Sunday, June 14, 2020
10 Resume Writing Tips for 2018
10 Resume Writing Tips for 2018 Resume Writing Tips for 2018 Perhaps youâre one of the thousands of career professionals assessing their career path and considering growth, advancement, or change. Maybe you just want to be prepared for the right opportunity should it present itself this yearâ"either way, your resume is the main tool to get you where you want to go. Whether youâre charting your career path, planning for growth, considering a career change, or havenât needed a resume in ten-plus years, these resume writing tips are timely advice you need to hear. Resume Writing Tip 2018 #1 Consider What Defines You I recently worked with a client who wasnât seeing any traction in her job search because she had blurry career goals. She needed clarity to turn her purpose and passion in life into a clear career path. Without a vision or direction for your career, itâs hard to chart a course and plan a strategy to get there. If you need clarity, start by asking yourself some soul-searching questions: What vision do you have for your career over the next 1, 3, 5, or 10 years? Which values are driving your goals? Whatâs your purpose? What are you passionate about? Why do you do what you do? Deep down I think what drives most of us is the desire to help others. Letâs face it, a selfish life isnât a very happy, fulfilling, or successful one. Sure, we all want a great career and to be paid well for the work we do. But a life invested in others, a life built on your contribution to making the world a better placeâ"thatâs a life of purpose and passion. Itâs a life that offers long-term fulfillment and career satisfaction. So while these major soul-searching questions might not seem to have a lot to do with writing your resume, they actually affect it more than you think. If youâre lacking clarity or a vision for your career, I would recommend reaching out to a trusted career coach who can help. Without a clear-cut course for your career, youâre like a ship at sea without the means to steerâ"youâre just being tossed about by the waves of whatever comes your way. Itâs time to take proactive control of your career journey. Resume Writing Tip 2018 #2 Speak to YOUR Audience Your resume has an intended audienceâ"and itâs not *just* the HR generalist, recruiter, or applicant tracking software program. You need to know who (which companies) youâre targeting, which industries, AND their greatest pains, needs, and problems. To get to the bottom of defining your target audience you need to ask yourself a few more questions: Are there specific companies Iâm interested in? Am I aiming to secure a position in a specific industry? What advantage or benefit does this position bring to their business? What will the company be lacking or missing if thereâs no one in this position? Consider some of the struggles and obstacles facing the employer and the industry. Make a list of the most critical ones, and reflect on times in the past when youâve confronted similar challenges. With your target list in handâ"and the discovery work of bringing transparency to your career path completedâ"itâs time to bring clarity to your personal brand. Resume Writing Tip 2018 #3 Uncover Your Unique Promise of Value Do you prefer to spend your time with people who are genuine or who are insincere? Authenticity has been glossed over when it comes to careers, job searching, networking, or how we present ourselves on our resume, cover letter, and LinkedIn profile. Research and experience tell us, though, that the opposite is true. Weâre naturally drawn to authentic people, businesses, companies, and brands. If you had a choice between doing business with a large, faceless company or a genuine person with a name and a common connection, which would you choose? Employers are searching for genuine employees; itâs why theyâre drawn to your LinkedIn profileâ"they can put a face to the name on the paper. They can research you on social media to get a glimpse into âwho you really areâ. Donât fall for the myth that your resume, cover letter, or LinkedIn profile have to be filled with canned, overused phrases (or templates) because you think thatâs what employers want to see. On the contrary, they want to get to know the real you and the unique promise of value you offer. So, how do you define your unique promise of value? Well, I hope youâre not tired of the soul searching and question asking, because weâre going for round three ⦠Start by asking yourself some questions to uncover the distinct benefits you offer the employer: What benefit or contribution do you add? What key accomplishments or successes have you delivered time and time again? What would you say is unique about yourself and how you do what you do? What are your greatest strengths? Ask others what they think about you. Reach out to friends, family, and your network and ask them which words they would use to describe you. What do others see as the value you add? Read through your LinkedIn recommendations and past performance evaluations and look for themes. When you put similar words and phrases together what picture do you get? What do others say are your greatest strengths? How do others describe you? What do your boss, team, direct reports come to you for on a regular basis? I realize that some of you may be introverted like me, and quizzing others on their thoughts about you may cause some anxiety. If thatâs you, I highly recommend the Reach Personal Branding Survey. You can gather up the e-mail addresses of those you want to elicit answers from and send it out and let the responses roll in. Itâs anonymous, so people can respond without concern over judgementâ"and the survey does all the work searching for common themes in your personal brand, then reports those back to you. It provides an external perspective of your personal brand. **By the way, I donât get any kickbacks from recommending the survey. I recommend it to you purely because I enjoyed it and found great value in the feedback. Itâs very eye-opening, and I believe you will find value in it too.