    |
|

Candidates
EVERY TEAM NEEDS A LEADER |
|
|
How to Win Any Position
(or at
least assure your credentials will be reviewed)
and other
Helpful Hints.
In today's competitive job market, company and
search recruiters are spending more money and more
time developing and refining an internet recruiting
strategy, complete with online tools for resume
submission directly into their own web-based resume
databases. To keep up with this trend, the
successful job seeker now uses standard fonts, crisp
black type, clear objectives, and strong key words
to prepare a resume. This ensures that the resume
can be read by a computer and "scanned" by the
artificial intelligence that is used to extract
qualification information. As a job seeker, the more
skills, education, experience and professional
affiliations you provide in your resume, the better
the chances your qualifications will match with
those of posted positions or those not yet
published.
To help maximize the effectiveness of your resume,
follow these simple tips:
-
Use a font size of 12 or
10 points.
-
Use standard fonts (Helvetica, Geneva, Arial,
Futura, Optima, Universe, Times, or Courier).
-
Do not use fancy typefaces, lines, boxes,
bullets, and graphics.
-
Use a standard chronological resume
format.
-
For an attachment, use MS Word (.doc, .rtf or
.txt); everyone cannot necessarily
open/print/use .pdf, .zip, .wpd, .ppt or .dat.
-
If e-mailing, do not use html. Plain ol’ text
does the best job for you.
-
If faxing, use the "fine mode" setting to ensure
better quality copy.
-
If mailing, use a laser-quality original on
white paper, printed on one side only.
-
State your objective clearly and specifically,
rather than generically.
-
Use terms, acronyms and jargon specific to your
industry make sure to spell out any acronyms.
-
Strive for two pages be brief, descriptive,
and list old or irrelevant experience very
briefly.
-
PROOFREAD for misspellings, typos, and
grammatical errors, plus use your spell check.
-
Include a short cover letter which states the
specific position of interest to you and why you
are qualified. Put the cover note AT THE END of
your resume. The machine will "want" to read
your resume first; maybe there's more than one
job available for your background.
-
You may also benefit from our
Helpful Hints.
Helpful Hints:
Effectiveness - Clarity -
Human Resource and Recruiter assistants do not
always have the time or experience to judge your 'good
fit', so always cover key points of your
qualifications for the 'must haves'
of a position in a custom cover note. The cover
note should be the last page of an
e-mailed resume.
E-resumes -
E-mail only in RichTextFormat.rtf
or MSword.doc or PlainText.txt
so that everybody can open your
attachment. Do not use .pdf, .zip, .wpd, .ppt, .pdf
or .dat. Use any 'fancy' version for printing and
snail-mailing.
Shotgun
- Do not send your resume to every posting that
contains one of your keywords.
Invest in a rifle!
Respond specifically
and targeted
for best results.
Hoops
-
Nobody jumps through them. Do not refer an employer
to your home page or some place
where you have posted your resume for your
convenience.
Wrong Site ?
- If this is the
wrong
MRI
site for you, go
to
www.brilliantPeople.com
for jobs and
private
posting.
Danger -
If your resume is
posted on any open/public site, your employer will
find it ! Removal from such sites is recommended.
Resumes
-
Chronological resumes
are highly preferred by Companies
and Recruiters.
Mister
- Do not call yourself
'Mister' in your resume. Too formal
in today's world
|
|
|
|
|
|
|