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Answer Upon - What Recruiters Hate About Resumes And Cover Letters
Hiring the Best - Interviewing Strategies that WORK! audience. Revise the resume until it holds your friends' attention all the way through.In today’s competitive environment, hiring has increasingly become a key link in establishing and maintaining your company’s edge. By attracting and hiring the best people, your company can move quickly and grow steadily. On the flip side, however, poor hires cost you precious time, money, and opportunity. Poor hiring could cost you your company.Unfortunately, hiring candidates who can do what they say they can do is getting tougher. A whole industry has sprung up in the past ten years helping job see Haley offers another way to create a compelling resume: "Use the 'So, what?' test. Any sentence on a resume that causes a reader to think 'So, what?' probably means it's waffle. Reword it or take it off." 3) Don't Forget The Cover Letter You wouldn't want to alienate anyone who could help you get a job, would you? Yet, that's just what you do when you forget to send a cover letter with your resume. Because a missing cover letter creates extra work for busy hiring professionals, as they try to figure out what job you're applying for and how you heard about it. Solution? Write and include a cov Conducting Risk Assessments for Hazardous Substances Today, I'm going to share with you the awful truth about resumes and cover letters.To manage Hazardous Substances a requirement is to conduct Risk Assessments for each of the hazardous substances. The process required to ensure that all risks identified with using a substance is controlled under the Queensland Workplace Health and Safety Regulations is described below. The requirements for other legislation will be quite similar.When is it a requirement to conduct a risk assessment?Legislation requires that Hazardous Substances risk assessments are requ Here it is: Most of them stink. That's not just my opinion, although I've read nearly 15,000 resumes and cover letters over the years and found glaring mistakes in about 85-90% of them. It's also the opinion of most of the hiring professionals I've spoken to over the years. Where do most resumes and cover letters go wrong? And how can you avoid the typical mistakes that most job seekers make? To find answers, I spoke with two experienced recruiters. Their candid advice can help you avoid typical pitfalls, and get hired faster Here it is ... 1) Don't Use The Same Resume For Every Job Would you grab any old suit off the rack and rush off to church to get married? No. First, you get the suit tailored, so it fits. That way, you won't look ridiculous. Unfortunately, job seekers can look ridiculous when they rush to apply for jobs without tailoring their resumes. It's a real pet peeve of most hiring professionals, including Larry Harris, a Minneapolis-based recruiter and President of American Consulting (americanconsultingcompany.com) "Why don't candidates customize every resume they send out, to fit the job they're applying for? That makes my job a lot easier when I forward that resume to my client, the hiring manager." According to Tony Haley, Director of UK-based Fenton Chase International (fentonchase.com), most resumes come across as generic, with no consideration about a particular position or company. "The most surprising group of candidates who do this is Sales Managers and Sales Directors. These people spend their days reviewing resumes from candidates and yet when it comes to their own, they cannot sell themselves," says Haley. Solution? Customize, customize, customize. Every company, every position, every manager reading your resume -- they're all different. So tailor your resume for every position you apply for. Bring out the details of your experience that are most relevant to each opportunity and company. 2) Don't Be Boring One of the worst sins you can commit with a resume is to be boring. The rule of thumb is simple: If they snooze, you lose (because your resume will go in the trash). Resumes get boring when you fill them full of jargon, or dry job descriptions, or a lack of specific results, according to Haley. "Consider the reader. Remember, the people reading your resume might not be that proficient at it. If they cannot see what they are looking for almost immediately, they might reject it, and if it's full of technical jargon, they might not understand it," says Haley. Solution? An easy way to eliminate dull wording from a resume is to read it aloud to 2-3 friends. If eyes glaze over or brows furrow, you've likely lost your audience. Revise the resume until it holds your friends' attention all the way through. Haley offers another way to create a compelling resume: "Use the 'So, what?' test. Any sentence on a resume that causes a reader to think 'So, what?' probably means it's waffle. Reword it or take it off." 3) Don't Forget The Cover Letter You wouldn't want to alienate anyone who