- Too long.
Most new graduates should restrict their resumes to one page. If you
have trouble condensing, get help from a technical or business writer or
a career center professional.
- Typographical, grammatical or spelling errors.
These errors suggest carelessness, poor education and/or lack of
intelligence. Have at least two people proofread your resume. Don't rely
on a computer's spell-checkers or grammar-checkers.
- Hard to read.
A poorly typed or copied resume looks unprofessional. Use a computer.
Use a plain typeface, no smaller than a 12-point font. Asterisks,
bullets, underlining, boldface type and italics should be used only to
make the document easier to read, not fancier. Again, ask a
professional's opinion.
- Too verbose
(using too many words to say too little). Do not use complete sentences
or paragraphs. Say as much as possible with as few words as possible.
A, an and the can almost always be left out. Be careful in your use of
jargon and avoid slang.
- Too sparse.
Give more than the bare essentials, especially when describing related
work experience, skills, accomplishments, activities, interests and club
memberships that will give employers desired information. Including
membership in the Society of Women Engineers, for example, would be
helpful to employers who wish to hire more women, yet cannot ask for
that information.
- Irrelevant information.
Customize each resume to each position you seek (when possible). Of
course, include all education and work experience, but emphasize only
relevant experience, skills, accomplishments, activities and hobbies. Do
not include marital status, age, sex, children, height, weight, health,
church membership, etc.
- Obviously generic.
Too many resumes scream, "I need a job—any job!" The employer needs to
feel that you are interested in that position with that company.
- Too snazzy.
Of course, use good quality bond paper, but avoid exotic types, colored
paper, photographs, binders and graphics. More and more companies are
scanning resumes into a database, so use white paper, black ink, plain
type, and avoid symbols, underlining or italics.
- Boring. Make
your resume as dynamic as possible. Begin every statement with an
action verb. Use active verbs, describing what you accomplished on the
job. Don't write what someone else told you to do; write what you did.
Take advantage of your rich vocabulary and avoid repeating words,
especially the first word in a section.
- Too modest. The resume showcases your qualifications in competition with the other applicants. Put your best foot forward without misrepresentation, falsification or arrogance.
type your search
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Top Ten Pitfalls of a Resume
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Resume
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