We all have those job-seeker cringes. Tripping into a potential boss just as she extends her hand to shake. Calling an interviewer by the wrong name. Sending a resume with the wrong telephone number.
Those resume gaffes can do more than induce cringes. They can keep us from jobs that we are qualified for.
Professionals ready to move into better jobs and college students applying for internships mean resumes are being written. And so many of them will be riddled with errors. Despite our best efforts, we often either don't know how to write the ever-elusive succinct rundown of our lives or we work a huge error (or several) into those summaries.
Matt Salo, director of the health and human services committee of the National Governors Association, will never forget the resume he received several years ago from a recent college graduate. This person did not have much work experience, so he added a bulleted list of skills:
- Strong Work Ethic
- Attention to Detail
- Team Player
- Self Motivated
- Attention to Detail
Salo did not call him back, although he sometimes wishes he had called to point out that "attention to detail" was listed twice.
"You really feel torn," Salo said. "You want to call these people up and say, 'Stop sending out this resume.' But you don't. There are so many of them."
Another resume that Salo received beat the attention-to-detail guy. A woman sent her resume and cover letter without deleting someone else's editing, including such comments as "I don't think you want to say this about yourself here" and notes that pointed out grammatical and spelling errors. "Apparently she had just taken what she got back and forwarded it along," Salo said. "Needless to say, that person wasn't hired, either."Several readers recalled their horror stories of applying for jobs with "public" in the title and realizing after they sent out multiple resumes that they had omitted the "l." I hope misery really does love company in this case, because it apparently happens often. Erin Piateski realized after she sent out herresumes this year that she had given the wrong dates for her mostrecent job, turning it from a month-and-a-half gig to ayear-and-a-month one. If that was true, it meant she had two full-timejobs at the same time. For a year. In Boston and Washington.Finally, a potential employer pointed out the error. But that company didn't offer her the job."I really hoped this wouldn't ruin my chances of getting a job,"she said. "I don't know if that was a reason or not." She was hired inNovember -- after applying with a corrected resume -- by an engineeringfirm in Arlington, Texas.
It's hard to hear stories like this and not think, "Well, Iwould never ..." You would read the resume over a million times.Perhaps get a friend or two to check it out. Of course, there's spellcheck. So why do careless errors creep onto a piece of paper that is soimportant?Melissa Fireman thinks it has to do with being so stressed outabout the job search. "I think it's nerves more than anything," saidFireman, founder of career management firm Washington Career Services."People just get nervous before they send it out."And so job seekers tense up, press the enter button and realizelater (or not) that they sent a cover letter without the resumeattached. (Happens all the time, Fireman said.) Or that they forgot toinclude the job code, making it nearly impossible for the recruiter tofigure out what they were applying for. In a previous job at a majormedia organization, Fireman and co-workers tossed many of thoseresumes.Sometimes the mistakes job seekers make are a little moresubtle. Resumes are too vague. They are written in prose form. Orresume senders get too detailed about skills and former jobs that don'tmatter to the one they are seeking, said Paul Villella, president andchief executive of Reston, Va.-based recruiting firm HireStrategy Inc.Take your time, he said, and think about what it is you'vereally accomplished. If there isn't too much experience on your resume,think about what your goals are. Then write it all down. "What do I dowell? What did I achieve? Those are the things most compelling andrelevant for the employer," he said.And he does not mean cringe-compelling. Source: Virginian-Pilot. Powered by Yellowbrix.
Source: Money & Work