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RESUME BUILDING
Road Map 
 Role of the Resume 
 Types of Resumes 
 Resume Formats 
 Resume Sections 
 Additional Documentation 
 Miscellaneous Tips 
 Miscellaneous Tilts 
 Sample Resumes 
 On-line Resources
What is a Resume? 
 A marketing tool 
 Your first tool for building a career 
 The first impression a prospective employer has of you 
 A selling tool that allows you to highlight to an employer 
how you can contribute to the company 
 Request for an interview 
 Purpose of the resume is to get you an interview 
 Must capture the reader’s interest and attention 
 Must convince the employer that you have the ability to fill 
their position 
 Your “big picture” 
 A snapshot of what you believe are your most important 
experiences and qualifications
Types of Resumes 
 A Paper/PDF Resume 
 A printed resume for use at job fairs, conferences, … 
 Should be clean, concise, professional, and pleasing to the eye 
 Use bullets, bolding, and indentation 
 Take this resume with you on job interviews, career breakfasts, … 
 An Electronic Resume 
 A plain text resume for on-line submission 
 Typically must conform to employer specifications 
 Use left-justified and space indented formatting 
 If desired, use “+”, “*”, and “0” to represent bullets 
 An HTML Resume 
 Typically includes links to homepage, images, … 
 Avoid this type of resume 
 Most people don’t want an employer walking around in their homepage
Resume Formats - Chronological 
 Highlight your work 
experience in 
reverse 
chronological order 
 Be sure to not leave 
gaps 
 The most widely 
used format for 
working 
professionals 
Cut off
Resume Formats - Functional 
 Highlight specific 
skills for which the 
market has high 
demand 
 Seldom used by 
new graduates 
 Frequently used to 
change jobs or 
careers 
Again, cut off
Resume Formats - Combinational 
 Highlight specific work 
experience 
 Highlight marketable 
skills 
 Use reverse 
chronological order 
 The best resume style 
for most college 
students 
I would prefer bullets
The Silver Bullet 
 What Is Your “Story”? 
 What slant can you take on your resume? 
 Do you want to emphasize internship experience? 
 Do you want to emphasize work experience? 
 Do you want to emphasize course work? 
 Do you want to emphasize project experience? 
 Do you want to emphasize research experience? 
 Do you want to emphasize personal traits? 
 What is unique or interesting about your college experience? 
 My Recommendation 
 If you have an interesting internship – emphasize it – if not get one! 
 Most MBA graduates have interesting project experience 
 Build on your liberal arts education!!! 
 Demonstrate leadership, communication, cultural awareness
Standard Resume Sections 
Move toward bottom 
 Header 
 Objective 
 Education 
 Honors/Activities 
 Work Experience 
 Relevant Courses 
 Skills 
 Projects 
I prefer other order
The Header Section 
 The first line should be your name 
 Larger than the largest font used in body 
 Avoid using decorative fonts 
 Don’t use black or gray shaded backgrounds 
 Exclude titles Mr., Mrs., Ms., … 
 Include contact address 
 Permanent address 
 Current address 
 Include your email address 
 Use your PROFESSIONAL email address 
 Don’t use “BIGBOY@HOT_MAIL.COM” 
 Include your phone number 
 Change the message machine OR caller tune to be 
appropriate
The Objective Section 
 Considered optional but I strongly suggest including it 
 Make statement clear, concise, and to the point 
 Bad: “I want to get a job” 
 Weak: “To attain an internship in the computer industry.” 
 Good: “To attain an internship in the computer industry working 
with database or network security.” 
 Avoid being overly specific to single company 
 “To attain a position at 3M Pharmaceuticals working on …” 
 I prefer objectives from the company’s perspective 
 “To attain a web application programming position where 
knowledge of Java and the Struts framework will add value the 
overall development process.”
