1 / 49

RESUME WRITING Presenting Yourself on Paper

RESUME WRITING Presenting Yourself on Paper. By:. Ali Dastangoo Alireza Vahdatpour Mohammad Khabbazian. Agenda. Purpose and Impact of a Resume General Guidelines Various Formats Scannable Resumes Email & Electronic Submissions Key Components Optional Categories Resume Check List

cozart
Télécharger la présentation

RESUME WRITING Presenting Yourself on Paper

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. RESUME WRITINGPresenting Yourself on Paper By: Ali Dastangoo Alireza Vahdatpour Mohammad Khabbazian

  2. Agenda • Purpose and Impact of a Resume • General Guidelines • Various Formats • Scannable Resumes • Email & Electronic Submissions • Key Components • Optional Categories • Resume Check List • Cover Letters/ Thank You Letter • Follow Up

  3. Purpose and Impact • Marketing Tool • Designed to create a favorable first impression • May get you an interview, won’t get you the job! • Personal Account of Your: • Education and Training • Experience • Skills and Abilities

  4. Purpose and Impact • Provides an accurate, concise, and original presentation of who you are • Resource for employer at interview • Remember: Employers spend 4 - 5 minutes at most reviewing a Resume. Make each word count!

  5. General Guidelines • Length • Generally one page (especially recent grads) • Two pages with extensive related experience • Layout • Direct reader’s eye using headings and layout • Choose standard font in 10-14 point size • Use appropriate color & high quality 8 1/2 x 11 paper, one-sided only!

  6. General Guidelines • Layout continued • Leave ‘white space’ for uncluttered look • One inch margins on all sides is standard • Be consistent with: • indentations • capitalizations • font • spacing

  7. General Guidelines • Content • Proofread! Don’t rely on Spell-check • grammar • spelling • typographical errors • punctuation • Stress accomplishments and results • Tailor contents to each position (e.g. rewrite Objective/revise Skills section)

  8. General Guidelines • Omit information which could be used in a discriminatory way • Leave all these things off your CV: • Marital status - Description of health • Citizenship - Age - Irrelevant awards, publications, scholarships, associations, and memberships • Recreational activities or hobbies • Travel history - Previous pay rates • Reasons for leaving previous jobs • The words “References available upon request.”

  9. Resume Formats • CHRONOLOGICAL FORMAT • Easy to read, most commonly used • Presents education and work experience in reverse chronological order • Very effective if majority of education and work experience is related to objective

  10. Resume Formats • FUNCTIONAL FORMAT • Focuses on skills and abilities, not dates of employment • Lists skills you’ve demonstrated which are required for a particular job • Allows you to emphasize skills gained through volunteer work and extra curricular activities • Often used by career changers, graduate students and postdoctoral scholars

  11. Resume Formats • COMBINATION FORMAT • Uses elements of Chronological and Functional • Emphasizes skills and abilities • Provides job/experience descriptions • Effective when job objective has multiple components (e.g. research and management, marketing and administrative)

  12. Resume Formats • TECHNICAL FORMAT • Used as a term to describe a resume prepared for technical positions (e.g. computer science or engineering) • Can use any format; emphasizes technical skills such as specific computer languages, laboratory skills, etc. • List GPA if 2.5 or above

  13. Resume Formats • CURRICULUM VITAE • Used by individuals seeking teaching and/or research positions in a post-secondary institution or high-level research industry • Often two or three pages for master’s or doctoral degree candidates • Specific “CV” workshops are offered through the Internship & Career Center

  14. Scannable Resumes • Uses nouns indicating specific job functions, skills, responsibilities (see detailed job description to select key words to use) • Use “key words” associated with position you are seeking. Include terminology of the business or industry • Do not fold, bend or staple resume. Mail in a large, flat envelope

  15. Scannable Resumes • Forget “fancy fonts”, flashy graphics  and colored paper • 10 - 14 point size, standard font • white, off-white, 8 1/2 x 11 paper • avoid shading, graphics, bolding, italicizing, and underlining

  16. Scannable Resumes • Avoid: • Bullets • Lines • Columns • Brackets

  17. E-mail and Electronic Submission • Maintain professional tone • Use professional sounding email address (not tweetybird@wherever.com!) • Be specific in subject header • Follow employer directions carefully! • Avoid use of characters and symbols • Use left-justified format

  18. E-mail and Electronic Submission • Do not underline, bold, or italicize text • Use “standard” font, such as Arial or Times New Roman • Use hard return to insert line, not word wrap • Sign your email with your full name • Proofread and use spell-check before sending • Do a ‘trial send’ to yourself or a friend to see how your resume looks after sending

  19. Resume Components • What goes where?

  20. Resume Key Components • TITLE BLOCK/HEADING • The identification “Resume” at the top of the page is unnecessary. • Your name • Address, including postal code • Daytime telephone number(s) - don’t forget area codes • Email address - ONLY IF YOU CHECK DAILY! • Cell phone or pager number(s)

  21. Resume Key Components • Example: Ali Kuchulu 210, Azadi Avenue Tehran, Iran, 34512

  22. Resume Key Components • OBJECTIVE • Gives resume focus, credibility and direction • Be concise and logical - develop different resumes for different types of jobs • Avoid cliches such as “like working with people” • Emphasize short term aspirations • Considered by some to be optional

  23. Resume Key Components • OBJECTIVE continued • May be oriented to: • A degree • A position • A field • Skills • …

  24. Resume Key Components • Example: • Computer Engineering internship which will use my design skills. • A position in software design, development, and testing. • Pursuing graduate studies toward PhD Degree in Electrical Engineering field with special interests in Wireless and Digital Communications, Information and Coding Theory.

