Summarising your strengths upfront
You can do this two ways, either via a list of Key Strengths represented as dot points or by creating a section under a heading like Career Profile.
Key Strengths
Based on my conversations with recruitment consultants, a key strengths area represented with dot points is the popular option. The aim of the section is to give the person reading your resume a quick snapshot of what you have to offer in the hope they instantly place you in the short list pile.
To maximise the opportunity
For example:
- High level computer skills including Excel, Word and Powerpoint.
- Five years experience in customer service both face to face and phone based.
And you fill in the rest. As a guide, six points is good but there is no real rule. Another tip, be specific. I see a lot of "Excellent Communication Skills" but what does that mean?
- Excellent written and verbal communication skills acquired via study and customer service work.
Career Profile, Career Overview, Career Summary, Career Objective?
Many people start a resume with a Career Objective. I think this is fine for school leavers or recent uni grads. For the rest of us, a career overview or Career Overview might be better. Employers want to know what you are going to do for them. Putting your expectation of your next employer in the first line of your resume could be off putting. By all means conclude with a career objective eg - "While currently a product manager, my career goal is to move into general management".
A Career Overview should provide the reader with a quick preview of what he or she will find in your resume. It should be a few sentences and written as one paragraph. It should include a smattering of your professional, academic and industry training. Some personal attributes are optional. As stated, your career goal could serve as the last sentence.
For example: Career Overview
A sales management professional with seven years' experience in the media industry, I have worked on newspaper, web and television products. I have a proven track record of developing new business and motivating a team to consistently exceed targets. I've recently completed a Masters of Business Administration and am now seeking a new professional challenge.
By the way, the example above is totally made up, but you get what I mean.
Also, avoid airy, fairy statements. Ian Napier of Flexiforce says that if a sentence doesn't contain factual information, ditch it.
For example, Ian has seen more than a few candidates describe their career goal as "to utilise my skills in a professional environment for the mutual benefit of myself and employer".
"I hate that line," Ian says. "Where is this sentence coming from? It is stating the obvious and tells me nothing."
Professional history
Outline your career history in reverse chronological order.
The structure to follow for each role is:
Job title, employer, dates, what you did, for whom and when.
Description of employer
This is appropriate for those coming from overseas or in cases where the company might be largely unknown. Organisations like IBM, News Limited, Suncorp or the big banks, to name a few examples, will need no explanation.
I read a resume from a candidate with fabulous IT experience gained while working for the largest children's hospital in India but he didn't say that. The hospital name, without that description, might not ring any bells with an IT hiring manager in Australia.
Responsibilities
People make the mistake of believing the more responsibilities listed the better. Include only the key things you were "responsible for" (accountable for). Don't list every single thing you did. I have seen CVs where people include: "Attended a weekly team meeting". So what? "Chairing" the weekly team meeting is a responsibility. See the difference?
Achievements (up to three per job is good).
This is where you list the things that you did that you were not paid to do. Items would include staff awards, special commendations, suggestions you put forward, scoped out or helped to implement that led to cost savings or an increase in revenue, access to new clients, higher levels of customer service, time efficiencies and so on.
Please note meeting a target is not an achievement - it's doing what you are paid to do. Exceeding a monthly target by an average of 30 per cent with a top result of 56 percent is an achievement.
Achievements show potential hirers what you are made of - and what they can expect you will do for them.
Indent your achievements by one tab on your resume to make them stand out.