Five Pragmatic Things You Can Do to Make Sure Your Resume Gets
Seen by Hiring Managers
by Martin Yate,
author of Knock 'em Dead: Secrets & Strategies for Success in an
Uncertain World
1. Target Job Title. A resume cannot be all
things to all people. It needs to focus on a specific job and carry
a target job title, coming right after contact information ( 80% of
resumes lack this and start instead with a Job Objective); your
email address should be hyperlinked. Recruiters use the
target job title in database searches and using one helps your
resume be pulled for review by a hiring manager, and the title then
gives the hiring manager an immediate focus.
2. Sell to the customer's needs: Don't sell what
you think are your strong points in a resume, find out what the
customers (hiring manager) want to buy. Do a Target Job
Deconstruction (TJD) on 6 job postings to determine how employers
prioritize their needs, and the words they use to describe them.
Recruiters search resume databases using the approved job title
and the words used in the job description. By doing TJD you know
what skills employers value in this job, how they prioritize
them and the words they are likely to use in database searches: in
short you have a template for the story your resume must tell.
3. Replace Job/Career Objective (no one cares what you
want), with Performance Profile. Managers do performance
reviews on all employees every year so the phrase has immediacy and
relevance. Beneath the heading address the heart of what you do in
your professional work: Take the first 4-5 priorities from your TJD
and turn them into short sentences running no more than five lines.
4. Core Competencies. Follow the Performance
Profile with a Core Competency section. This contains all the words
and phrases that were used in the job postings to describe your work
(example: A/P, A/R, Quarterly P&L). List all the words and phrases
that apply to you in columns; then repeat the words in the context
of each of the jobs where they were applied, this way you get to use
keywords that will be used by recruiters as search terms at least
once and possibly two or three times; this will improve your
database ranking. A hiring manager will read Core Competency section
as headlines for all the skills you can talk about.
5. Together, a Target Job title, Target Job Deconstruction,
Performance Profile and Core Competency section pack all the
information into the first half page of your resume, to improve its
database performance and to tell any recruiter or hiring manager of
your ability and suitability for the job. This opening to a resume
tells any reader you can do the job and you "get" what is truly
important.
© 2011 Martin Yate, CPC, author of Knock 'em
Dead: Secrets & Strategies for Success in an Uncertain World
Author Bio Martin Yate, CPC, author of Knock
'em Dead: Secrets & Strategies for Success in an Uncertain World, is
a New York Times and international bestseller of job search and
career management books. He is the author of 11 job search and
career management books published throughout the English speaking
world and in over 50 foreign language editions. Over thirty years in
career management, including stints as an international technology
headhunter, head of HR for a publicly traded company and Director of
Training and Development for an international employment services
organization.
Within the profession he has a global reputation
as the thought leader on job search and career management issues. He
has lectured on four continents and has maintained a coaching
practice since 1991.
The current recession is the 5th he has helped
people navigate over the last 30 years.
For more information please visit http://www.knockemdead.com and
follow the author on Facebook and Twitter
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