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Fatal Resume Errors
We see a LOT of resumes. Our recruiters submitted
what they thought were the most common faux pas. Use these tips
to avoid making fatal errors in your resume:
- Poor grammar, typos, misspellings, etc. A sloppy resume
says you're careless.
- Overkill. Anything over a page-and-a-half is too long.
- Vagueness. Quantify your results. Don't state: "Responsible
for supervising 300 employees." Instead say: "Managed the marketing
department, which increased revenues 82 percent in a four-year
period." Don't write a job description; list what you have accomplished.
- Plagiarism. Avoid patterning your resume after the
same examples everyone else uses. Hiring authorities get bored
with look-alike resumes. Be creative and different-but only
to a point.
- Colored paper. Any color other than white is unacceptable.
Colored paper does not copy well-your resume will be distributed
to multiple people.
- Clichés and buzzwords. Don't use words that
you think should sound "smart." Hiring authorities are not impressed
with "utilize," "flexible," "team player," and "seeking an opportunity
for me to grow and develop."
- Tiresome details. If you're well into your career,
skip those college summer jobs. As you advance in age and up
the corporate ladder, pare down your resume. Nobody really cares
that you worked your way through college waiting tables, especially
when you're applying for an executive position with a securities
firm.
- Indeterminate gender. If you're Pat, Lynn, or Lee,
don't keep 'em guessing. With certain names use Mr. or Ms. as
a prefix.
- Lying. First, you don't lie because it's wrong. Second,
you don't lie because if you get caught, you won't get the job.
- Omitting your job objective. State clearly what you're
looking for. Ambiguity indicates you lack direction and focus.
- Listing your job obj ective.
Note that this contradicts the previous point. Some headhunters
think a job objective limits the candidate. If the exact position
isn't available within the organization, the andidate automatically
eliminates himself from a job. Do your homework in advance to
be sure your objective coincides with an open position before
including it in the resume. If there are several positions that
interest you, do not include your objective.
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