** It may be helpful to you to see that this process is not about creating your personal brand or being who youâre not. I would never advise you to try to be something youâre not. This process is about discovering the brand thatâs already there and what others see as your brand. Resume Writing Tip 2018 #4 Captivating, Influential, and Beneficial As you dig into your career history and assess common themesâ"and how they relate to the needs of the company and the problems of the employerâ"look for those things that make you captivating, influential, and beneficial. How have you positively influenced others? What would others say is fascinating, compelling, or interesting about you? What benefit would an employer or company get from choosing you over another candidate? What benefit or value did you bring to your previous employers? TRY THIS: Take a few minutes to reflect back on the last three positions youâve held. Write down at least one challenge that you overcame in each of the three positions. Now, answer these questions about each challenge: What was the challenge? What steps did you take to resolve the challenge? What was the result of the action that you took? Save the answers to these challenges because theyâre going to help you share your story in tip number six. You want to look at the big picture of your career history and find common themes. As they start to emerge, your personal brand takes shape AND youâll have great stories and accomplishments to write about in your resume. Youâll also be able to easily share with the employer how you can resolve their problems, meet their greatest needs, or add to their bottom line. Click here to download this article as a PDF that you can take with you to read later: https://www.greatresumesfast.com/resume-writing-tips-for-2018-free-PDF 2018 Resume Writing Tip #5 Cut the Fluffy Sales Talk Be realâ"and be yourself. When you write your resume, be authentic. When we write resumes for our clients, part of the process is listening carefully to our clients and the words that they use so that when we write their resumes weâre using their own words, personality, and voice. You want your resume to be a reflection of yourselfâ"and not a canned template. STAY AWAY FROM TEMPLATES Templates and fluffy sales talk, clichéd phrases, and overused terms are glanced over when employers screen resumes. Itâs actually a waste of space. I could give you a long list of these terms, but you probably already know what Iâm talking about; they tend to be on every resume template or sample site on the Internet. Rest assured, if itâs on a template or large resume sample site there are hundreds if not thousands of others using the exact same contentâ"which completely defeats what youâre trying to do. Resumes are meant to be a genuine reflection of who YOU areâ"not some random person on the Internet. If it reads like a worn-out line youâve heard beforeâ"or something that could be removed from your resume and put on someone elseâs (and it would describe them)â"itâs not authentic. Thatâs right ⦠Iâm looking at you, you âresults-drivenâ, âexcellent communicatorâ, who also happens to be a âgreat team playerâ. ARE YOU SELLING SOMETHING? Something else to consider is that no one likes to be sold something. Think about the last time you went to a car lot or furniture store and the salesperson walked up to you as soon as you set foot on the property. You knew they were going to try and sell you something right awayâ"and it automatically put you on the defensive, right? No one wants to be taken advantage of or fed some line that hundreds of people before them have heard. Employers are the same way. Itâs always better to err on the side of sincerity. REMOVE ADJECTIVES A practical way to cut the sales talk and fluff is to remove adjectives. Especially multiple adjectives in a row. Replace adjectives with accomplishments. Your accomplishments are unique to youâ"and compelling to employers. 2018 Resume Writing Tip #6 Write Your Story Letâs reflect on your answers to the challenges question in resume writing tip #4. In each of your challenge scenarios there was a problem, an action you took to resolve the problem, and a result of that action. Hereâs a great formula to put together bullet points that will help you to write and share your story on your resume. Start with the result: EXAMPLE RESULT: Generated $3M in revenue growth. Talk about the steps/action you took to resolve the problem. ACTION: Repaired damaged client relationships and restored trust with three multimillion-dollar client accounts. Share the problem or pain point: PROBLEM: When I stepped in as sales executive, the company had lost 15 of their major client accounts due to mismanagement by the sales team. Now you can take the information from your three questions and use it to create a resume bullet point that tells the story of how youâre a relationship repairer, revenue generator, trust restorer, team builder, and positive agent for change. Just remember that youâre using your accomplishment (results) to tell the storyâ"not relying on adjectives to do it. 2018 Resume Writing Tip #7 Prove Yourself Part of being authentic in representing your brand and telling your story is proving and validating who you are and your accomplishments on your resume and online. You can validate your personal brand by writing about your accomplishments with tangible results. Numbers are very persuasive and hard to argue against. They provide tangible proof that you provide real results. Use numbers throughout your resume. Sometimes I have clients who think they simply donât have any numbers, maybe because they were not in a sales role or a position that affected the companyâs bottom line. We all have quantifiable accomplishmentsâ"you just have to know where to look. Hereâs an article I wrote a few years ago to help you do just that. Using Metrics in a Resume When You Have None. Testimonials are third-person endorsements. What someone else says about us can be even more impressive or impactful than what we say about ourselves. Itâs having