Resumes That Rock (16 Expert Tips)
by Karen Fritscher-Porter
Published on this site: June 14th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month...

It's never too early to update your resume, even if you're not
searching for a new job. Why? Updating your resume is a valuable
reminder to yourself of your practical value to employers.
Refer to it when preparing your business case for a raise
request or when preparing for your annual performance evaluation.
Your resume is a good reminder of your achievements for your
company as well as your capabilities and skills.
And if you suddenly find your company, or life, in upheaval
and need to start searching for a new job, preparing your
resume is one less stressful activity to worry about. You've
kept your resume current so it's nearly complete. Just polish
it, print it and add a cover letter targeted toward each individual
employer and position. Then drop it in the mail, fax it or
e-mail it per the potential employer's preference. It's so
simple, right? Hardly.
If you could really capture your essence in a bottle and
send it to the prospective employer, you'd certainly get the
job. Why? He'd know how polished, enthusiastic, well-qualified
and perfect you were for the position compared to the other
trillion candidates applying too. Unfortunately, it doesn't
work that way. Your "essence" has to go into the
brief resume and cover letter versus a bottle. And that's
how the potential employer knows he or she just MUST meet
you in person.
"Your resume is a snapshot," says Anne McKinney,
author and editor of "Real Resumes for Administrative
Support, Office & Secretarial Jobs" by PREP Publishing
(www.prep-pub.com). "And when a resume is a great resume,
from head (its objective) to toe (its personal section), an
employer can really feel that he has met you. He might not
know exactly what you look like but it's a photograph of you
in lots of ways that you've brought to life. And that's not
easy for most people to create since they're not writers."
Here is advice McKinney shared that should help make your next
resume and cover letter writing experience easier and more focused:
Cover Letters:
- Don't write anything that will get you screened out.
For example, don't write that you've just finished having
your ninth child but your mother-in-law takes care of the
children during the day. Most employers will think your
life is too busy to truly include them in a reliable fashion.
- Be careful when you introduce personal content. But don't exclude
it in your cover letter if it might be of interest to that particular
employer. For example, you mention your youngest child has just
left home for college, you're newly single and you're psyched
for this position that possibly entails traveling as a personal
assistant. That employer is looking for someone who is willing
to travel or relocate and focus on him predominately. You're in.
- Write positive statements. Don't start with 'I've been out
of the job market for 15 years...' It doesn't inspire confidence.
See the tip above for a better way to phrase this
- Stay away from touchy subjects unless it's positive and useful
information. Religious matters wouldn't likely be appropriate
for a cover letter unless, for instance, you're applying to work
at a nonprofit organization of your faith. Then it might be to
your advantage to mention something relevant.
- Use the cover letter to address questions or discrepancies
that the employer might have about you. Make employers aware
that you do know what job you're applying for and you're
not just littering the universe with your resume. That might
mean writing that 'I'm writing to you from Missouri but
I'm planning to be in North Carolina where you're located
upon my husband's retirement from the military when we return
to our home town.'
- Communicate three main concepts in your cover letter.
The prospective employer wants to know anything that might
help her make money; cut a cost; attract a new customer;
retain an existing customer; or solve a problem. Make your
self-promotion do that and you'll be on the DO CALL list.
- Flaunt it, baby! If you're a whiz with computer skills, don't
be shy about saying so. Whether you learned a skill on the job
or went to school for four years to learn it, you do have the
skill. It doesn't matter how you acquired such valuable skills--just
mention that you have them.
Resumes:
- Write a single resume that is suitable for multiple employers.
- Make your resume one page. Start by writing everything you
want to say; then edit and cut. A two page resume can work too.
Just remember, prospective employers are reading a lot of cover
letters and resumes. Concise is better.
- Put the juicy stuff on page one of a multi-page resume.
- Break the resume into sections: education, training, computer
skills and so forth. Your 'experience' section is the prime real
estate and should be half or more of a one page resume.
- Write in chronological order. Start with the most recent information.
- Go back in your employment history as far as beneficial to
you. Ten years is good. Experience beyond that can go in a summary
under 'highlight of other experience' section, hitting just the
highlights without dates. This is where you can mention you've
also worked in CPA and law firms, giving the employer an indirect
reminder that you're versatile.
- Write a broad objective statement. Make it all purpose
enough so that somebody reading it won't immediately say
'we're not what she's looking for.' Accentuate your personal
qualities and some of your skills in the statement.
- Don't highlight that you've primarily worked in one industry
or write that you're seeking an entry-level position. You may
be looking for an administrative assistant job in the aerospace
industry but would you consider office manager in the company's
automotive industry sister company if offered to you?
- Write your accomplishments. Your resume should mostly describe
what you actually accomplished on the job. Don't be boring! Say
'trained approximately 30 employees in the word processing department
in operation of Microsoft Word...' not 'responsibilities included
switchboard, computer operations and customer service.' That first
sentence says you trained people, communicated, presented in front
of a group, worked one-on-one providing individual assistance
and have lots of computer experience. The second phrasing just
says you're boring. Yawn!
A scheduled interview means your resume is a success. Pop the bubbly
(but not right before your interview)!

Karen Fritscher-Porter is the publisher and editor
of The Effective Admin, a free monthly e-zine for administrative
support professionals who want practical tips to advance their
career and simplify their daily job duties. Learn more about
The Effective Admin at http://www.admin-ezine.com
where you also can buy booklets and reports full of informational
tips useful to administrative
assistants and their managers.

|