Properly
Updated Résumés Rise to The Top of Candidate Pile
-Michele
Angello
(This article was used as source material and
quotes for an article written by Doug McPherson for the Denver Post.
That article was published on 11/11/07.)
The first step when updating your résumé is to look
at your job history. Do you have jobs listed that go back more than
10 years? If you do, you can start by getting rid of your oldest
information.
A good place to get started writing about your current job is to
see if your employer has a job description for your position. You
can mine it for your responsibilities since these documents are
usually hyper descriptive.
If you don’t have a job description from your employer, think
about what you do on a typical day and use that to get the juices
flowing. Add in any special projects or monthly responsibilities.
Use action verbs to describe all of your responsibilities. Action
verbs are words like inspected, adapted, implemented, created, and
produced.
Writing a description of your job responsibilities is a balancing
act. You need to find the right balance of detail, since too much
makes for a long and unreadable résumé, and too little
won’t do you justice. A good general rule is to aim for a
job description that is no longer than 2 inches on the page.
Once you have a job description, move on to your accomplishments.
Quantify these as much as possible with percentages, sales figures,
increases, and decreases.
Quick Tip
Always keep documentation
of company sales or improvements that resulted from your work,
letters of appreciation, awards, recognition, and good performance
evaluations. These documents will help you come up with strong
accomplishments for your résumé.
Check your summary of qualifications to make sure that it reflects
your current responsibilities, not just your last job on the resume.
Add in any key words or skills that you have that employers are
looking for now that you may not have highlighted in the past.
Then check over your old job descriptions. Did you do something
at your old jobs that you should emphasize now? Make sure to add
these in too.
Also check and make sure to include any new skills, technologies,
special projects, and certifications you have achieved since your
last update.
Make sure to revisit your résumé about once a year
and keep it updated. In these days of uncertainty and corporate
layoffs, it’s wise to have your résumé ready
to go at all times.
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