someone else validate your brand and successes. LinkedIn can be a great resource to support and validate your brand, career successes, and what others have to say about you. Itâs hard to argue with recommendations, and now endorsements have become a vital part of your job search and personal brand. Recommendations: Donât wait for someone to recommend you. Be proactive about requesting recommendations from supervisors, clients, coworkers, colleagues, direct reports, or others you know professionally. Be specific about what youâd like them to share in their recommendation. Perhaps thereâs a certain theme of accomplishments you want to highlight or a facet of your personal brand you want to bring attention toâ"donât be afraid to ask your network to recommend you for those topics. Endorsements: Endorsements support your personal brand in a few ways. At a glimpse employers are able to see which skills you have been endorsed for, and by how many people. They can also see any mutual connections you share and which skills they endorsed. When you apply to positions on LinkedIn, it automatically culls out any endorsements youâve received that match the keywords for the position and alerts the hiring manager to how many skills are a match. This is another way to prove youâre a great fit. 2018 Resume Writing Tip #8 Modern Design, Stunning Visuals, Gripping Graphics We are a visually driven societyâ"and we are becoming increasingly more so as technology and social media drive us in that direction. If youâre not a believer, I submit to you: Pinterest, Snapchat, Instagram, and the fact that videos are becoming a widespread method to drive clicks, shares, and views. Graphics, visuals, and resume design affect your resumeâs impact. They can also support your personal brand and communicate vital information. As the saying goes, a picture is worth a thousand words. Use a modern resume design that is easy to read. Employers scan your resume and search for your summary, position title, employment dates, and past positions. Make this information easy to locate. Create graphs or pie charts that convey important information or tell a story. It could be a pie chart that breaks up the different keyword/skills areas you want to bring attention to or highlights the main industries you know. Sales data is great to convey in a graphic. Industry memberships or leadership organization logos are a great way to highlight industry-relevant associations or leadership experience. Testimonials or quotes can be offset in nice visuals. Youâre also conveying validation/proof while doing so with a great visual. Double bonus! If youâre not an expert with Microsoft Word design, or perhaps youâre in a marketing or creative field and want a truly distinct resume, I encourage you to avoid seeking out templates online. Itâs worth the investment to find a resume writer who can create a modern resume design, stunning visuals, and captivating graphics that support your brand, share your accomplishments, and really draw the employer in. 2018 Resume Writing Tip #9 What Color and Branding Have in Common Using color draws the eye in to the resume. Research has proven that the strategic use of color can actually catch and hold the attention of recruiters. Hereâs a great video from Reach Branding that Iâve referred to many times that explains different colors and the associated brand/image. You may choose to use a color that represents your brand. Itâs important to note that studies have proven resumes receive an initial six-second eye scan to make a fit/no fit determination. First impressions are criticalâ"and theyâre visual. While itâs certainly OK to omit colorâ"if it positively affects an employerâs first impression and causes them to invest more time in a fit/no fit decisionâ"it makes sense to include a color that supports your personal brand. 2018 Resume Writing Tip #10 Itâs Not Just About Your Resume Itâs about your entire career portfolio. Once youâve defined yourself, given a vision to your career path, discovered your unique promise of value, and found common themes and stories to share, you need to communicate this same message and brand across all other platforms. Infuse branding and your message into your LinkedIn profile, professional blog, social media profiles, and all of your career documentsâ"and talk about them with your network. Itâs important that your message and branding are consistent, otherwise itâs not really a brand at all. Itâs simply what you want to be known for but not who people see or the message they receive from you. 2018 Is About Career Growth The resume writing tips Iâve offered this year veer off the beaten path of the everyday run-of-the-mill resume tips you typically see. Thereâs a method to my madness, I promise. Last year, I predicted that 2017 would be a year of hope and optimism for job seekersâ"that weâd see an upswing in the job market. And it proved to be an on-point prediction. I believe 2018 is going to be a year of clarity and vision for career professionals as they seek to define their career paths and take steps to advance their careers. As you chart the course for career growth this year, take these resume tips to heart and invest the time into the soul searching required. Working through the questions at the beginning will help you to define who you are, which will help you decide where youâre going and give clarity to the vision for your career. Without a vision for your career path, itâs hard to plan the steps youâll need to get there. NEED MORE HELP? If youâre struggling to write your own resume, not seeing the results you want from your current resume, or havenât needed a resume before and youâd like help, you can find more resume writing articles or request support for a resume writer at Great Resumes Fast. Connect with me on LinkedIn to read more tips on resumes, cover letters, LinkedIn profiles, and job searches. Iâm passionate about helping career professionals who donât have the time, experience, or expertise to create interview-worthy resumes.
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