From: Peter Newfield, Career-Resumes.com®
By Peter Newfield
President of Career-Resumes.com®
When you think about taking an adventurous trip to an exotic locale
around the globe, you know the first thing you’ll need is
an updated passport. You can’t cross from Country A into Country
B without that official stamped document listing your personal information.
The analogy holds true when contemplating a job change -- whether
within the same industry or changing fields -- you will need an
updated resume to help you along on that important career journey.
A resume is more than just a listing of your most basic information,
however. A strong resume should present a thumbnail sketch of your
career history, talents, accomplishments, and achievements. A powerful
resume not only outlines where you have worked but also highlights
what you personally can take credit for along the way. Most professional
resumes start off with a Summary of Qualifications, a brief five
to seven sentence overview of your professional knowledge and skills.
Next, comes Areas of Strength which can be key words to show at
a glance the areas where you have the most experience such as “Financial
Reporting”, “Staff Training”, “Operations
Management”, etc.
The meat and potatoes part of the resume, of course, is the Professional
Experience section. Here is your opportunity to not only list the
companies, job titles, and dates of employment in reverse chronological
order, but also to include information about your responsibilities
and accomplishments. What sets you apart from every other pharmaceutical
sales rep? How have you made money for your company, reduced costs,
built and trained new teams, or pushed the envelope in a way that
can be qualified? Here is your opportunity to blow your own horn,
to give the prospective employer an answer to the question, “What
have you done lately?”
An accomplishment driven resume can get you a lot farther than
a laundry list of past jobs. On one or two pages, you can present
your best efforts, awards won, languages spoken, global experience
gained, or specialized training and certifications. You need to
get this information across before the interview or, chances are,
there may not ever be an interview.
Of course, education, industry training, and computer skills also
need to be included on your resume. Unless you have recently graduated
from college, the Education section should follow the Professional
Experience part of your resume. Include your degree, major, and
any outstanding awards or scholarship information, if you feel it
is impressive. If you have been out of school for more than five
years, it is safe to say that you can leave out the fraternity and
extracurricular activities and just highlight the academic achievements.
Once you have your resume information polished and proofread, make
sure that you take the time to send your resume to the best sources
for career advancement within your industry. Of course, answering
job advertisements in major daily newspapers and industry/trade
journals is a natural way to start, but don’t forget to check
out the many on-line services available for posting your resume.
Your resume can be posted on electronic bulletin boards, be searched
by key words by major corporate Human Resource departments, or be
screened by recruiters with clients who are looking for someone
with your particular qualifications.
Your resume is your passport to a better job and the more you can
do to make yourself stand out from the crowd, the farther you’ll
go in that career journey of life. Best of luck and happy travels!
For a free critique/price quote, email Career Resumes® at Peter@career-resumes.com.
Peter Newfield is President of Career-Resumes.com®,
one of the premier resume writing services in the United States.
He is The Resume Expert for BlueSteps.com, ExecutiveRegistry.com,
NETSHARE.com, DirectEmployer.com and the former Resume Expert for
Monster.com, Spencer Stuart Talent Network and the Career Center on AOL. View samples at: www.career-resumes.com