate your résumé in terms of today's best practices, bear in mind all the things that a résumé is not:

1. Your résumé is not your autobiography. It is not the story of your whole life. It is a business document that should not include a picture of yourself or personal information about your marital status, children, sexual identity or age. Your political leanings and religious beliefs or affiliations should only be included if they are relevant to the particular job for which you seek consideration.

You need not include every job you ever had or everything you ever did or were responsible for at those jobs. Typically, you don't need to go back more than 10 to 15 years on a résumé and should make a logical cutoff depending on your work history. While everything you claim on your résumé must be accurate, there is no rule that says it has to be all-inclusive. You can simply state under you earliest listed job: "Details of prior employment history are available upon request."

2. Your résumé is not a list of your job descriptions and responsibilities. Perhaps the most common résumé mistake is making it the record of the things you were supposed to do in your various roles without including how you went about fulfilling those responsibilities or what results you achieved. * 3 значения слова SUPPOSED

3. Your résumé is not about your aspirations. Put simply, employers won't be impressed to read that they hold the key to the job of your dreams. On the other hand, they will be impressed when you show them how and why you are the candidate of their dreams.
Employers care about what you have to offer and the value you can contribute to the company you seek to join. That's why objective statements are "out" and personal branding statements are "in" at the top of well-crafted résumés.

4. Your résumé is not an employment application. "What? Of course, it is!" you exclaim. "It's how I tell an employer that I want to be considered for a job." You wonder why it isn't an application. * I wonder - I ask myself. разница

Many companies will have their own application forms that candidates fill out at or around the time of their first in-person interview. By signing the document, you often consent to background or other checks and attest that all the information you give about prior employment and anything else on the form is truthful. You thereby acknowledge that if unfavorable information is revealed, or if the employer discovers that any information you provide is untruthful, you may be immediately excluded from further consideration, or fired if you have already begun to work at the company.

Your résumé may be fairly considered as the grounds for which you seek to be considered. As such, everything you include in it must be entirely accurate. But it doesn't constitute in and of itself a formal job application document.

5. Your résumé is not a list of your actions. A functional résumé "focuses on your skills and experience, rather than on your chronological work history," writes Alison Doyle, job search expert for About.com.

The problem with this kind of format, however, is that it muddles what you did, where you did it and when you did it. That makes it difficult for decision-makers to determine your overall career development. Moreover, because people who are fighting age discrimination or returning to the workforce after an extended absence often favor this format, it raises a red flag about what you are trying to mask by not giving a simple, straightforward, chronological story.

Your résumé is ultimately your unique story of professional experience including challenges, what you did and what you attained. It tells the story of a discrete set of work activities, the skills you've attained and the education and credentials that enable you to perform as a valued employee.

When you choose relevant facts to include and weave them together in a way that shows you're the answer to an employer's needs, you'll stimulate interest in what you have to offer. At that point, you'll most likely get that all-important invitation to begin a dialogue.

Happy hunting!

(с) Arnie Fertig, MPA, is passionate about helping his Jobhuntercoach clients advance their careers by transforming frantic "I'll apply to anything" searches into focused hunts for "great fit" opportunities. He brings to each client the extensive knowledge he gained when working in HR staffing and managing his boutique recruiting firm. Источник

вот так нужно набираться новых слов - выделяя слова в контексте:
* Три причины, почему не запоминается больше пары сотен английских слов
* 14 самых креативных резюме * О каких хобби лучше молчать на собеседовании
* 20 вещей в вашем резюме, которые следует избегать

как писать письма на английском, простые и легкие тексты на английском

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