Ten Resume Mistakes
Don't make your resume have mistakes as following:
1. Resume lacks focus
A sharp focus is an extremely important resume element. Given that employers screen
resumes for between 2.5 and 20 seconds, a resume should show the employer at a glance
what you want to do and what you're good at. In a recent study by Career Masters
Institute, employers wanted resumes to show a clear match between the applicant
and a particular job's requirements. A "general" resume that is not focused on a
specific job's requirements was seen as not competitive. In an even more recent
study by CareerBuilder.com, 71 percent of hiring managers preferred a resume customized
for the open position.
One way to sharpen your focus is through an objective statement. Your objective
statement can be very simple and straightforward; it can be simply the title of
the position you're applying for, which can be adjusted for every job you apply
for. Or you can embellish your Objective statement a bit with language telling how
you'll benefit the employer. Something like:
Objective: To contribute strong ________ skills and experience to your organization
in a _________ capacity.
In this day of being able to manage our own computer files, you could have several
versions of your resume that are essentially the same except for the objective.
A specific objective is always better than a vague or general one. You can read
more about resume objectives in our article, Should You Use a Career Objective on
Your Resume?
To sharpen your focus, you can also add a section called something like "Summary
of Qualifications," "Profile," or the like. Such a section can contribute to powerful
resume opener that draws the reader in; it can be part of the top third of your
resume that showcases your best selling points, catches the prospective employer's
attention, and immediately demonstrates your value as a candidate. "Think of this
section as an executive summary of your resume," writes my partner, Dr. Randall
Hansen. "Identify key accomplishments that will grab the attention of an employer."
You can use your Profile/Summary section to position yourself for each job you target
by tweaking the wording to fit each type of position.
2. Resume is duties-driven instead of accomplishments-driven
Resumes should consist primarily of high-impact accomplishments statements that
sell the job-seeker's qualifications as the best candidate.
Never use expressions such as "Duties included," "Responsibilities included," or
"Responsible for." That's job-description language, not accomplishments-oriented
resume language that sells. After all, if you were an employer and wanted to run
a successful organization, would you be looking for candidates who can perform only
their basic job functions, or would you want employees with a proven track record
of accomplishments? In these days in which most resumes are placed into keyword-searchable
databases, you won't find employers searching resumes for words like "responsibilities,"
"duties," or "responsible for."
Instead, focus on accomplishments that set you apart from other job candidates.
In each job, what special things did you do to set yourself apart? How did you do
the job better than anyone else? What did you do to make it your own? What special
things did you do to impress your boss so that you might be promoted? What were
the problems or challenges that you or the organization faced? What did you do to
overcome the problems? What were the results of your efforts? How did the company
benefit from your performance? How did you leave your employers better off than
before you worked for them? How have you helped your employers to:
- make money
- save money
- save time
- make work easier
- solve a specific problem
- be more competitive
- build relationships
- expand the business
- attract new customers
- retain existing customers
Accomplishments are the points that increase reader's interest, stimulate a request
for a job interview, and really help sell you to an employer -- much more so than
everyday job duties. In the above-cited study by Career Masters Institute, content
elements that propel employers to immediately discard resumes include a focus on
duties instead of accomplishments, while documented achievements were highly ranked
among content elements that employers look for.
For more about how to identify your accomplishments, see our article, For Job-Hunting
Success: Track and Leverage Your Accomplishments. You may want to use our Accomplishments
Worksheet to help you brainstorm your achievements.
Some job-seekers list accomplishments in a separate section or isolate accomplishments
from duties/responsibilities when describing their job functions. I don't support
this practice because everything on your resume should be accomplishments-driven.
If you label only certain items as accomplishments, the reader's assumption is that
the other things you did were not accomplishments.
Be sure also that the accomplishments you list support your career goals and that
you tailor them to the job you're targeting with this resume.
3. Resume items are listed in an order that doesn't consider the reader's interest
"The Resume Ingredients Rule," set forth by Donald Asher, author of numerous resume
books (see our Q&A with him), says that information on a resume should be listed
in order of importance to the reader. Therefore, in listing your jobs, what's generally
most important is your title/position. So list in this preferred order: Title/position,
name of employer, city/state of employer, dates of employment. I can't tell you
how many resumes I've seen that list dates first. Dates can be important to some
employers, but they're generally not as important as what your position was and
whom you worked for.
Education follows the same principle; thus, the preferred order for listing your
education is: Name of degree (spelled out: Bachelor of _____) in name of major,
name of university, city/state of university, graduation year, followed by peripheral
information, such as minor and GPA. If you haven't graduated yet, list your information
the same way. Since the graduation date you've listed is in the future, the employer
will know you don't have the degree yet.
By the way, the Resume Ingredients Rule is also the reason that experience and education
are listed in reverse chronological order on your resume; it's assumed that your
most recent education and experience are most important and relevant to the reader.
