By Juanita Ledesmacds.sdce.edu/sites/default/files/RESUME AND COVER LETTER...Chronological VS....

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Transcript of By Juanita Ledesmacds.sdce.edu/sites/default/files/RESUME AND COVER LETTER...Chronological VS....

By Juanita Ledesma

The Basics

Choosing a Format

Parts of a Resume

Experience Statements – P.A.R.

Cover Letters

Other Resources

Purpose

Customization

Relevance

Fonts

To “Bold or not to Bold”

Make a Statement

Organize

Two Primary Formats

Time gaps unexplained (10%)

“Poor or no cover letter”(40%)

“Resume too long “(10%)

Lie or exaggerate

Show salary or offer explanations

List references, or personal information

Keep repeating phrases or words

Use “I” statements

Emphasize your accomplishments

Use active verbs to show your skills i.e.

assisted, created, assessed, advised

Use key words from the job description

Proofread for errors, misspellings

Chronological FunctionalVS.

TRADITIONALLIST WORK

EXPERIENCE IN

REVERSE

INCLUDES 10-15

YEARS OF WORK

EXPERIENCE

POSITION, TITLE,

ORGANIZATION,

LOCATION, DATES OF

EMPLOYMENT

ACTION

STATEMENTS ARE

UNDER JOB TITLE

Use if your career path has been building over time and shows

logical progression:

Not ideal for Lack of Job History, Changes in Careers, Spotty

work history

Significant career change

Gaps of employment

Different jobs in a short time

Recent graduate with no experience

Includes volunteering, internships, academic projects, paid work

Strategic arrangement

(action words)

Focus on the relevant

Minimize least relevant

Should I use it?

Header

Objective (optional)

Summary Statement

Work Experience

Education and Training

Volunteer (optional)

Military (optional)

• Name - largest; no more than 16 font

• Voicemail - clear, courteous

• Email – make sure it is professional (use first and last name)

• Information – accurate

• Name and page number on 2nd page

JOHN DOE1234 Easy St.San Diego, CA

619-222-9898 mmouse@gmail.com

JOHN DOE1234 Easy St., San Diego, CA 619-222-9898 mmouse@gmail.com

Be specific, or NONE

Everything in the resume to support your

objective

Job description has the words you need

Sample of a weak objective:

“A challenging position that will allow me to contribute to the growth of the organization while offering an opportunity for advancement.”

Sample of a strong objective:

“To obtain a position as a cook with the Hilton Bayfront hotel”

Number of years of experience

Credentials, education or training

Key accomplishments

At least 5 key strengths, skills or characteristics for the position (hard and soft/essential skills)

Bilingual skills

Match key words from job description

Titles: Summary, Profile, Qualifications, Summary of Qualifications

3-4 sentences or bullets with years of experience

Quality or Characteristic that supports goal

Key words, soft skills

Awards/recognitions

Accomplishments

EXAMPLE:

A Technical Professional with 10 years experience and exceptional written and verbal communications. Strengths in troubleshooting, analyzing, and repairing electronic devices. A team player and successful at meeting goals, collaborating with engineers and clients to achieve outstanding results.

Expertise in:

An administrative individual with a certification in accounting and 3 years of experience. Dependable, detail oriented, strong organizational skills, and a team player.

Effective time management with the ability to multi-task

Excellent at customer problem resolution

Fast learner with a strong work ethic

Solid leadership experience

Superior networking skills

Examples of hard skills:

Computer programming Web design Typing Accounting Finance Writing Mathematics Legal Other skills that are in the requirements for a job

Examples of soft skills:

Communication Critical thinking Problem solving Team player Flexibility Dependable Professionalism Ethics

Place before or after Work Experience?

List where, what, when (dates are preferred)

While in school say “in progress”

Include relevant on-the-job training,

workshops, conferences, volunteer, etc.

Accomplishments are best described using the PAR formula:

P = Problem (a problem you encountered)

A = Action (the action you took)

R = Results (%$#+-)

Instead of . . .“Responsible for office filing system.”

Use . . .“Reorganized file system that cut record searches down to less than 5 minutes a 50% savings in time.

Develop a Brag File

Review past job descriptions

Look for any action you took that “Resulted in . . .”

Practice writing P.A.R. statements:

THINK OF SOMETHING SPECIAL YOU DID!!

Accurate Accounts Payable and Accounts Receivable.

Scheduling of 20 employees for efficient coverage of department.

Provided excellent customer service with resolution of customer conflicts.

Ordered supplies for $500,000. budget monthly.

Use numbers, statistics, percentages, names, titles, etc. where possible

Did you increase sales? (by 20%?)

Improve efficiency

Create a new process

Reduce costs, save money (by 10%?)

Trained up to 20 new employees monthly

Supervised a team (how many?)

Exceed your goals

Selected by manager to handle …

Promoted, Advanced, Awarded

Job Description:

Arranges schedules, meetings, travel, distributes information, prepares reports and presentations, and performs other administrative tasks to ensure an efficient working environment as well as carries out special projects.

Create documents, spreadsheets and presentations as directed in a timely and accurate fashion.

Coordinate and organize meetings, training, team functions –including meeting room set up, material preparation, food ordering, preparing agendas, transcription and distribution of minutes and action items if necessary.

Scores for key words that are relevant to the job description

A certain percentage of key words may be required before scheduling for an interview

Does not read fancy fonts. Best: Arial, Courier, Times New Roman

Begin your bullet statements with action verbs:

Evaluated

Approved

Maintained

Produced

Proofread

Save a copy of each version

Update your resume

Don’t overly rely on your resume to develop job leads for you!

NETWORK, use social media…

Use bulleted phrases, not sentences

Start each phrase with a different action verb

Be clear and concise with descriptions

Choose action verbs to highlight your accomplishment

Key: Modify your resume to look for “key words” in each job description and place those throughout your resume.

Age or date of birth

Marital Status

Address of former employer

Salary history

Religious or political affiliations

“I” statements

Abbreviations

Specific dates

References Available Upon Request

Pictures

Customize for each job

Pre-sell your resume

Email or snail mail

Address to a real person when possible

If you can, make a personal link to someone

Express enthusiasm and interest

Use their words in the job description to

show what you can do

Show that you know something about the organization or industry by reviewing their website

Take the initiative

One page – exactly the same letterhead,

paper and font as your resume

Proofread (your letter must be perfect)

Welcomebackcenter.org (medical field)

NACES (transcript evaluations for equivalency)

Upwardly Global Skilled Immigrants

Resume templates and

additional resources

and information:

http://cds.sdce.edu

LIST TWO ACTIONS YOU WILL TAKE:

1. After your first draft of a resume, please bring to career services for a critique

2. ??