This section should scream “I am a leader” 
The Honors/Activities 
Section 
 Should only contain honors and awards earned 
during your time in college 
 You can include academic or extracurricular items 
 I prefer only academic or service-related items 
 Include a brief description if not self-evident from 
title 
 “Award given to top performer on the capstone exam” 
 Don’t include hobbies or activities not related to the 
job or your story 
 Don’t include volunteer work unless there is a direct 
and positive link with the job or your story
The Work Experience Section 
 Dedicated to most recent and relevant employment 
 Format 
 Employer and location on the first line 
 Don’t need name of supervisor, complete address, or contact information 
 Position and time-span on the second line 
 Use only year, not month and year (avoids time gaps) 
 Each position should have at least two bullets 
 Explain role and contributions 
 Don’t emphasize duties but rather emphasize outcomes 
 “Increased efficiency of … by 20%” 
 “Improved user navigation experience on …” 
 Descriptions should be consistent in wording 
 Watch the tense 
 Current job uses present tense 
 Former jobs use past tense 
Employers want 
problem solvers
The Relevant Courses Section 
 The keyword is relevant courses 
 Don’t include Foundations of Computing 
 Don’t include Aloha and Fabric Painting 
 Focus on courses the are either unique or would 
normally be considered elective 
 Soft Skills Seminars 
 Language Competency Classes 
 Computer Networks 
 Employers will assume you have had the rest
The Skills Section 
 This is where you emphasize your technical 
skills
The Projects Section 
 Used correctly, this section can set you apart from other new 
graduates 
 Most new grads don’t get the opportunity to use this section 
 Show any lengthy, impressive, or relevant projects to which you 
have made real contribution 
 Each project should have at least two bullets (focus on outcomes)
Supporting Documentation – 
Cover Letter (1) 
 Why do I need to write a cover letter? 
 Use the cover letter to focus attention on elements of your 
background that are particularly relevant to the company 
 Letter acts as your verbal introduction to the employer 
 Send it to a person, not a place 
 Avoid “To Whom It May Concern,” 
 Worst case “Dear Recruiter:” 
 First sentence should tell why you are writing 
 “I am writing in regard to your posting listed on …” 
 “Dr. Wagner at Money Minting Business School suggested that I 
…” 
 “As you may recall, I spoke with you briefly at …” 
 If unsolicited, indicate why you are interested in the company
Supporting Documentation – 
Cover Letter (2) 
 Highlight your skills 
 Use two to three paragraphs to given in-depth 
description of your selling points 
 Each paragraph should be stand alone (could be 
moved to different location in text) 
 Close with a promise of action 
 If possible, indicating that you will be contacting them 
in the near future to set up a mutually acceptable 
meeting time or to further discuss your qualifications 
 Nice if you can say “during the second half of this 
month, I will be in your Delhi. I will contact your office 
when I arrive to arrange a possible meeting time”
Supporting Documentation – 
Cover Letter (3)
Supporting Documentation – 
References 
 Prepare a separate reference sheet 
 Use same paper as the resume itself 
 Bring reference sheet (and resume) with you to any interviews, 
job fairs, career breakfasts, … 
 Do not mail reference sheet with resume and cover letter 
 Reference sheet is a stand-alone document 
 Should include your Header from the resume 
 Try to arrange contact information in pleasing fashion 
 Use professional references only 
 Pick individuals that think highly of you 
 Pick individuals that are familiar with your work 
 Always ask your references before using their names 
 Be prepared to give supporting materials – courses, projects, … 
 Ask again if it has been a while
Scannable Resumes 
 Most large employers will scan your resume 
into a central database 
 Tips to assist the scanning process 
 Don’t use italics, underlining, or graphics 
 Use bold only for headers 
 Use “scanner-friendly” fonts 
 Times New Roman, Courier, Helvetica, or Arial are 
good examples 
 Font sizes of between 9 and 12 
 Use black ink on white background
Tips on Delivery of Your Resume 
 Posting Online 
 “rules” are still emerging 
 Common mistake – formatting that doesn’t make the trip 
 Convert to text only 
 Use PDF if allowed 
 Proofread carefully after conversion 
 If they ask about salary, leave it empty 
 If they force salary, be honest but don’t shoot for the moon 
 Emailing your resume 
 Attach resume as a PDF document (or Word document) 
 75 – 80% of companies are running Windows 
 Also include text version in the email message 
 Attachments can get dropped or filtered 
 Test before deploy 
 Send to at least three friends, ask them to print it and send it back to you
Miscellaneous Tips (1) 
 Use action words in your descriptions
Miscellaneous Tips (2) 
 Act like a professional 
 Avoid inappropriate graphics, images, formats, … 
 One page only 
 You are a fresh graduate, don’t assume that the one-page 
rule doesn’t apply to you! 