could help you get a job, would you? Yet, that's just what you do when you forget to send a cover letter with your resume. Because a missing cover letter creates extra work for busy hiring professionals, as they try to figure out what job you're applying for and how you heard about it. Solution? Write and include a cov Malcolm Baldrige Values and Concepts Part 3 -- Organizational and Personal Learning uld you grab any old suit off the rack and rush off to church to get married? No. First, you get the suit tailored, so it fits. That way, you won't look ridiculous.In this issue, I will share my experience acquired from the conglomerate and its operating companies. For the purpose of this article, I will articulate the Organizational and Personal Learning which is one of the eleven core values and concepts used in Malcolm Baldrige Criteria. As before, I will use case studies to show how some of the companies implement them.To recap, below are the Eleven Core Values and Concepts of Baldrige Criteria:-Visionary Leadership | Customer-Driven Excellence | < Unfortunately, job seekers can look ridiculous when they rush to apply for jobs without tailoring their resumes. It's a real pet peeve of most hiring professionals, including Larry Harris, a Minneapolis-based recruiter and President of American Consulting (americanconsultingcompany.com) "Why don't candidates customize every resume they send out, to fit the job they're applying for? That makes my job a lot easier when I forward that resume to my client, the hiring manager." According to Tony Haley, Director of UK-based Fenton Chase International (fentonchase.com), most resumes come across as generic, with no consideration about a particular position or company. "The most surprising group of candidates who do this is Sales Managers and Sales Directors. These people spend their days reviewing resumes from candidates and yet when it comes to their own, they cannot sell themselves," says Haley. Solution? Customize, customize, customize. Every company, every position, every manager reading your resume -- they're all different. So tailor your resume for every position you apply for. Bring out the details of your experience that are most relevant to each opportunity and company. 2) Don't Be Boring One of the worst sins you can commit with a resume is to be boring. The rule of thumb is simple: If they snooze, you lose (because your resume will go in the trash). Resumes get boring when you fill them full of jargon, or dry job descriptions, or a lack of specific results, according to Haley. "Consider the reader. Remember, the people reading your resume might not be that proficient at it. If they cannot see what they are looking for almost immediately, they might reject it, and if it's full of technical jargon, they might not understand it," says Haley. Solution? An easy way to eliminate dull wording from a resume is to read it aloud to 2-3 friends. If eyes glaze over or brows furrow, you've likely lost your audience. Revise the resume until it holds your friends' attention all the way through. Haley offers another way to create a compelling resume: "Use the 'So, what?' test. Any sentence on a resume that causes a reader to think 'So, what?' probably means it's waffle. Reword it or take it off." 3) Don't Forget The Cover Letter You wouldn't want to alienate anyone who could help you get a job, would you? Yet, that's just what you do when you forget to send a cover letter with your resume. Because a missing cover letter creates extra work for busy hiring professionals, as they try to figure out what job you're applying for and how you heard about it. Solution? Write and include a cov Life as a Private Enterprise rnational (fentonchase.com), most resumes come across as generic, with no consideration about a particular position or company.Consider your life as a business enterprise. Overshadowing everything else is a business goal and a strategy to reach that goal. Also there is a business philosophy, the red thread that gives meaning of existence to the enterprise. Now consider your life. You need one or several goals, immaterial and material ones. What is important to you in life? Consider that which you want to achieve, where you want to be and also what kind of people you want to be around. In this way you can find your way to "The most surprising group of candidates who do this is Sales Managers and Sales Directors. These people spend their days reviewing resumes from candidates and yet when it comes to their own, they cannot sell themselves," says Haley. Solution? Customize, customize, customize. Every company, every position, every manager reading your resume -- they're all different. So tailor your resume for every position you apply for. Bring out the details of your experience that are most relevant to each opportunity and company. 