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Résumés
Your résumé is your most important calling card in your job search. It should
include the following information:
- Contact information. Include phone, mail and e-mail contact
information. Your voicemail message should be professional. A message
that is too casual can create a negative impression.
- Career objective. You can choose to list or not list your career
objective. If your objective doesn't match the recruiter's needs, you
may miss out on a golden opportunity. However, a clearly stated career
objective can help your recruiter find your ideal career match.
- Summary statement. Your summary should be brief.
First, include your title and years of experience.
Second, list pertinent skills.
Third, discuss your character traits or work style.
Example: "Financial Accountant with over 10 years' experience
with two Fortune 500 companies. Technical skills include P∓L, budgeting,
forecasting and variance reporting. Bilingual in Spanish and English.
Self-starter who approaches every project in a detailed, analytical
manner."
- Professional experience. List each position held in reverse
chronological order, dating back at least ten years. If you held multiple
positions within the same company, list them all to show advancement
and growth. The body of each position description should describe your
responsibilities and accomplishments.
- Other components. Include education, professional training,
affiliations/appointments, licenses, technical skills and languages.
- Personal information. Do not include personal information such
as marital status.
12 Accomplishments Employers Want To See
- Increased revenues
- Saved money
- Increased efficiencies
- Cut overhead
- Increased sales
- Improved workplace safety
- Purchasing accomplishments
- New products/new lines
- Improved record keeping process
- Increased productivity
- Successful advertising campaign
- Effective budgeting
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