1. Be Complete
Make sure that your resume includes EVERYTHING your prospective employer would need to know to be able to offer you an interview.
It is NOT unheard of for your carefully-crafted cover letter to be separated from your CV - if your contact details were only on your cover letter, how will they get in touch to arrange the interview?
Therefore, make sure that your CV includes AT LEAST the following information:
---> Full contact details
---> The position you are applying for or are interested in
---> Employment history
---> Personal and professional achievements
---> Academic and professional qualifications
---> If not included elsewhere, evidence of your key strengths that will make you an irresistible candidate!
And while we're at it, functional resumes are a big NO-NO!! As a professional recruiter, when I see a functional resume, I think "What is this guy (or gal) hiding?". It's like smelling fresh paint on an old car. Just stick with a chronological resume ALL THE TIME and paint any inconsistencies (e.g., career breaks) in as good a light as possible. This will ALWAYS be better than trying to hide it in the first place!
2. Be Relevant
Seasoned recruiters are AMAZED by the number of applicants who have clearly not tailored their resume to the job they are applying for.
Make sure that you put yourself in THEIR shoes. Think about what they are looking for in your resume.
If, for instance, you are applying as a job as an office manager and your experience is in telesales, make sure that you emphasise your team leadership and time management skills.
If, however, you were applying for a sales job, then clearly focus on your ability to get leads, convert leads into sales, and sell more products to existing customers.
In short, every time you mention something you've accomplished in your CV, make sure it will strengthen your case for being given an interview.
If it doesn't, CHANGE it or DELETE it!!
3. Be Recent
As well as being relevant, make sure that your resume content is RECENT.
If you are a seasoned manager applying for the position of CEO in a large company, is your experience managing your university's theatre company particularly convincing?
On the other hand, if you are a recent graduate, that could be exactly the right thing to put on your resume as it will demonstrate that you have some management experience. Just make sure that you back it up with specific accomplishments in the role!!
4. Be Specific
Be as specific as you can on how YOUR performance served the company you were working for.
As an illustration, consider these four descriptions of an applicant's experience managing a sales function:
---> Responsible for 50 people in XYZ Corp's sales department.
---> Managed 50 colleagues in XYZ Corp's sales department to increase sales by 100% over 4 years.
---> Led 50 colleagues in XYZ Corp's sales department to increase XYZ's share of the widget market from 15% to 20% over 4 years.
---> Led XYZ Corp's 50 strong sales team to increase XYZ Corp's share of the widget market by radically overhauling the compensation structure, fostering a more collaborative culture within the team and redesigning the customer acquisition process.
Now, if I needed to make a decision on which of these resumes would be worthy of an interview, guess which one I would choose...
5. Be Clear
Make your resume as clear as you can in five ways:
---> Font: Use an easily-readable font. Verdana is a classic, is easily readable and is easy on the eye. Other favourites are Times New Roman or Georgia. Try to stick to one, or at most two font sizes (nothing less than 8 point and ideally nothing less than 10 point), and do not over-style your text. Italics, bold and underlined words on the same page look clumsy.
---> Format: Make the format of your resume as easy to follow as possible, and consider using horizontal rules across the page to separate sections.
---> Language: Ensure that the description of your experiences and accomplishments is as clear as possible. Test them with your friends. Ask them whether it is possible to make the descriptions clearer or more concise.
---> Consistency: Make sure that you are consistent in every way - this significantly increases readability. For instance, use a consistent date format throughout. If your first position is listed in the order of [date, company, position, achievements] then make sure they are ALL listed like that. When listing your achievements, make sure that they all start with a verb. And make sure that font sizes and styles are consistent for similar words - for instance if your previous employers' names is in bold, then they all should be.
---> Spelling and Grammar: Use your word-processor's spelling and grammar checking facility. A spelling or grammatical error in a resume is quite simply inexcusable and could be enough ON ITS OWN to send your resume to the bin. Once you've checked it on the computer, check it with someone who you trust to pick up any last gremlins in the grammar.
6. Be Brief
Ideally, a resume should be just one page, although if you are applying for a job in which the assessor will need significantly greater detail on your past accomplishments, then the resume can spread to two pages.
Though remember, this is the exception and not the rule!!
Wrap Up
So, now you have a winning resume guide! Go back to your old resume and check it against the six easy steps in the winning resume guide, and make sure your phone is on the hook for when those recruiters call!
