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Resume Tips
Ten Winning Resume Suggestions

  1. Keep It Factual
    Don't stretch the truth. If you can't do the job or if you haven't done the job, don't paint a picture of yourself that real life won't support. Even if you can make it through the interview and get the job, employers can, and have, terminated employees for falsifying resume information. Consider the consequences of embellishment or misrepresentation carefully.

  2. Keep It Brief
    The higher up you are in an organization the more you are required to multitask and to delegate. The more you are required to delegate, the less time you will have to spend on any one issue personally. Consider this when you write your resume. You will only get the briefest of time when reviewed by a manager. Try to present your value, the Who, What, Where, Why, How and When of you, within the first 30 seconds.

  3. Keep It Simple
    Avoid run on sentences. Keep the structure simple. Length loses the reader. Brevity becomes you. Keep to the point and get to the point quickly. No one has time for blatant blarney.

  4. Keep it Cold (objective)
    Avoid weightless words that fail to enlighten the reader and provide no value. Words like "results oriented" don't add value and provide the reader with little insight into your unique skill set. Words that are overused, trite and self congratulatory should not be part of your qualifications. Keep in mind that the person reviewing your resume has read hundreds of resumes and has pretty much seen every variation of self embellishment under the sun.

  5. Keep It in Your Language
    If you wouldn't say it in a normal conversation or in an interview, you shouldn't use it in a resume. Speak from the heart, not from the dictionary.

  6. Keep It Current
    Your resume is not a tombstone. It isn't chiseled in granite. It is a reflection of who you are. As you change, so too should your resume. The time to update your resume isn't when your job is in peril and it isn't when you find out about a salary freeze. A good organization will give you periodic performance reviews. You owe it to yourself to do the same. At the conclusion of a major project or a major change in the organization you should take the time to update your resume.

  7. Keep it Focused
    Make it your job to know a great deal about the organization you intend to honor with your resume. Know their needs, know their history, know who is hiring, know what their future looks like and most importantly, know how you can help them. Tailor your resume to highlight your skills and experience which address these needs!

  8. Keep It Directed
    Be certain it is addressed to the correct audience. The correct audience is the individual or business unit that actually has the budget to hire you. It is rarely Human Resources. If the position description does not name a specific person then use "Dear Hiring Manager" in your resume cover letter.

  9. Keep It Powerful
    Use words that create an image. Understand the power of words. If they don't help you stand out, they are wasted.

  10. Keep It Clean
    Avoid over-usage of bolding, italicizing, exclamation marks, underling, etc. When translated to an ASCII file it looks like a broken jig saw puzzle.
 
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6FigureJobs.com - Executive Jobs for Vice Presidents, Directors, Managers and C-Level professionals.


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