 Stick to the truth 
 Don’t sprinkle buzzwords in that you really don’t 
understand 
 It speaks volumes about your character when you 
can’t explain your own resume 
 Focus on achievements and results 
 Laundry lists of duties are not impressive
Miscellaneous Tips (3) 
 Use easy-to-read language 
 Winston Churchill - “Use short, old words.” 
 Get the words and punctuation correct 
 Errors and “broken English” are the kiss of death 
For example, “Lets eat grandpa!” 
 Follow the instructions 
 If the company asks for specific information, then give it to them 
 Follow up 
 If you said you would call, then call 
 Maintain a consistent writing style 
 Avoid “To apply …” then “Applying …” 
 Avoid the use of “I” or “my”
Miscellaneous Tilts (1) 
 USE ALL CAPITAL LETTERS 
 Much harder to read 
 Avoidwhitespace 
How about 
him? 
 Use white space (not borders) to break sections apart 
 Include a picture of yourself 
 You’re not THAT good looking! 
Would you hire 
this guy? 
 Use several fonts to catch their attention 
 Creates a “ransom note” effect 
 Print your resume on “day glow” paper 
Print your resume day glow” paper 
 Be professional 
 Illogical Order Use 
 Resume is a story – put most interesting parts at the beginning
Miscellaneous Tilts (2) 
 Focus on you and your needs 
 Employers have better things to do than hear about you 
 They want to know “what can you do for me” 
 Use templates to construct your resume 
 Use superlatives to emphasis your work 
 Great performance as … 
 Stick to the facts and figures – not an evaluation of yourself 
 Use long flowing sentences 
 Short and to the point 
 Sentence fragments are fine if they are understandable – 
BUT NOT IN THE COVER LETTER!!!!!
Don’t Make These Famous 
Mistakes 
 “Education: Curses in liberal arts, curses in 
computer science, curses in accounting” 
 “Personal: Married, 1992 Chevrolet” 
 “Proven ability to track down and correct erors.” 
 “Disposed of $2.5 billion in assets” 
 Cover Letter: “Thank you for your consideration. 
I hope to hear from you shorty!”
Good Examples (1)
Good Examples (2)
Bad Examples (1)
Bad Examples (2)
On-Line Resources 
 www.collegerecruiter.com 
 www.developercareers.com 
 www.writinglettersandresumes.com 
 www.professional-resumes.com 
 www.1stresumes.com 
 www.a1resumes.net 
 www.10minuteresume.com 
 www.crsresume.com 
 www.resumeservice.com 
Free 
Not 
Free

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Building Resume

  • 2. Road Map  Role of the Resume  Types of Resumes  Resume Formats  Resume Sections  Additional Documentation  Miscellaneous Tips  Miscellaneous Tilts  Sample Resumes  On-line Resources
  • 3. What is a Resume?  A marketing tool  Your first tool for building a career  The first impression a prospective employer has of you  A selling tool that allows you to highlight to an employer how you can contribute to the company  Request for an interview  Purpose of the resume is to get you an interview  Must capture the reader’s interest and attention  Must convince the employer that you have the ability to fill their position  Your “big picture”  A snapshot of what you believe are your most important experiences and qualifications
  • 4. Types of Resumes  A Paper/PDF Resume  A printed resume for use at job fairs, conferences, …  Should be clean, concise, professional, and pleasing to the eye  Use bullets, bolding, and indentation  Take this resume with you on job interviews, career breakfasts, …  An Electronic Resume  A plain text resume for on-line submission  Typically must conform to employer specifications  Use left-justified and space indented formatting  If desired, use “+”, “*”, and “0” to represent bullets  An HTML Resume  Typically includes links to homepage, images, …  Avoid this type of resume  Most people don’t want an employer walking around in their homepage
  • 5. Resume Formats - Chronological  Highlight your work experience in reverse chronological order  Be sure to not leave gaps  The most widely used format for working professionals Cut off
  • 6. Resume Formats - Functional  Highlight specific skills for which the market has high demand  Seldom used by new graduates  Frequently used to change jobs or careers Again, cut off
  • 7. Resume Formats - Combinational  Highlight specific work experience  Highlight marketable skills  Use reverse chronological order  The best resume style for most college students I would prefer bullets
