HireMinds

Crafting the Perfect Resume

As someone who receives dozens of resumes a day, I see a wide range of styles and formats. There’s no single right way to write a resume.

The goal of a resume isn’t to get a job – it’s to set up an interview. Don’t include a ton of extra information, references or head shots. I like to see personal hobbies that showcase achievement and leadership. Avoid controversial topics like politics or religion.

Format Matters

The cold reality is technology impacts how a resume is read. Most companies receive your resume in an ATS (Applicant Tracking System). A Microsoft Word formatted resume with few graphics or photos is read better and will give you a leg up in getting noticed. You can absolutely have a PDF to showcase your design and creative ability, perhaps better suited to hand out in an in-person interview or to email directly to a hiring manager.

Tell a Story – with Facts and Metrics

I look for resumes that are well written and that include relevant accomplishments vs. a list of duties performed. Keywords are critical.  Keywords should be embedded into bullet points as part of accomplishments vs. a separate section of just words/skills. If you have expertise/knowledge of specific software packages or technology platforms, include those in a separate section. I prefer a one or two-page resume. Make sure to leave white space and use at least a 10-point font.

Executive Summary or Objective?

I prefer seeing a summary vs. an objective. When you write your summary statement, you aren’t just telling the employer what you are good at, you are telling them what you want to do in your next job. No matter how well you do something or how much experience you have in a certain area, don’t highlight it if you don’t want to do it. For example:

Think of what defines you as a professional. Examples could be

Here are a few examples of summaries that I like

The Body of the Resume

Here are some tips on tailoring your resume and developing bullet points that tell a story and show how your experience is directly relevant to what the client is looking for (tip: use the job description to ensure you have relevant examples for each of the key things the company is looking for). For each bullet you should have three components:

Here are a few examples of resume bullets that I like

One-page, two-page, red-page, blue-page?

A common question I get is on length. One page or two?

Scott White specializes in recruiting communications and marketing professionals for Boston area life sciences companies. Find Scott on LinkedIn here or email him at scott@hireminds.com.

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