A good resume has different elements: some should be included and some excluded. How you do this can make a big difference. There are, for this reason, different way to go about the project, but some rules apply to them all. Here you will find ten steps you should include from a good resume writing guide.
1. Find a job
That sounds ambiguous: the thing to do is to find a job you want to apply for. It’s important to try to find something that you’d like to do. And your family won’t mind.
2. Keywords
In this case your keywords are words that can summarize your abilities and past accomplishments. They should include things like what you are qualified to do, what skills you have, what jobs you are good for, and the like.
3. Selecting a resume format
You need to do this because there are three basic formats to choose from and some employers prefer one rather than the other. The three are: the chronological, the functional, and the combinational formats. Make sure you find out which of these you should use.
4. Resume Heading
This is at the top, so it’s the first thing your reader sees. This should contain information about you and your whereabouts: name, address, phone and fax, e-mail, and website, if you have one.
5. Job objective
This is very important in that it instantly informs your employer of some crucial information about you: what is the position you want? What level of responsibility can you handle? What are the things in your resume that are applicable to the job you hope to get?
6. Qualifications
This is a kind of follow-up to your objectives. Here is the place to summarize the things you can do and are qualified to do. Why are you the right person for the job? What’s in your background that is relevant? What credentials do you have? What’s your work ethic?
7. Word experience
This is the next follow-up – moving on from your qualifications. What kinds of jobs did you hold in the past. Were there aspects of those jobs that would be relevant for the job you are trying to get? Don’t talk about things that went wrong in the past. That’s a negative and should be left out.
8. Achievement statements
Don’t produce some kind of generic resume; it gets to be boring real fast. You want to spice up your resume with the achievements you can brag about. Have you had some honors before? If anything here shows that you would be good for the job you want, mention it.
9. Education
They want to know what you know. In other words, what kind of schooling have you had and how far did you go? It’s not typical to include your high-school diploma, unless of course that’s as far as you went. If you went further, include things like you GPA or honors you may have gotten (like magna cum laude).
10. Remaining points
What you put in here is really your decision. The resume writing guide will suggest things like community service or volunteer work. Professional memberships or affiliations may also come in under this rubric. Hobbies may be relevant, too.
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