How to Write a Winning Resume

POSTED May 31

How to Write a Winning Resume

Below are some of the top resume tips so you can be noticed by hiring managers.

By: Victoria Mauro 

Whether you are interested in finding your first job or your full-time career, you should always have a solid resume. A resume is where you list your accomplishments, skills, and previous experience. A resume can be what sets you apart from other candidates during the application process. To create a qualifying resume, you should check to see that your resume holds the following criteria. 

First, be sure your resume holds a simplistic but classy structure. You should be using a font that is seen in Google Docs or Microsoft Word. Two fonts that are the most common and easiest to read are Times New Roman and Arial. As you fix your font style, be sure to check out the size of your font and the length of your resume. Typically, your resume should be no larger than size 12 font and no longer than 1-2 pages. 

Next, look into the details that are highlighted on your resume. Start your resume with your name, city, email, phone number, and any socials you want to include. An example of a social platform that people put on their resume is their most used and appropriate, like LinkedIn. If you do hold social media platforms, make sure that they are up to date because hiring managers can see any information you post on the internet. Under your name and information, you should write an objective that caters to the job field in which you are applying. This should be a few sentences and will help hiring managers get a glimpse of why you want to perform the job they have listed. The last part of the introductory section is your skills. You will want to highlight some of your best strengths as well as some skills that you hold related to the job field. 

 After you do this you will go into your education. Education should be ordered from your most recent education to your past education. If you are in college or out of college, you do not need to have your high school education on your resume. Then you will want to go into your work experience. This is similarly formatted to education where you list your work experience from most recent to past. Once you have listed both your education and work experience, it is time to add in any extra activities/volunteer work or awards that you have completed. 

Finally, as you have gone through and listed all of these valuable pieces in your resume, be sure to add in details. For every education, work experience, and volunteer activity, you should have some information about your success or learning during these events. Do not write these details in paragraph form, it is best if you use bullet points that start with action words. An example of this would be,” – Delivered fast, professional, and kind service to customers during every shift”. You can have about 2-3 bullets for each education, work experience, and activity listed. But remember that you should be no longer than 1-2 pages so do not list everything you did in each section. Only list the important and relative content so that hiring managers can detect why you and your experience are good for their job role. 

Keep your resume grammatically correct and clean so you can secure the job of your dreams! 

For more on topics like this visit: 

www.cyberjobcentral.com/blog

www.resumecoach.com/how-to-write-a-resume-that-gets-results/