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How to Write a Resume Advice

By: Kermit Jolly

First, keep the following two things in mind when you write your resume:

1. Your resume is the first contact you make with your prospective employer, and you have only one single chance to make a first impression, and

2. Hiring agents are very busy and merely scan through the piles of resumes in front of them.

Tip #1 - Your Resume Must Be Relevant

Customize your resume for the specific job that you want. Yes, it's more work than having just one version of your resume, but it pays off big time.

Research the company and the job, and include in your resume only what's relevant to the job.

You'll make the hiring manager love you if you give just the relevant information and save her the effort of wading through irrelevant experience.

Tailor your resume specifically to the needs of those who are going to read it.

Tip #2 - Make Your Summary Compelling

Think of the summary at the top of your resume as the teaser at the top of a newspaper article, after the headline. That's how hiring managers read resumes.

Your resume will be just another one of hundreds if you don't catch the hiring manager's attention in the first few paragraphs. Draw the reader's interest with an interesting and relevant summary of your experience.

With a great summary you'll be making the life of the hiring manager a lot easier.

Tip #3 - Focus on Your Benefits

Many resumes are just plain boring. Do hiring managers keep tissues on their desk because they suffer from hay fever? No, it's the dull resumes that are boring them to tears.

Your resume is your very own personal advertisement. What are common to most ads? They mention features but sell you on the benefits! You only buy something when you can see the benefit for yourself.

Don't bore the hiring manager with just a list of your features.

What is the difference between a benefit and a feature?

"Ten years of website development," is a feature.

"Ten years of website development that will enhance corporate image and website search engine rankings," is a benefit.

Tip #4 - Make Sure There are No Spelling Mistakes

There are no excuses for having spelling mistakes in your resume. If you can't be bothered to press F7 in MS Word, why should a company be bothered to hire you and pay you a salary?

You cannot "recall" your resume once it's out there in the wild.

Make absolutely certain that it's as near perfect as possible.

Spelling mistakes never make a good impression on a prospective employer.

It's one of the easiest how to write a resume tricks that many people forget.



Article Source: http://www.rightbiz.com

By Kermit Jolly. At how-to-make-a-resume.toponlinetips.com you can get advice on how to make a resume.

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