Building A Resume

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Building A Resume To Blow Away The Competition!

Building A Resume can be a pain, can't it? All that hard work, time and frustration only to be told that on average only one interview is granted for every 200 resumes received by the average employer. In fact research also tells us that your resume will be quickly scanned, rather than read properly. Ten to 20 seconds is all the time you have to persuade a prospective employer to read on.

Do you feel that sense of hopelessness that you will never be able to begin building a resume to get that dream job even if your life depended on it? Read on to find out how I learnt that building a resume isn't as hard as it first seems and I didn't have to spend a fortune either!

Below, I have included some of the tips and the product that actually helped me in building a resume that landed me my first top job!

Visit EasyJob and get the job of Your Life - Create your winning resume and blow the competition away! FREE Trial!!

Build A Resume - First Impressions Last 

Don't crash an burn!

When setting out building a resume always keep in mind the decision to interview a candidate is more often than not based on an overall first impression of your resume. Hard as it may seem, the top half of the first page of your resume will either make you or break you. By the time the hiring manager has read the first few lines, you have either caught their interest, or your resume has crashed and burned.

So What are the key ingredients to building a resume?

Building A Resume - It's All About 2 Sections 

A great resume has two sections. The first section is where you tell the hiring manager about your abilities, qualities and achievements/accomplishments. You're letting them know your the right person for the job. You need to write in a manner that makes the reader immediately perk up and realize that you are someone special. Got that?

The second section is where you back up the first with evidence that you actually did what you said you did. You also need to outline the jobs you have held and of course your education etc.

Remember the juice is in the first section. When the hiring manager finishes reading your resume, you want them to immediately reach for the phone to invite you in to interview. You don't want them informed. You want them interested and excited.

Try and keep in mind when building a resume to leave the reader wanting more. You are giving them even more of a reason to reach for the phone!

Okay, that sounds good, but what are these two sections broken down into then?

For a simple solution to building a resme that will give you that competitive edge, visit EasyJob as I found its resources a goldmine for writing that winning resume.

Building A Resume - 3 Tips 

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Building A Resume - Hire Me! 

It's all about asserting yourself.

When you start building a resume, the first part is where you assert yourself. HIRE ME!

Start with an OBJECTIVE - Why you are the perfect person for the job. Use an objective if you are a career changer or graduate.

Or use a SUMMARY - This is best when you are staying in the same job field. Write several concise statements that focus the reader's attention on the most important qualities, achievements and abilities you have to offer. It is your one and only chance to attract and hold their attention, to get across what is most important, and to entice the employer to keep reading.

Follow that with SKILLS AND ACCOMPLISHMENTS - Remember you are still building a resume to sell yourself to the reader, not to inform them. Basically, you do what you did in the previous section, but go into more detail.

Now for the second part, THE EVIDENCE SECTION - By evidence I mean all the standard information you must include when building a resume, such as work history (summarize your work experience here and list your work history in reverse chronological order), dates, education, affiliations, list of software mastered, etc. If you put all this at the top of your resume, anyone reading it will feel like they are reading an income tax form! Let's face it, this stuff is mind numbing no matter how extraordinary you are. All this evidence is best placed in the second half of the resume. Put the hot stuff in the beginning, and all this less exciting information afterward.

Finally you can put "References available upon request" at the end of your resume. Voila!

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by JohnyC

My name is Johny and I have in the past worked for numerous recruitment consultants. So this lens includes some of the golden nuggets of knowledge I p... (more)

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