  • 8. The Silver Bullet  What Is Your “Story”?  What slant can you take on your resume?  Do you want to emphasize internship experience?  Do you want to emphasize work experience?  Do you want to emphasize course work?  Do you want to emphasize project experience?  Do you want to emphasize research experience?  Do you want to emphasize personal traits?  What is unique or interesting about your college experience?  My Recommendation  If you have an interesting internship – emphasize it – if not get one!  Most MBA graduates have interesting project experience  Build on your liberal arts education!!!  Demonstrate leadership, communication, cultural awareness
  • 9. Standard Resume Sections Move toward bottom  Header  Objective  Education  Honors/Activities  Work Experience  Relevant Courses  Skills  Projects I prefer other order
  • 10. The Header Section  The first line should be your name  Larger than the largest font used in body  Avoid using decorative fonts  Don’t use black or gray shaded backgrounds  Exclude titles Mr., Mrs., Ms., …  Include contact address  Permanent address  Current address  Include your email address  Use your PROFESSIONAL email address  Don’t use “BIGBOY@HOT_MAIL.COM”  Include your phone number  Change the message machine OR caller tune to be appropriate
  • 11. The Objective Section  Considered optional but I strongly suggest including it  Make statement clear, concise, and to the point  Bad: “I want to get a job”  Weak: “To attain an internship in the computer industry.”  Good: “To attain an internship in the computer industry working with database or network security.”  Avoid being overly specific to single company  “To attain a position at 3M Pharmaceuticals working on …”  I prefer objectives from the company’s perspective  “To attain a web application programming position where knowledge of Java and the Struts framework will add value the overall development process.”
  • 12. This section should scream “I am a leader” The Honors/Activities Section  Should only contain honors and awards earned during your time in college  You can include academic or extracurricular items  I prefer only academic or service-related items  Include a brief description if not self-evident from title  “Award given to top performer on the capstone exam”  Don’t include hobbies or activities not related to the job or your story  Don’t include volunteer work unless there is a direct and positive link with the job or your story
  • 13. The Work Experience Section  Dedicated to most recent and relevant employment  Format  Employer and location on the first line  Don’t need name of supervisor, complete address, or contact information  Position and time-span on the second line  Use only year, not month and year (avoids time gaps)  Each position should have at least two bullets  Explain role and contributions  Don’t emphasize duties but rather emphasize outcomes  “Increased efficiency of … by 20%”  “Improved user navigation experience on …”  Descriptions should be consistent in wording  Watch the tense  Current job uses present tense  Former jobs use past tense Employers want problem solvers
  • 14. The Relevant Courses Section  The keyword is relevant courses  Don’t include Foundations of Computing  Don’t include Aloha and Fabric Painting  Focus on courses the are either unique or would normally be considered elective  Soft Skills Seminars  Language Competency Classes  Computer Networks  Employers will assume you have had the rest
  • 15. The Skills Section  This is where you emphasize your technical skills
  • 16. The Projects Section  Used correctly, this section can set you apart from other new graduates  Most new grads don’t get the opportunity to use this section  Show any lengthy, impressive, or relevant projects to which you have made real contribution  Each project should have at least two bullets (focus on outcomes)
  • 17. Supporting Documentation – Cover Letter (1)  Why do I need to write a cover letter?  Use the cover letter to focus attention on elements of your background that are particularly relevant to the company  Letter acts as your verbal introduction to the employer  Send it to a person, not a place  Avoid “To Whom It May Concern,”  Worst case “Dear Recruiter:”  First sentence should tell why you are writing  “I am writing in regard to your posting listed on …”  “Dr. Wagner at Money Minting Business School suggested that I …”  “As you may recall, I spoke with you briefly at …”  If unsolicited, indicate why you are interested in the company
