My name is Andre Plessis. I am a REALTOR® with Keller Williams® Realty. My mission is to empower and educate people so they learn how to buy and sell real estate correctly to build long-term wealth. The Wealth Creation Team is a team of experienced Estate Planning Attorneys, Tax Advisors, Mortgage Planners and REALTORS®. The WCT is a group of carefully selected professionals who work with individuals to help them eliminate debt, stay out of debt, create and manage their wealth!
Sunday, August 28, 2011
How to Avoid Writing a Resume That Will Disqualify YOU For a Job
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 13.9 million Americans were unemployed as of last month. And according to the jobs website CareerBuilder, a lot of them are going to stay that way if they keep sending out terrible resumes.
This week, CareerBuilder announced the results of its annual survey of more than 2,600 employers nationwide. Nearly half (45 percent) of the human resource managers they polled said they spend, on average, less than one minute reviewing a resume.
That’s a pretty small window for you to impress a boss. Sometimes it takes less than a minute to dispose of a resume. Here are some actual resume lines that those HR managers said doomed an applicant in mere seconds…
“Candidate said the more you paid him, the harder he worked.”
“Candidate was fired from different jobs, but included each one as a reference.”
“Candidate said he just wanted an opportunity to show off his new tie.”
“Candidate listed her dog as reference.”
“Candidate listed the ability to do the moonwalk as a special skill.”
“Candidates – a husband and wife looking to job share – submitted a co-written poem.”
“Candidate included ‘versatile toes’ as a selling point.”
“Candidate said that he would be a ‘good asset to the company,’ but failed to include the et in the word asset.”
“Candidate’s email address on the resume had shakinmybootie in it.”
“Candidate included that she survived a bite from a deadly aquatic animal.”
“Candidate used first name only.”
“Candidate asked, ‘Would you pass up an opportunity to hire someone like this? I think not.’”
“Candidate insisted that the company pay him to interview with them because his time was valuable.”
“Candidate shipped a lemon with resume, stating “I am not a lemon.’”
“Candidate included that he was arrested for assaulting his previous boss.”
Talk about making an impression to a possible future boss!
So what can you do?
Write a resume, not a biography. You’ve probably led an interesting life, but your next employer only wants to hear about the parts that matter to him. “Only list experience that’s relevant to the job description,”
Summarize. Since you only get a minute of someone’s time. Replace the cliched “objective” with a “professional summary recapping your relevant experience in one or two sentences.” As with everything else on the resume.
“Keep your descriptions to the point and trim out any unnecessary words.”
Read it again and often. Needless to say, if an HR manager sees a spelling mistake in your resume, it’s all over for you. “A lot of hiring managers will toss any resume that contains spelling, grammar or formatting errors, regardless of your past experience.
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