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Students
21 Ways to Help You Improve Your Online Résumé
(Back to Resume Index)
1. Content! Keywords!
Since most employers sort résumés electronically, keywords and specifics that
demonstrate your abilities, your accomplishments, and your past experiences are
crucial to getting their attention.
2. Market Yourself Well
Begin with a summary of qualifications section that encapsulates your most
marketable skills and experience into four to six sentences.
3. Demonstrate Results
Employers like proof that you can do the job. Note the action performed and
conclude with the achieved result, noting how your employer benefited. Use
numbers and percentages to show how money or time was saved. Example:
Coordinated the annual conference, adding new speakers and innovative programs,
which resulted in a 17 percent increase in attendance and an 18 percent
increase in revenues.
4. Be Brief and Concise
One page -- short and to the point works best. Be a skillful editor, deleting
the portions which are not relevant or least helpful to your securing a
particular position. Emphasize your most recent experience -- the last five to
seven years. Cover in detail the major job duties performed.
5. Be Targeted
Focus every résumé to the job title being applied for. It's much more effective
to create a different résumé for each job title (i.e., one résumé for
"Trainer," another for "Program Director") and incorporate only the information
pertinent to doing that job.
6. Visually Appealing
The formatting of an online résumé must be kept readable, sharp and
professional. Make sure sentences are concise and that there is
adequate white space between points. This online
résumé posting program eliminates italics, bold
formatting, and fancy fonts. Stick to Times Roman or Arial fonts and use 12 -
14 point size. Use bullets to emphasize important points.
7. Be Clear
No vague generalities. Say exactly what you mean, using the smallest number of
words to make the point.
8. Be Accurate
State your skills, qualifications, and experience as positively as possible
without exaggerating or misstating the truth. If your job responsibilities are
not adequately described by your job title, indicate your abilities with
appropriate terms (i.e. Events Coordinator, instead of Staff Coordinator). List
job titles, employers and dates/years of employment.
9. Use Action Verbs
Start each sentence with a descriptive action verb - such as established,
managed or organized. They add power to your sentences. And, never use “I” on
the résumé, only short impact sentences. Example: Designed the company’s new
marketing flyer.
10. Be Complete
Spell out names of schools, cities, abbreviations and titles completely, since
employers may not recognize abbreviations or acronyms.
11. Make Points Quickly
Complete sentences are not necessary in résumé writing; it is better to use
simple descriptive statements to make a point. Be sure any technical terms are
understandable to non-technical personnel.
12. Justify Experience
In all your sentences, use past tense words since they imply that you "have
done it" before. This reassures employers you can do it for them.
13. Be Perfect
The résumé you send out must be flawless. No mistakes or typos, especially in
e-mails. Typos are HR manager’s chief complaint and they insist they won’t hire
offenders.
14. Proofread Carefully
Don't trust computer spell checkers. Read every word out loud to be sure it is
correct.
15. Make it Readable
A crammed, cramped résumé often goes unread. Make deletions wherever necessary
to achieve a readable product. Use white space, highlight key points with
bullets and eliminate redundancies.
16. Avoid Graphics
Complex designs are distracting to the reader. Lines, boxes, shadings, fancy
borders or clipart should be avoided as they cause major errors when sent
electronically.
17. Don't Include Personal Statistics
It is no longer considered professional or wise to include information about
marital status, gender, height, weight, health or to insert a picture on your
résumé.
18. No Tag Lines
Employers know you'll provide references if they request them, therefore it is
not necessary to put "References upon request" at the end of your résumé.
19. Don't Advertise Negative Information
The résumé is the wrong place to advertise that you were laid off, fired or had
an extended illness. Never state why you left a position; simply list the dates
of employment. Don’t mention what salary you want to receive.
20. Be Current
Update information every six months. Keep a current résumé on CareerBuilder.com
and create a job alert to have the latest job postings e-mailed to you daily.
21. Final Test
Does your résumé get results? Does your résumé clearly and quickly communicate
to employers that you can do the job? Do your strengths come across? Does
everything support the job you are targeting? Should anything be removed? Are
employers calling? If not, rework, get professional help or check out several
résumé books to help you improve yours.

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