What are HR professionals really looking for in resumes? Top 5 Dos & Don’ts

Here are the DOs:

  1. Lead with your strengths. If there’s any one golden rule, it’s that you should lead with your strengths. Your most important information should be as high up on the page and as far left as possible (since people read top to bottom, left to right).
  2. Focus on achievements and accomplishments, not responsibilities and tasks. What we’re looking for are transferable skills, but more importantly, we’re looking for your accomplishments and achievements. What was the impact you made in your previous roles?
  3. Read the job description, re-read the job description, then read it one more time. By carefully reading the job description, you can come close to predicting the phrases and words a recruiter will use in the search.
  4. Pimp up your resume. Don’t explicitly remind the recruiter of the fact that you’re not a perfect fit by giving them information that isn’t relevant.
  5. Use the whole page. Try to use as much of the page as possible. Expand your margins out, all the way around the page, reduce them to ½ inch.

Here are the DON'Ts :
  1. Don’t bold keywords. Don’t give us an excuse to spend less than the 15 seconds and throw your resume quickly into the no pile.
  2. Write in bullet-point format, not in full sentences. If anything, focus more on describing your achievements and the impact you made in your previous roles.
  3. Save your money, don’t use fancy paper. Stick to plain white paper and something in the 10 lb weight range (a measure of paper thickness).
  4. References? We don’t need no stinkin’ references! What you can do is to prepare a separate sheet with the names, titles and contact information, 2 to 3 different ones, just in case.
  5. Don’t forget to add some glee. You would be surprised at the number of times people can get interviews simply because of something interesting they do outside of work.
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Details - DOs


1. Lead with your strengths

Although many books may prescribe a specific formula or order for you to layout your resume,
the truth is that there is no such thing. If there's any one golden rule, it's that you should lead
with your strengths. Your most important information should be as high up on the page and as
far left as possible (since people read top to bottom, left to right).

If education is your best strength, have that as your first section. If it's your previous work
experience, then put that section first. Know your audience, know what the job requires, and
also know your competition. If this job is one that’s posted just at your school, chances are
that many people from your program will also be applying making your education not much of a
differentiator. However, if this is a job posted openly on a company's website, perhaps the
strength of your school and program may make you standout.


2. Focus on achievements and accomplishments, not responsibilities and tasks

Too many people still simply list the basic responsibilities and tasks in their bullet points.
Unless what you did in your previous jobs was exactly what you'll be doing in your target
company, the recruiter does not care about the specific day-to-day activities you performed
previously.

What we're looking for are transferable skills, but more importantly, we're looking for your
accomplishments and achievements. What was the impact you made in your previous roles?
How did you contribute to the organization? If you can quantify the value you were able to add,
even better! Start by thinking about your proudest moment, and go from there.


3. Read the job description, re-read the job description, then read it one more time

Today, technology is playing a bigger role in the recruiting process, especially for large multinational
companies (MNCs). Online recruiting systems are replacing the old fax and mail-in
resumes. These systems also enable recruiters to quickly search their databases using
keywords.

With that in mind, how do you make sure your resume gets picked-up during the search? By
carefully reading the job description, you can come close to predicting the phrases and words a
recruiter will use in the search. Have the job description next to you as you're building your
resume and try to incorporate these key words into your bullets. The more you can use the
exact phrases that are used in the job description, the better your chances will be.


4. Pimp up your resume

Ideally, you want to customize your resume for every single job you apply for. This is obviously
easier said than done. Practically, you should try to at least have a few different versions ready
to go to use as a base, perhaps a technical one, an industry-specific version, and one focused on
your soft skills (e.g. communication, leadership, teamwork).

If you're applying to a software company, make sure you remove all irrelevant references to
your hardware skills. If it's a marketing role you’re going after, get rid of all your technical
finance-related jargon. When your previous experiences don't match, think about what's
transferable. Turn your unrelated specifics into short generic phrases.

Don't explicitly remind the recruiter of the fact that you're not a perfect fit by giving them
information that isn't relevant.


5. Use the whole page

Many people ask whether they should have a 1-page or 2-page resume. The simple answer is
that you should present as much relevant information about you that you can. Don't include
information just to pad and fill-out the resume, but don't short-change yourself either. If it's
been a few years since you've finished your undergraduate degree, stop including your high
school achievements. For every single phrase you write, ask yourself what the message is
you're trying to convey, what's the point. If it's not relevant, get rid of it.

Try to use as much of the page as possible. Expand your margins out, all the way around the
page, reduce them to ½ inch. Move your dates to the right-hand side, and try not to use
excessive indentation. Why waste a whole column of white space by indenting your bullets? If
you line them up neatly all to the left, the bullets look just as good.

Details - DONT's


1. Don't bold keywords

Recruiters spend roughly 15 seconds scanning your resume. We have our own system on how
we spend those 15 seconds and what we look for. The last thing you want to do is throw us
off our game by distracting us with bold keywords, words that may not even be ones that are
important or what we're looking for. Don't give us an excuse to spend less than the 15
seconds and throw your resume quickly into the no pile.


2. Write in bullet-point format, not in full sentences

Bullet points are not real sentences, so save yourself some words and space by cutting out your
articles (e.g. a, an, the) and pronouns. Keep the sentences concise and compact. Bullets are
meant to be crisp and to the point. If anything, focus more on describing your achievements
and the impact you made in your previous roles. Since bullet points aren't proper sentences,
don't end them with periods.


3. Save your money, don't use fancy paper

Today, many companies simply ask you to upload your resume to their online system, or to cut
& paste your information into their web forms. However, there are still some places, especially
on-campus career centres, which accept hardcopy paper resumes. For these situations, stick to
plain white paper and something in the 10 lb weight range (a measure of paper thickness).

Don't cheap out on the paper quality, but don't go overboard and get something too thick.
Most paper resume submissions will get photocopied numerous times as the resume gets
passed up to the hiring managers and through the ranks. If you use fancy off-white or coloured
paper, photocopies will turn out potentially dark and messy.

When it comes to electronic submissions, if the system allows it, think about uploading a PDF
of your resume. PDF files allow you to preserve your formatting, and at the same time ensure
that nothing gets modified or deleted from your original file. For those of you who don't have
a PDF writer installed, there are many good free ones available for download. I recommend
CutePDF Writer which you can find here - www.cutepdf.com.


4. References? We don't need no stinkin' references!

Including a line at the bottom of your resume stating that "references are available upon
request" is old school, and no longer needed today. Companies generally do not ask for
references until you get further along in the interview process and things start to get serious.

It's also assumed that if the company wants references you will provide them. What you can
do is to prepare a separate sheet with the names, titles and contact information, 2 to 3
different ones, just in case. Of course, make sure you get permission from your references and
give them the heads up that someone may be calling them soon.

5. Don't forget to add some glee

Finally, don't forget to add a line or two around your hobbies and interests. List a few that you
are most passionate about. You would be surprised the number of times people can get
interviews simply because of something interesting they do outside of work.

Avoid listing trendy hobbies in which you're just trying to jump on the bandwagon (e.g. marathon runner,
golf, etc.). If I ask you a question about this hobby and I bust you, it will be an instant credibility
killer. Also, try to stay away from listing too many solitary activities, such as jogging, reading,
and writing. We're looking for team players these days, not those that like to sit in the
backrooms working on their own.

Even if you might have a potential connection that will help fast-track your application, your
resume is your calling card. Don't make the decision any tougher to hire you over the
hundreds of other people that are just as eager and have been honing their resumes for years.

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