2) Don't Be Boring One of the worst sins you can commit with a resume is to be boring. The rule of thumb is simple: If they snooze, you lose (because your resume will go in the trash). Resumes get boring when you fill them full of jargon, or dry job descriptions, or a lack of specific results, according to Haley. "Consider the reader. Remember, the people reading your resume might not be that proficient at it. If they cannot see what they are looking for almost immediately, they might reject it, and if it's full of technical jargon, they might not understand it," says Haley. Solution? An easy way to eliminate dull wording from a resume is to read it aloud to 2-3 friends. If eyes glaze over or brows furrow, you've likely lost your audience. Revise the resume until it holds your friends' attention all the way through. Haley offers another way to create a compelling resume: "Use the 'So, what?' test. Any sentence on a resume that causes a reader to think 'So, what?' probably means it's waffle. Reword it or take it off." 3) Don't Forget The Cover Letter You wouldn't want to alienate anyone who could help you get a job, would you? Yet, that's just what you do when you forget to send a cover letter with your resume. Because a missing cover letter creates extra work for busy hiring professionals, as they try to figure out what job you're applying for and how you heard about it. Solution? Write and include a cov Do You Mean To Say That After All These Years There Has Never Been Any Advertising Accountability? s you can commit with a resume is to be boring. The rule of thumb is simple: If they snooze, you lose (because your resume will go in the trash).Then please tell me how they get away with saying "Advertising works". A recent report by America's Association of National Advertisers claims, "Marketing accountability is still often an activity trapped within the silo of the Marketing function".It would seem that the findings underscore last summers "Marketing Accountability Survey" in which 60% of respondents reported no cross-functional involvement whatever within their company!And so the long predicted death of advertising agencies as we kno Resumes get boring when you fill them full of jargon, or dry job descriptions, or a lack of specific results, according to Haley. "Consider the reader. Remember, the people reading your resume might not be that proficient at it. If they cannot see what they are looking for almost immediately, they might reject it, and if it's full of technical jargon, they might not understand it," says Haley. Solution? An easy way to eliminate dull wording from a resume is to read it aloud to 2-3 friends. If eyes glaze over or brows furrow, you've likely lost your audience. Revise the resume until it holds your friends' attention all the way through. Haley offers another way to create a compelling resume: "Use the 'So, what?' test. Any sentence on a resume that causes a reader to think 'So, what?' probably means it's waffle. Reword it or take it off." 3) Don't Forget The Cover Letter You wouldn't want to alienate anyone who could help you get a job, would you? Yet, that's just what you do when you forget to send a cover letter with your resume. Because a missing cover letter creates extra work for busy hiring professionals, as they try to figure out what job you're applying for and how you heard about it. Solution? Write and include a cov What Does Your Business Card Say? audience. Revise the resume until it holds your friends' attention all the way through.A good business card means a well structured marketing plan, not only it has to pass the trash test but it also has to say a lot of things about the person and the company it represents.When you choose a business card you must have in mind the fact that it must say something about the company or contain something that defines it. So in order to impress your clients you must carefully chose your business card; of course not everything suits for example you can’t have a pink business card with little ponies Haley offers another way to create a compelling resume: "Use the 'So, what?' test. Any sentence on a resume that causes a reader to think 'So, what?' probably means it's waffle. Reword it or take it off." 3) Don't Forget The Cover Letter You wouldn't want to alienate anyone who could help you get a job, would you? Yet, that's just what you do when you forget to send a cover letter with your resume. Because a missing cover letter creates extra work for busy hiring professionals, as they try to figure out what job you're applying for and how you heard about it. Solution? Write and include a cover letter with every resume, including those you send by email. Even a one-line cover letter in an email is better than nothing, according to Larry Harris: "You could simply write, 'I'm applying for your telemarketing software sales position. I spent five years doing that exact job. I'd be perfect for it!" Here's hoping these tirades and tips from hiring professionals will help you write a better resume and cover letter next time you apply for that dream job. Now, go out and make your own luck!
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