Want To Improve Your Chances Of Getting Called For Interviews? Avoid These Rookie Resume Mistakes!
Scooped by
Barry Deutsch
onto Effective Executive Job Search March 15, 2014 3:32 PM
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One of the greatest mistakes I see as an executive recruiter is a lack of sharing quantifiable results, outcomes, metrics, improvements - all the things you should be proud of achieving. You should be tooting your horn loudly - truthful examples, illustrations, and specifics of your proudest work accomplishments.
Yet even at an executive level, many job seekers use the old-school style of responsibilities and duties to describe their work experience. Even if they list bullet-point examples - they are so generic, superficial, and in the stratosphere - that they are bordering on comical.
Here's what the author said about this "rookie mistake":
"If the recruiter/hiring manager never sees an example of your accomplishments from previous companies, there may not be an interview. You don't have to go overboard, but let your resume speak to your achievements. Perhaps you spearheaded a company initiative that saved your previous employer X amount of dollars. Did you contribute a key idea on an important business proposal?"
Start listing your accomplishments and achievements - let that document drive the creation of your resume, cover letter, and interview answers.
Barry Deutsch
Master Job Search Coach
IMPACT Hiring Solutions
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