Success Factors for Your Resume
You know you're good...real good. The problem, though, is that
you are struggling to demonstrate just how good you are on paper.
Ah...the resume. If you've ever written one you know what a
challenging task it can be.
The Gregg Reference Manual tells us some fundamental facts about
resumes:
* The purpose of your resume is to get you an employment
meeting. An interview. Your resume will not get you a job.
* Your resume is not a medium for telling prospective employers
about your long-term goals and aspirations. It is where you
appeal to their hiring motivations by demonstrating what you can
do for them, communicating the experience you have acquired and
skills you have developed.
With these basic concepts in mind, let's summarize several other
elements that your contemporary resume must include:
R = Review of your qualifications E = Essential information only
S = Showcase your value U = You are Unique! M = Market yourself
E = Effectively gets you noticed
-------------------------------------------- R = Review of your
qualifications -------------------------------------------- What
skills, education, or experience (paid or unpaid) do you have
that make you the ideal candidate for the opportunity, industry,
or career you are pursuing? These data bits are the building
blocks of any resume. They are absolute musts.
Most self-written resumes do a pretty decent job of listing
skills and education, but fail miserably in the Experience
section. More on how to address this challenge when we get to
the "S" below.
---------------------------------------- E = Essential
information only ---------------------------------------- Your
resume should not be a voluminous listing of everything you have
done, everywhere you have done it, and every club or association
you've ever been affiliated with. Chisel your copy down to
content that is relevant to your target job/career path.
Suppose you are a marketing professional. Your memberships in
the American Marketing Association, the Direct Marketing
Association, and the Public Relations Society of America belong
on your resume.
Your memberships in the local dog trainers club and the American
Dog Owners Associaiton can clearly be left off (unless you are
applying for a marketing position with the Humane Society).
------------------------------------ S = Showcase your value
------------------------------------ Value. Employers want to
know specifically what value you can bring to their
organization. If you earn an hourly wage, you are not paid by
the hour -- you are paid by the VALUE that you bring to that
hour. If you are salaried, you don't get paid by the month --
you are compensated for the VALUE that you bring to that month.
One of the most effective ways to communicate value on your
resume is to address the burning question, "Why should we hire
you?" You must identify what specific contributions (that is,
verifiable accomplishments) you have made at previous employers.
This critical information is proof that you can do the same at
your next job.
Showcasing you unique accomplishments is simultaneously simple
and complex. It is simple because the best contributions are
somehow related to the bottom line (money, profits). The
challenge lies in how to reframe what you've done relative to
increased profits, reduced costs, or productivity enhancements.
How can your resume show that you've helped previous
organizations solve a specific problem, be more competitive,
expand business, attract new customers, or retain existing ones?
---------------------------------- U = You are Unique!
---------------------------------- Your resume must be unique in
content and in format. The information will be unique because,
as mentioned above, you will have pinpointed those
accomplishments that will set you apart from other applicants.
Unique formatting means not using those templates that came
packaged with your word-processing software! A cookie- cutter
resume will not do justice to you or your career. Bookstores are
full of excellent resources with samples of compelling resumes
to ignite your creativity.
------------------------------------ M = Market yourself
------------------------------------ A superior resume utilizes
proven marketing concepts such as headlines (rather than boring
objective statements). It stresses the benefits you have to
offer (how you can contribute), not just features (what you were
responsible for).
Catch the attention of prospective employers on the first page
with a powerfully written Profile or Qualifications Summary.
Resumes are initially scanned for roughly 15 to 30 seconds. If
you've lost the reader's interest at the top of the first page,
he/she will not read further. Your resume will go in the "no"
pile.
------------------------------------------------ E = Effectively
gets you noticed
------------------------------------------------ There is no
such thing as a "good" or "bad" resume. There are only
"effective" or "ineffective" ones. By weaving the concepts above
into your resume, you can increase your odds of getting noticed
by those with the authority to recommend you for the next step
in the hiring process -- a telephone, teleconference, or
in-person interview.
You know you're good...real good. You are now challenged to
prove it on your resume.