  25. Resume Key Components • EDUCATION • List highest degree first, followed by other degrees received • Degree level • Major(s), minor(s) and emphasis if applicable • If your major/degree is relevant, list that first; if not, emphasize university name , then list major. • Sharif University of Technology

  26. Resume Key Components • EDUCATION continued • Date to be conferred • GPA if 3.0 (16/20) or higher • NOT necessary to include High School degree!

  27. Resume Key Components • EDUCATION continued • Lower division students seeking an internship should consider • listing class standing first • followed by major(s), minor(s) and emphasis if applicable • then listing Bachelor’s degree expected in month and year

  28. Resume Key Components • Example: Bachelor of Science, Computer Engineering, May 2002 Sharif University of Technology Overall GPA: 17.80/ 20.00 Major GPA: 18.00/ 20.00

  29. Resume Key Components • EXPERIENCE • Summarize significant full and part time positions • Include relevant volunteer work or internships • Volunteer experiences may be incorporated into Career Related Experience or listed separately under heading: Community or Volunteer Experience. • Highlight responsibilities, skills developed, and accomplishments • List job title, employer, city, state, and dates of employment, followed by description

  30. Resume Key Components • EXPERIENCE continued • Present information in reverse chronological order • OR • Create special sections (e.g. Related Experience, Research Experience) • Use action verbs and sentence phrases, NOT complete sentences • Always put verbs in the past tense even though you may be currently performing these duties.

  31. Resume Key Components • EXPERIENCE continued • May include significant academic assignments and relevant extra-curricular activities • List accomplishments and contributions you have made • Quantify accomplishments, if possible

  32. Resume Key Components • Example:

  33. Optional Categories • SKILLS • List skills you can perform with little or no direction • Computer - list hardware, software, and operating systems • Laboratory - list techniques, procedures and/or equipment • Language - indicate fluency level, specify if you can read/write/speak the language

  34. Optional Categories • SKILLS continued • Research - list research skills with which you are familiar • General skills, including communication (written and verbal), problem-solving, managerial, etc. • Presentations • Others specific to the job • Skills are often underestimated by students!

  35. Optional Categories • Example

  36. Optional Categories • Publications • List articles published and those accepted for publication • Include in Experience section • Qualifications or Skills Statement • If major is not obviously related to job objective, this provides an opportunity to tie everything together

  37. Optional Categories • Example

  38. Optional Categories • Licenses, Certifications, Credentials, Training • Related items only (Olympiads, Languages, Computer Abilities, etc.) • Professional Affiliations • List memberships and offices held

  39. Optional Categories • Example

  40. Optional Categories • Honors/Awards/Hobbies/Interests • Avoid listing those which may be controversial • References • Usually state “References Provided Upon Request” as last line of resume • Ask permission before listing someone!

  41. Resume Review Check List • Does your resume look appealing? • Is it clearly labeled, using appropriate headings? • Does it highlight your skills and abilities? • Have you had it critiqued by others? • Have you triple checked for accuracy?

  42. The Cover Letter

  43. The Cover Letter • Should be customized for each position • Establishes personal contact • Should be addressed to a specific person, using name, and title • In salutation, never use first name! • Use “Dear Recruiter” if no name is available • Use same paper, font and format as resume • Keep letter to one page in length

  44. The Cover Letter • Use standard business format • Emphasize how your skills, education, experience can benefit the employer • Close by indicating your interest in the position and follow-up plans • Don’t forget to sign the letter!

  45. The Cover Letter • Paragraph one • What position are you applying for and how did you find out about the position? • Paragraph two • Why do you want to work for this particular employer, and why should employer hire you? • Paragraph three • What’s your next step going to be? Indicate how you will follow through or express desire for an interview.

  46. Thank You Letter

  47. Thank You Letter • After an interview, write a brief follow-up letter. • Few people interviewed take the time to send such a note • reinforce your value to the company or organization • Correct any misunderstandings • Add forgotten points

  48. Follow Up • Teacher Resume Writer Booklet, Available at: • http://www.k12jobs.com/resumes/Teacher_resume_writing.pdf • Resume, Curriculum Vitae and Cover Letter examples can be found online at: • http://ucdavis.placementmanual.com/resume/index.html • Thank you from:

  49. Q&A

More Related