Resumes:
The Write Way to Present Yourself
COMPONENTS OF A PROFESSIONAL RESUME
1. Contact Information
Make it easy to contact you
either by phone, mail or e-mail. Don't make the recruiter track
you down. Note: make sure your voicemail message is
professional. You don't want a recruiter to get the wrong
impression from a silly message on the recording. Do not include
personal information, such as marital status, here or anywhere
else on your resume.
2. Objective/Title
Some experts believe that
including an objective may limit your chances of obtaining an
interview; if your objective doesn't match the recruiter's needs
at the time, you may miss out on a golden opportunity. On the
flip side, a career objective is useful in communicating that
you are proactively managing your career. You know what you
want, why not say it? We suggest taking a broad approach:
Instead of writing a sentence like "Seeking a career
opportunity as a Marketing Executive…," try a simple
title after your contact info, simply "Marketing
Executive."
3. Summary Statement
First, include your title and
years of experience. Second, list special skills. Third, talk
about your character traits or work style. Remember that this is
a summary; it should only be 2-3 sentences long.
Example: "Financial
Accountant with over 10 years' experience with two Fortune 500
companies. Technical skills include P & L, budgeting,
forecasting and variance reporting. Bilingual in Spanish and
English. Self-starter who approaches every project in a
detailed, analytical manner."
4. Professional Experience
List each position held in
reverse chronological order, going back at least ten years. If
you held multiple positions within the same company, be sure to
list all of them - you want the recruiter to see how you've
progressed. Concentrate on the description of the position -
that's the meat & potatoes.
The body of the position
description has two parts:
1.
a description of your responsibilities and
2. your
accomplishments
Feature-Accomplishment-Benefit
Use the FAB format to organize
your skills and sell your accomplishments to a recruiter.
Feature:
the actual responsibilities.
Accomplishment:
the performing of responsibilities.
Benefit: how
your performance affected your employer.
Example: Manufacturing Engineer
- Feature: Create and
implement a Certified Inspector program
- Accomplishment: Reduced
the number of parts inspected upon final assembly
- Benefit: Decreased
inspection costs by 45%
FAB Statement: Created and
implemented a Certified Inspector program that reduced the
number of parts inspected upon final assembly. Inspection costs
were reduced by 45%.
Situation-Solution-Outcome
Consider this format to
demonstrate your problem-solving capabilities:
Situation:
What situation was your company facing?
Solution:
What did you do to solve the problem?
Outcome: What
was the outcome?
Example: VP of Business Development
- Situation: Company wanted to
grow non-government business
- Solution: Created and
implemented commercial market penetration strategy
- Outcome: Increased revenues in
excess of $100 million
SSO Statement: Company
wanted to grow non-government sector business. Developed
business that resulted in the capture of commercial sales with
increased revenue in excess of $100 million.
Top 12
accomplishments that most interest employers
- Increased revenues
- Saved money
- Increased efficiencies
- Cut overhead
- Increased sales
- Improved workplace safety
- Purchasing accomplishments
- New products/new lines
- Improved record keeping
process
- Increased productivity
- Successful advertising
campaign
- Effective budgeting
Other resume components include:
Education, Professional training, Affiliations/Appointments
Licenses, Technical skills and Languages. Approach these items
from the viewpoint of the recruiter or employer: How will these
skills benefit the company?
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