Sunday, June 14, 2020
5 Common Resume Mistakes Holding You Back And 5 Quick Fixes
5 Common Resume Mistakes Holding You Back â" And 5 Quick Fixes Last week, in a fit of pure joy and excitement over it being Friday, I decided to be extra generous and offer the first 10 Twitter followers and first 10 Facebook fans to respond a free resume review. The response was overwhelming, and within a few short minutes I had 20 respondents. After reviewing the resumes, what I took away from the experience is that too many job seekers are making the exact same resume mistakes over and over again. So ⦠in order to overcome these wildly popular, job-search-damaging mistakes, Iâm going to share with you the 5 most common resume mistakes I saw last week in the hope that youâll take a look at your own resume. And if you see any of these mistakes, fix them now ⦠before they do any further damage to your job search. Using Objective Statements Half of the resumes I reviewed contained generic and vague objective statements. âto obtain a position that will utilize my education and years of experience to grow and advance â¦â Or something to that effect. Studies show recruiters and employers spend 10 seconds or less in their initial review of your resume. A statement like the one above is not making use of the recruiterâs time; it is not telling them anything unique about you, why they should hire you, or why youâre different from everyone else that has the same statement on their resume. Quick Fix: Delete the objective statement, people! Itâs a waste of valuable space on your resume that could be put to better use communicating the value you offer the employerâ"and as a candidate, what sets you apart in a sea of job seekers who all look and sound alike. No Introduction or Professional Profile Then there were those who didnât include an objective statementâ"but didnât include anything at all! I was shocked to see half the resumes I reviewed contained no introduction, summary, profile, branding statement ⦠nothing! The resume jumped right into their degree or work experience. What is so damaging to your job search about this? You give the hiring manager no clue as to the type of position you want to obtain, what youâre qualified to do, and no summary of your experience. This means theyâll have to guess which position youâre applying for as well as the type of experience you have ⦠and theyâll have to go looking for it. So that initial 10 seconds they invest probably wonât be invested at all because theyâre going to have to go searching for all the information they need. Quick Fix: Market yourself! Use a job target/title at the top of the resume, include a branding statement, and create a 3- to 5-line career summary about yourself that includes major keywords and prominent successes. All Bullets ⦠All the Time I can assure you no one wants to read 20 bullets in a row. You will lose your audience after the 5th one. You know that expression, âeverything in moderationâ? That includes your resume too, folks. It should not be two pages of just bullets. Every resume I reviewed, save one, had an overabundance of bullet points that went on for pages. Quick Fix: Mix it up! Use paragraphs to summarize your experienceâ"and bullets to tout your accomplishments. Accomplishments Few and Far Between Every resume, save one (Iâm not making this up, people; when I say every resume but one, I mean it.), had bullet points that told me about duties and responsibilities. Only one person used any metrics within their resume to describe their accomplishments, successes, contributions, and results. But Jessica, what if I donât have any numbers or accomplishments from my past jobs? Iâm so glad you asked. Come, letâs reason together! If you had contributed absolutely NOTHING to your past positions you would have been fired. Surely you contributed something. Does there have to be a number attached to it? Not necessarily. Did you face any challenges or situations during your tenure that required you to take action? Of course you did; youâre human ⦠weâre problem solvers by nature. Quick Fix: Think about a challenge or situation you faced while employed. What action did you take to address it? What was the outcome? Tell me about that! Thatâs your story, thatâs the value you offer employers, those are your results/accomplishments/successes/contributions. By the way, this is also great practice for behavioral interviewing. When the interviewer says, âTell me about a time when â¦â youâll know youâre in a behavioral interviewâ"and youâll already have your answer ready. Youâre welcome in advance. =) Passive Words and Phrases This is one of my resume pet peeves. Passive terminology tells the employer very little about your contributions. Here are some examples of passive resume terms: Adept at, Familiar with, Knowledgeable in, Duties included, Responsible for, Skilled in, and Worked with. All examples of ways to not really tell the employer anything of value. Instead, use some action-driven words and phrases. Quick fix: Here are several examples of action-driven words you can use on your resume right now: Accelerated Bartered Coordinated Developed Enhanced Forged Generated Honored Identified Invented Judged Launched Managed Negotiated Obtained Piloted Recaptured Secured Selected Thwarted Transformed Unified United Verified Won So hereâs my take-away for you ⦠pull out your resume and find out which one (or more) of these common mistakes youâre making on your resume and implement the quick fix associated with it. If youâre making all five, just focus on fixing one at a time until all five are corrected. Spread it out over a few days if necessary so you wonât feel overwhelmed or like youâre tackling rewriting your entire resume in one shot. Focusing on one issue and repairing it will make the task of fixing your resume much less daunting. If you would prefer to enlist an expert to assist with rewriting your resume and repairing these mistakes, e-mail me for more information.
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