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Your Resume
This may seem
like an unimportant thing during an interview, but this is the sole
reason why you may get that interview so you should be prepared with
a well written resume.
You should
tailor your resume to highlight the qualifications, work experience
and any education that you’ve had that best represents the type of
work you are applying for. You should also include any other work
experience that you’ve had, as well as any accomplishments that you
have made in your field.
You may also
want to dress up your resume to let it stand out a bit. A nice
border is an elegant way to make your resume stand out without being
a distraction to the information within it.
Of course
there also quite a few things that recruiters hate to see on resumes
as well. Many people do not think that recruiters really go all the
way through a resume, but they really do. Recruiters have certain
pet peeves when it comes to reading a resume. I’ve included a list
of some of the pet peeves that you should avoid when putting your
resume together. These are the things that recruiters hate to see.
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Hiding or not
including vital information on a resume is like death. A
recruiter needs to see all of your important information without
having to search for it.
-
Major gaps in
your employment history leave a recruiter wondering about your
work ethic. Be prepared to answer questions if you have such
gaps in yours.
-
Summaries that
are hard to follow and understand are annoying to recruiters.
Keep your summary easy and brief.
-
Use easy and
simple fonts. Fancy fonts and colors are not eye catching in the
manner that you likely wanted it to be. Yours will become to
how-to on making resume errors.
-
Avoid writing
your resume as a narrative or in the first or third person. It
is really irritating for a recruiter, and comes off as arrogant
and/or egotistical.
-
Pictures
and/or graphics on a resume is distracting to a recruiter.
Things like that will likely get your resume tossed out without
a glance.
-
Needlessly
adding objectives and introductions on your resume bores
recruiters. They know what your objective is, and your resume is
not meant to be a novel.
-
Lying or
putting misleading information on your resume is a major no-no.
There are always ways for a recruiter to check up on you and
many do, so don’t lie. Getting caught in a lie on a resume just
says that you can’t be trusted.
-
Adding
unnecessary information on a resume like your hobbies is
completely useless. You should save that section to describe any
accomplishments that you have made in your field.
-
Sending a
resume that doesn’t match the type of job that you are applying
for is extremely irritating to a recruiter. You are wasting
their time.
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Using overly
long paragraphs in a resume will get yours tossed aside. It is
harder for the recruiter to read and makes the task take too
long.
-
Resumes that
are more than two pages will not be fully read by a recruiter.
That’s just the way it is.
-
Dating the
information in your work history in the wrong order makes your
resume harder to follow. (Work history should be listed with
most current jobs at the top)
-
Resumes that
have too much detail when talking about your previous duties are
a waste of your time. Duties are generally just sifted through.
They are rarely given very much attention, just enough to give
the recruiter an idea of what you have done in the past.
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Spelling and
grammatical errors just proves that you are not very keen on
details.
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