How do you choose your leisure reading? When you read the newspaper, visit a website, or pick up a magazine what grabs you attention? Is it a compelling headline? An interesting picture, or some other graphic? Do you scan the article or do a deep-dive for total comprehension? How do you decide which route to take? I would imagine that time pressures hold sway.
Consider spending your day wading through a mountain of resumes, hoping to find a handful of candidates that match your specs? I recruit for a living and I find that thought oppressive. Would you like to sift through boring, poorly formatted resumes all day. Madness! It could drive one to drink! No one wants to read boring material. It is no different for a recruiter. To be productive we scan resumes and put them in piles. You want your resume to land in the right pile, the “I have got to call this guy” pile. If you want your resume to stand out, you must internalize that thought.- Provide a short Executive Summary at the beginning to set the stage.
- Executive Summary – Executive Level, Industry Segment, Functional Discipline
- Use paragraph format for Executive Summary, and Job Responsibilities.
- Italics for job responsibilities will make the resume more interesting to read.
- Use bullet-point format for Accomplishments and Skill Sets.
- Use bold and underline functions to make headers stand out.
- Give a brief description of each employer and the purpose of each position.
Think like a marketing professional. These folks are tasked with creating interest by communicating the benefits of their brand. After all, isn’t your resume about communicating your message? Tell your story with high impact language in an interesting format. The words you choose must stimulate an immediate emotional response. They must be powerful and precise, evoking a sense of energy and excitement. Eliminate trite buzz words! Buzz words are buzz killers!
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Jim Weber, President
New Century Dynamics Executive Search
www.newcenturydynamics.com