Also consider whether your education or your experience is your best selling point
and which should therefore be listed first. Generally, brand-new graduates list
education first, while job-seekers with a few years of experience list experience
first. When job-seekers add value to their education by attaining an MBA or other
graduate degree, they often switch education back to the more prominent position
because it now becomes the hot selling point. In fields such as science and higher
education, in which education remains a more important selling point than experience,
education tends to be listed first consistently. In many countries outside the U.S.,
education is also considered more important than experience.
4. Resume exposes the job-seeker to age discrimination by going too far back into
the job-seeker's job history
The rule of thumb for someone at the senior level is to list about 15 years worth
of jobs. Age discrimination, unfortunately, is a reality, and even more likely,
employers may think you're too expensive if you list too much experience on your
resume. Similarly, don't provide the date of your college graduation if it was more
than about 10 years ago. Read more in our articles, Resume, Cover Letter, and Interview
Strategies for Older Workers and Positive Attitude is Key When Fighting Prejudice
Against Older Workers.
5. Resume buries important skills, especially computer skills, at the bottom
There are few jobs today for which computer skills are not important. Yet many job-seekers,
even those in technology fields, tend to tack a "Computer Skills" section to the
end of their resumes. If computer skills are relevant to your field, list them in
your Summary or Profile section. That way, they'll catch the reader's eye in the
first third of your resume. If you are in the technology field, list your technical
skills in a separate section called something like "Systems Proficiencies," but
be sure it's on the first page of your resume. You may want to set your skills up
in a reader-friendly table, as in these samples: IT Resume and New Grad IT Resume.
Similarly if language and international-business skills are important in the type
of job you seek, list them in your Summary or Profile section, not at the end of
your resume.
6. Resume is not bulleted
Use a bulleted style to make your resume more reader-friendly. In the above-cited
study by Career Masters Institute, use of bullets was the 2nd-highest ranked preference
by employers, and density of type (paragraphs rather than bullet points) was ranked
highly as a factor that would inspire employers to discard a resume.
Use bullets consistently. Some job-seekers bullet most of their resume but don't
bullet the Profile/Summary section, for example. Or they will list the overall scope
and responsibilities for each job in an unbulleted section before beginning a bulleted
section describing accomplishments. Given that the reader can't easily discern a
rationale for why some material is bulleted and other material isn't, it's best
to bullet consistently throughout the resume.
7. Resume uses a cookie-cutter design based on an overused resume template
Most resumes created from a Microsoft Word template are instantly recognizable to
employers as such. There's nothing wrong with that except that employers have seen
a million of them, so they don't stand out. The employer immediately senses a certain
lack of imagination in the job-seeker. These templates are also somewhat inflexible
and contain problematic formatting. "Using a template or any kind of boilerplate
to demonstrate your value to a company is the worst thing you can do to yourself
when job hunting," says Nick Corcodilos of Ask The Headhunter. "You're supposed
to be uniquely qualified so the company will choose you instead of some cookie-cutter
drone -- right? Do you really want a template?"
8. Resume lacks keywords.
Job-hunting today increasingly revolves around the mysterious world of keywords.
Employers' reliance on keywords to find the job candidates they want to interview
has come about in recent years because of technology. Inundated by resumes from
job-seekers, employers have increasingly relied on digitizing job-seeker resumes,
placing those resumes in keyword-searchable databases, and using software to search
those databases for specific keywords that relate to job vacancies. Most Fortune
1000 companies, in fact, and many smaller companies now use these technologies.
In addition, many employers search the databases of third-party job-posting and
resume-posting boards on the Internet. Pat Kendall, president of the National Resume
Writers' Association, notes that more than 80 percent of resumes are searched for
job-specific keywords.
The bottom line is that if you apply for a job with a company that searches databases
for keywords, and your resume doesn't have the keywords the company seeks for the
person who fills that job, you are pretty much dead in the water. To read more about
keywords and how to identify the best ones for your field, see our article, Tapping
the Power of Keywords to Enhance Your Resume's Effectiveness.
9. References are listed directly on your resume.
Never listed specific references directly on your resume. List them on a separate
sheet, and even then, submit them only when specifically requested by an employer.
Even the phrase, "References: Available upon request," is highly optional because
it is a given that you will provide references upon request. If you couldn't, you
would have no business looking for a job. The line can serve the purpose of signaling:
"This is the end of my resume," but if you are trying to conserve space, leave it
off.
10. Resume's appearance becomes skewed when sent as an e-mail attachment and/or
resume is not available in other electronic formats
Have you ever noticed that when you send a resume (or any document) as an attachment
from your computer to someone else's computer, it sometimes doesn't look the same
on the other person's computer as it did on yours? Maybe it has more pages on the
other computer, or maybe Page 2 starts at the bottom of Page 1, or maybe the fonts
are different.
If you are regularly sending your resume as an e-mail attachment, you may want to
experiment with sending it to friends' computers to ensure that the formatting appears
consistently from computer to computer.