Wednesday, November 20, 2019
5 Signs Your Résumé Is Holding You Back
5 Signs Your Résumé Is Holding You Back 5 Signs Your Résumé Is Holding You Back When youâre searching for a job, nothing is more frustrating than sending out scores of résumés for positions you know youâre qualified for and not getting any interviews. If thatâs happening to you, your résumé may be holding you back in some way. Of course, in a tight job market like this one, it can be hard to know if the issue is simply the market and the amount of competition out there or if your résumé itself is putting you at a disadvantage. Here are five of the biggest indicators that it's your résumé that's probably the problem: 1. Youâre applying for plenty of jobs for which you match the listed qualifications, but you arenât getting interviews. Most people, even the exceptionally well-qualified, donât get interviews for every job they apply for. But if youâre applying for dozens of jobs per month â" jobs for which you truly do meet the qualifications â" and never hearing anything back, chances are good that your application materials are responsible. Your résumé probably isnât going to get you interviews at even half the jobs you apply to. But if itâs not even scoring you a success rate of one in 10, that tells you that you need to revisit what youâre sending out. 2. You feel like youâre a much more valuable worker than your résumé shows. A lot of people think to themselves, âIf I could only get an interview, theyâd see what a great fit I am.â But if you feel that way, your résumé isnât doing its job. If youâre a great employee â" someone with a track record of achieving at a high level in past jobs â" itâs your résuméâs job to show that. If itâs not, you need to rewrite your résumé until it reflects why an employer should be excited to talk to you. A common response to this is, âBut the type of work I do is hard to convey on a résumé.â However, being a valuable employee is about getting results for your employer, and thereâs always a way to describe those results on a résumé. It doesnât have to be as quantitative as âincreased sales by 20 percentâ or âpromoted twice in two years,â although those are great accomplishments to include if theyâre true. Instead, it might be something more like âbecame the departmentâs go-to source for quickly and accurately resolving billing discrepancies,â âbuilt a reputation of working successfully with previously unhappy clientsâ or âresolved an inherited four-month backlog in three weeks.â Whatever it was that made you excellent at your work, thatâs what your résumé needs to convey. Otherwise, it wonât open many doors for you. 3. If you imagine the résumé of someone with a similar work history but who has done mediocre work, it doesnât look much different from your own. Your résumé shouldnât just list what activities you engaged in at each job. Instead, it should convey how well you did them. Hiring managers probably won't be especially impressed by your job descriptions. What they care about is whether you excelled in the role. If your résumé doesnât convey that you were better than that other guy who had a similar job, thereâs nothing to make an employer think youâre the one worth interviewing. The way you address this is by focusing your résumé on what you achieved in each role and how you excelled, not just a list of duties. 4. Itâs three or more pages. Job seekers with long résumés regularly protest that they canât possibly fit their full job history on two pages. But many highly qualified, senior-level candidates regularly manage to stick to two-page (and sometimes one-page) résumés. So if you exceed two pages, most hiring managers will see you as someone who canât edit, doesnât understand what information is most important and doesn't respect their time. Are you really willing to accept that outcome just so you donât have to trim down your text? 5. When you do get interviews, interviewers seem surprised by some of the information you give them. If your interviewer seems pleasantly surprised by a work achievement or other qualification that comes up in the interview, it might be something that should have been on your résumé in the first place. Similarly, if your interviewer seems disappointed to learn that, say, your last job was only a few hours a week or lasted only a few months, thatâs a flag that your résumé might need to be clearer. You might wonder why you should be clearer about things that might get you disqualified, but otherwise you risk wasting your time interviewing for jobs for which youâre not a strong candidate and donât have much chance of being hired.Alison Green writes the popular Ask a Manager blog, where she dispenses advice on career, job search and management issues. She's the author of âHow to Get a Job: Secrets of a Hiring Manager,â co-author of âManaging to Change the World: The Nonprofit Manager's Guide to Getting Resultsâ and the former chief of staff of a successful nonprofit organization, where she oversaw day-to-day staff management.
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