The Sweet Spot For Resumes
Posted on 24. Jan, 2008 posted by Bill in Employment News
In sports and a variety of other activities from bridge building to nose piercing, the sweet spot is the point in the middle where impact will have optimal effectiveness. In resumes the sweet spot is the place to put your strongest information. This magic spot is at the top of your resume right under your name and contact information.
Some resume formats label this area Goals or Objectives, while others may focus on Skills, Accomplishments or Experience. In some academic Curriculum Vita, Education will be featured first. No matter what the heading, if the right words are there, your resume has a superior chance of getting a more careful reading.
The cold, hard truth behind this is that the person scanning your resume will start looking at that top section, and might not go further. How to get them to read the rest and schedule an interview is the next question to consider.
What information should go in that top section? The current estimate is that each resume might be scanned for six seconds or less by human resources, even less time if the company involved is having resumes scanned by a software program. Personal are only speeding up the same process that employers and their personnel screeners have been doing for decades, searching for a few specialized phrases.
These are the words you want to put in the sweet spot at the top of your resume. In order to customize your resume for each job application, think about two factors:
1. What the employer wants–the ad you're answering should answer this question and provide useful words and phrases.
2. What you are offering in terms of experience, skills or achievements that demonstrate how you can do the job being offered, and how your goals and objectives will add value to the employer.
Using the sweet spot can simplify the task of tailoring a resume to a variety of different sorts of jobs, because only that small segment of the resume might need to be changed.
Courtesty Lynne Murray – http://editorial-rescue.blogspot.com
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