Showing posts with label wales cv. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wales cv. Show all posts

Wednesday, 25 June 2008

Professional versus self written CV/Resume

Patty asks: I am a mid level marketing/printing professional looking to update my resume. Do you think hiring a professional resume writer is a worthwhile expense?

In Answer:
There is no right or wrong answer - it all depends.

Firstly, on your ability to communicate; secondly on when you last changed employers; and thirdly on the position you are aiming for/the unemployed state you find yourself in.

If you can't communicate in words, changed employers last over 10years ago, and are currently unemployed - Yes, its worth it. If you are a journalist, changed employers less than 18mons ago (because you were head hunted, not sacked), and are going for your dream job - then No.

If like the majority you are in the middle, then consider the skills a professional CV/Resume writer could bring to your career choice and speed of employability. A good third party could point out skills you didn't realise you had, and which the market needs. Good CV/Resume writers can by default be career advisors, but look for those who undertake it as part of their brief if you decide to employ a professional CV/Resume writer.

At the end of the day, its your career and hence your CV/Resume - who ever writes it for you.

Good Luck!

Monday, 23 June 2008

PDF versus WORD format

Matthew asks: It seems that companies are still hung up on insisting that resumes be sent in Word format. Even worse are the proprietary job sites that won't let you do anything but paste it in text format which then corresponds to fields they've chosen - this has the unexpected consequence of coddling prospective employees by forcing them into a 'rubric' that keeps the chronology and skill set, but otherwise strips all context from their profile. While of course the simple facts of a person's job history is important, whether you can format a document properly or present your professional history without omitting important details is important too. I have taken to submitting in PDF by default when there is no clarification one way or the other. I will only send in Word if they explicitly say so, and I'm honestly less inclined to even apply for jobs that only look at the fields that they have set up. What do you think? I understand the need to have a standard set of data fields to sort through lots of candidates, but other than the basics, the resume as a form of presentation is also important. I can't tell you how many times I noticed resumes for prospective new hires that were in Word format but were very badly formatted. The result was often a fairly ugly, cumbersome document that probably looked fine on their home computer - but PDF's eliminate that potential altogether. I know some will argue that PDF's are not always easy to create for free - but that is rapidly changing, and if MS Office has the capability and most online web office suites do, then that's about as mainstream as it can get. Maybe the job sites can build an applet within their site that allows you to convert as you submit? I'm curious to hear what people think, especially HR staff and recruiters.

In Answer:
From a technology and preservation of information view point, PDF has much to offer. But, your resume is about selling you, and if you make it more difficult for the Recruiter or HR person reviewing for the position, then they will reject you.

- Some posts ask for specific information. The fact you were asked to submit that and made it more difficult to include that information by using PDF is a problem
- Your CV/Resume may be perfect, but the Recruiter doesn't want to send it out in their non-house format, with your contact details on so that they miss out on their billable fee
- OCR is not yet perfect technology!

Our inhouse management system has an OCR, but its five times as quick to process a candidates details when the information is in WORD over PDF.

Its your CV/Resume, selling you - so think about the person buying you as well. Good Luck!

Tuesday, 17 June 2008

Cover Letters

Mohamed Asks: What are the most important 3 things that you need to cover in a cover letter? which ones you should absolutely avoid?

In Answer:
Write your cover letter as if you are responding to employer's questions - make it as easy as possible for them to read and to invite you in for an interview by:
1. Stating where you found position listing, and what position is of interest (they want to know how advertising is working)
2. Briefly framing your understanding of position (employers often have multiple position requisitions open at a time) and how you fit the job (how your skills fit within the context of the position)
3. State why you are interested in the company/position/industry in a way that adds value. Employers want a high yield rate of interviews to offers--showing that position is aligned with your goals and interests, and that you are familiar with the company can only help. (It's true that not all employers read cover letters, but do you want to take that risk?)

Things You Should "Absolutely Avoid"
1. Restating your resume (especially since you'll be including it, anyway). The cover letter should highlight your fit for the position, not serve as a second summary of all your skills and interests. (Again, the key is to make it easy for your employer to read.)
2. Using language that you wouldn't use in everyday speech. I'm skeptical, for example, of using words such as "liase" or "ameliorate"
3. Saying the position is a perfect fit for you--wait until you learn more about the company and the nature of the position within the organization
4. Raise ANY red flags (relocation/salary/benefits requirements or demands/Why you left other job/Personal life issues -relations,housing, income, health/Religious, political, race, gender, sexual, financial, lifestyle beliefs, etc, etc, etc!!!)
5. Forget to include a call to action - ask for the interview.


A basic style should include:

Paragraph 1: State why you're writing the letter. (position you're applying for, and an overview of the contents of the rest of your letter)

Paragraph 2: Describe why you're qualified. (Give an overview of the highlights from your resume, and explain how these have prepared you for the job you're applying for.)

Paragraph 3: Provide supplemental information. (Make it interesting. Examples of topics- why you want the job, why you chose this career, your philosophy relating to that profession, how you would go about doing a certain aspect of the job, etc.)

Paragraph 4: Sum it all up. (Conclude, express your interest in an interview, thank them for their time and consideration.)

Job searching is a process of mutual selection - what appears great on paper may not be perfect in person. The interview will be a chance for you and the employer to assess a potential match; the goal of the cover letter and resume is to land you the interview.