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ASK: Creating a great resume

(This is part of Ask the Community Guy, an ongoing series of questions posed by readers for Jake, the Community Guy)

Dovetailing the conversation about Community Management jobs, I thought it was a good time to also discuss creating a great resume. I have this conversation regularly with people of all ages, skill levels, and backgrounds. In fact, I had this very conversation last night! I should have written down some notes to make writing this post easier!

A great resume is a great story.

Let me repeat that for effect: Your resume tells a story about who you are, what you know, how you think, what kind of a person you are. Like so many things in life, first impressions matter, and your resume is very often your first impression to a potential employer.

Over the years I’ve seen literally hundreds of resumes, and hired somewhere around 50 people. I’m always shocked how many people simply don’t think much about their resume. Basic, obvious, glaring errors:

The list goes on, but you get the point. The story these resumes told was: “I’m a lazy, uninspired potential employee”. Not exactly the makings of a must-have employee. You’re the foremost expert on you

So then what story should a resume tell? That’s easy:

Design
Here’s a fun exercise: ask some friends for their resumes, download some off the web, and open up a few of the default Word templates. Print them all out, shuffle them, then haphazardly spread them out on an open surface. Blurs into a sad mess of black and white nothingness, doesn’t it? How do you ensure your document stands out? Add some design elements!

CAUTION: If you’re not a designer, hire one. Do NOT attempt to design on your own if you don’t know what you’re doing. No design elements are better than bad design elements every time. There are plenty of designers around that can help you out for relatively little money. Ask them for a nice header graphic, a standardized font treatment suggestion, and/or a simple logo. Simple.

Additionally:

The last point on design is perhaps the most crucial. Your resume should be one page. No more, no less. One page. Seriously. I don’t care how much experience you have or how much you want to share, if you can’t tell your story in one page, you need to rethink your story. You’re not writing your auto-biography, you’re trying to create a marketing piece that drives a potential employer to invite you into their office to share further details.

One page.

Content
If you’re going to keep it to one page, let’s look at what shouldn’t be include first.

Telling a great story has little to do with relaying dates and facts. It’s about emotion, excitement, amazement. Your goal isn’t to lull your potential employer into a soft sleep with your accurate retelling of the times and dates of our career. No, it’s to make them excited, giddy about picking up the phone to setup your interview.

Build your resume around your accomplishments. Focus on what you learned, what you were responsible for, what kind of projects you completed successfully. Break down your content into three areas:

Personally, I’ve only done minor tweaking to the resume for specific interviews. Instead, I design it to clearly represent my career and then write the best cover letter possible. Andy agrees that the cover letter is crucial.

Would it help to see this in action? Check out my (highly outdated) resume.

Other stuff
Here’s a few other random suggestions to keep in mind:

And when you’re ready to send out your tasty new resume, take a look at my thoughts on finding a community job or visit the Community Guy Jobs portal.


If you’d like to submit a question to the Community Guy, check out the submission details.

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3 Responses to “ASK: Creating a great resume”

PDF is nice, but I’ve had MANY recruiters, application systems, and managers ask for a Word DOC resume ONLY. So, I’m afraid we all have to dust off our skillz and make sure change tracking is disabled and all changes have been “accepted.” Here’s a good summary on the issue:

http://www.shaunakelly.com/word/trackchanges/HowTrackChangesWorks.html

You’ll also need to make sure you’ve got good TXT versions of your resume and cover letter available - many automated systems will only accept this format, and we’ve all seen what copied text looks like coming out of Word.

Good points, Eric. Thanks for bringing them up (I’ll update the post).

Besides the track changes, there are also other issues with Word docs. See the update for some additional links.

Hi Jake,

Thanks for your email asking for my input on this post. I took the liberty of recording a three minute podcast as my answer. How ’bout them apples? Click here to listen:

http://www.reliablegrowth.com/public/harry_joiner_community_guy.mp3

Rock on!
Harry Joiner
MarketingHeadhunter.com

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