  • 18. Supporting Documentation – Cover Letter (2)  Highlight your skills  Use two to three paragraphs to given in-depth description of your selling points  Each paragraph should be stand alone (could be moved to different location in text)  Close with a promise of action  If possible, indicating that you will be contacting them in the near future to set up a mutually acceptable meeting time or to further discuss your qualifications  Nice if you can say “during the second half of this month, I will be in your Delhi. I will contact your office when I arrive to arrange a possible meeting time”
  • 19. Supporting Documentation – Cover Letter (3)
  • 20. Supporting Documentation – References  Prepare a separate reference sheet  Use same paper as the resume itself  Bring reference sheet (and resume) with you to any interviews, job fairs, career breakfasts, …  Do not mail reference sheet with resume and cover letter  Reference sheet is a stand-alone document  Should include your Header from the resume  Try to arrange contact information in pleasing fashion  Use professional references only  Pick individuals that think highly of you  Pick individuals that are familiar with your work  Always ask your references before using their names  Be prepared to give supporting materials – courses, projects, …  Ask again if it has been a while
  • 21. Scannable Resumes  Most large employers will scan your resume into a central database  Tips to assist the scanning process  Don’t use italics, underlining, or graphics  Use bold only for headers  Use “scanner-friendly” fonts  Times New Roman, Courier, Helvetica, or Arial are good examples  Font sizes of between 9 and 12  Use black ink on white background
  • 22. Tips on Delivery of Your Resume  Posting Online  “rules” are still emerging  Common mistake – formatting that doesn’t make the trip  Convert to text only  Use PDF if allowed  Proofread carefully after conversion  If they ask about salary, leave it empty  If they force salary, be honest but don’t shoot for the moon  Emailing your resume  Attach resume as a PDF document (or Word document)  75 – 80% of companies are running Windows  Also include text version in the email message  Attachments can get dropped or filtered  Test before deploy  Send to at least three friends, ask them to print it and send it back to you
  • 23. Miscellaneous Tips (1)  Use action words in your descriptions
  • 24. Miscellaneous Tips (2)  Act like a professional  Avoid inappropriate graphics, images, formats, …  One page only  You are a fresh graduate, don’t assume that the one-page rule doesn’t apply to you!  Stick to the truth  Don’t sprinkle buzzwords in that you really don’t understand  It speaks volumes about your character when you can’t explain your own resume  Focus on achievements and results  Laundry lists of duties are not impressive
  • 25. Miscellaneous Tips (3)  Use easy-to-read language  Winston Churchill - “Use short, old words.”  Get the words and punctuation correct  Errors and “broken English” are the kiss of death For example, “Lets eat grandpa!”  Follow the instructions  If the company asks for specific information, then give it to them  Follow up  If you said you would call, then call  Maintain a consistent writing style  Avoid “To apply …” then “Applying …”  Avoid the use of “I” or “my”
  • 26. Miscellaneous Tilts (1)  USE ALL CAPITAL LETTERS  Much harder to read  Avoidwhitespace How about him?  Use white space (not borders) to break sections apart  Include a picture of yourself  You’re not THAT good looking! Would you hire this guy?  Use several fonts to catch their attention  Creates a “ransom note” effect  Print your resume on “day glow” paper Print your resume day glow” paper  Be professional  Illogical Order Use  Resume is a story – put most interesting parts at the beginning
  • 27. Miscellaneous Tilts (2)  Focus on you and your needs  Employers have better things to do than hear about you  They want to know “what can you do for me”  Use templates to construct your resume  Use superlatives to emphasis your work  Great performance as …  Stick to the facts and figures – not an evaluation of yourself  Use long flowing sentences  Short and to the point  Sentence fragments are fine if they are understandable – BUT NOT IN THE COVER LETTER!!!!!
  • 28. Don’t Make These Famous Mistakes  “Education: Curses in liberal arts, curses in computer science, curses in accounting”  “Personal: Married, 1992 Chevrolet”  “Proven ability to track down and correct erors.”  “Disposed of $2.5 billion in assets”  Cover Letter: “Thank you for your consideration. I hope to hear from you shorty!”
  • 33. On-Line Resources  www.collegerecruiter.com  www.developercareers.com  www.writinglettersandresumes.com  www.professional-resumes.com  www.1stresumes.com  www.a1resumes.net  www.10minuteresume.com  www.crsresume.com  www.resumeservice.com Free Not Free