Jonathan Lewis is the founder and CEO of Careerfriend, a company committed to helping people succeed in their dream careers. His extensive experience of attracting, recruiting, retaining and developing exceptional people in management consulting and investment banking allows him to offer clear, actionable advice which has a great impact on people either looking for new jobs or looking to succeed further in their existing jobs.
The Careerfriend website (http://www.careerfriend.com) contains free career advice articles to help people succeed in securing dream careers, from career and employer selection, through resume and cover letter writing, to interviewing, salary negotiation and ongoing career development.
Jonathan was educated at Cambridge University, UK and has advised major national and international corporations, both in the public and private sectors, on issues of corporate strategy, corporate organization, labor relations, personnel development
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
Disadvantages of Resume SoftwareFormat A large majority of software requires... Read More
Imagine if a business invested years into the research, design,... Read More
What do you want to be when you grow up?... Read More
Here's a list of the top 10 tips you can... Read More
I wanted to quit my job. So I decided to... Read More
How can you manage your emotions during your career change... Read More
A client who has a fine arts degree wanted to... Read More
The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (No Child... Read More
If you use your voice to get attention, you use... Read More
As children we often used to read stories where magical... Read More
Interviewing for a new job, or a promotion, can be... Read More
Sample resume objectives. When a harried and possibly panicked job... Read More
A student loan helps you get through college. Then you... Read More
One of the best things you can do to increase... Read More
Do you want to know how to jump-start your professional... Read More
Creating a strong resume is a very important part of... Read More
As professional recruiters working both retained and contingency search assignments,... Read More
The expense was substantial. An immersion workshop with twelve participants... Read More
Many people in the last decade have experienced for themselves... Read More
Downloading a free resume template can be so alluring. No... Read More
The need to tell people about yourself may present itself... Read More
11 Commandments For Smart Negotiating1 - BE PREPARED. The... Read More
The champagne corks have been popping to celebrate your promotion.... Read More
It seems like a good idea, harmless in fact. Your... Read More
According to US Department of Labor statistics, the average time... Read More
It's okay to take your job seriously, to be a... Read More
Many people, under financial or other pressures to find work... Read More
Are you lost in the wilderness when it comes to... Read More
One of the trickier questions an interviewer might put to... Read More
1) Build a Relationship With Your Boss:Like it or not,... Read More
Dr. Denis Waitley, trainer of leaders, including Super Bowl and... Read More
Growing up on a Delaware farm was a wonderful and... Read More
Looking for a job involves a wide range of responsibilities:... Read More
Have you ever heard of liquid air? The process of... Read More
So you've managed to secure a job interview for a... Read More
It only happened on Mondays. Sometimes I escaped... Read More
Sophisticated job seekers know and understand that sometime during the... Read More
There is more attitude around than the 'traditional 'positive /... Read More
You've looked at all the job interview tips and techniques.... Read More
In this day and age it can become increasingly difficult... Read More
What makes for a rich career? It is more than... Read More
We need more people to choose nursing as a career.... Read More
Asking for money is so taboo in our culture that... Read More
How would you know if your resume did or didn't... Read More
I have something to say that's driving me batty. It's... Read More
So, you need to submit employment references. A simple task,... Read More
"What is my calling?" Do any of us really have... Read More
Are you being paid what you are worth? Has anybody... Read More
OK. You've posted your resume online. You've sent out a... Read More
The message came from Human Resources. There's nothing to worry... Read More
Unless you are among the luckiest people in the world,... Read More
Most of us are aware that we need to grieve... Read More
Some experts say NEVER bother with resume objectives. While others... Read More
Some interview questions are asked so frequently that they've become... Read More
Is it opening doors to new opportunities? Does it compel... Read More
The economy is picking up, budgets are new, positions are... Read More
Obviously, there are RIGHT ways to move UP the ladder.... Read More
If "resignation" is the word that strikes fear into all... Read More
Unemployment carries a lot of emotional baggage for most of... Read More
A resume may not be who you are, but to... Read More
The AIDA formula is as old as dirt. It was... Read More
There was a time when accounting was the boring college... Read More
Recruiting firms, like most businesses today, must embrace technology in... Read More
1. Employee Backdrop in AustraliaThe whole arena of Industrial Relations... Read More
It's hard to imagine why anyone would pick up a... Read More
The interviews are completed, the paperwork is all filled out... Read More
Careers, Jobs & Employment |