Frequently asked questions on Resumes
Click on the question to discover the answer then click to close:-
What is a resume and how are they different to CVs?
The ‘who you are’ aspect is for employers and recruiters who are interested in soft skills, that is personality, motive, vision and the kind of things that will bind you to their own vision of themselves as an employer.
I have a resume that I did from my last job application. Do I have to have it updated?
Generally speaking, a resume is a portrait of you and obviously, if you have a new job you need to be able to include that new information into the latest version of your resume.
However, it’s unlikely that YOU are going to change personally and so the update is related more to the latest details in relation to your experience, professional development and/or studies.
In terms of the timeline, you will not necessarily tell the story in a chronological order, you might decide to put it into order of importance because if a job you held five years ago three jobs back, is now suddenly more important in terms of your next application, then having it five years ago and three jobs back will not necessarily be in your best interest.
So you can list your experiences in order of importance related to the job you are applying for.
What are the most important aspects of a resume?
A resume should be:-
- concise;
- informative;
- compelling; and
- it should sell you in the best possible way;
so that the employer or recruiter who looks at your resume, will be able to make the decision very quickly whether they want to invest time to interview you.
A resume should include your 30-second elevator pitch.
What is a 30-second elevator pitch?
A 30-second elevator pitch is based on the philosophy:-
When you get into an elevator in a tall building with someone who you can benefit from and who you want to impress, but that someone is going to get out on the 30th floor, you need to make an impression very quickly.
What can you say to them that will make them want to continue the conversation or to invest time to find out more about you? This is your 30-second elevator pitch!
Your 30-second elevator pitch should be in your resume and you should also mention it at the interview. When you are asked: “tell us about yourself”; this is when your 30-second elevator pitch should be used. Nobody wants to listen to you talk for 2 or 3 minutes on 'who you are' and 'what you do', they want to hear a really dynamic overview that takes no more than 30 seconds... That’s your 30-second elevator pitch.
Do I include personal information, such as interests and hobbies, in my resume?
The answer is 'Yes' and 'No'.
Interests and hobbies are part of the whole 'you'. They are things that make up who you are and they can be of extreme interest to employers, but of less interest to recruiters, who are more interested in the very core information about what you can achieve.
An employer, however, IS interested in knowing what makes up 'you', the person who’s going to join their team:-
- Will you fit with their culture?
- Will you be a good member of their team?
What you do outside of your work in terms of interests and hobbies, whether it’s keeping fit; going to the theatre; or a community activity where you volunteer, are the sorts of things that are of importance to employers. It will not cost you to leave them out, but it may benefit you to include them.
I have been at home raising my children for the past few years, which leaves gaps in my work history. Is this a bad thing?
Gaps in your work history can be caused by many things:-
- raising a family at home;
- being sick over a prolonged period of time; or
- because you’ve taken time off work to travel.
These are all understandable and all acceptable, but you must declare them, they must have a place in your resume. Do not try and hide them because eventually the truth will come out and if you are caught lying or covering up, even if it's not a bad cover up, it will count against you in terms of the potential employer's assessment of you as a potential employee.
I have heard about soft skills. Can you explain what they are and why they should be included in my resume?
'Soft skills' are the glue that binds an employer and an employee together once technical competency has been established. People with skills and experience don't always get the job and if they do they are not always the best person for the job.
One major Australian recruitment firm has a list of what they call '8 Success Factors for Evaluating Candidates':-
- Technical Competency - evaluates your competence in the required technical aspect of a position.
- Evaluating an individual’s ability to build rapport with other people in the team, and with external and internal stakeholders.
- Values and motives - evaluates an individual's work ethic and personal motivators within a business environment.
- Cultural - evaluates the match of an individual’s attitude and value system with the overall company culture and value system.
- Potential - evaluates areas of strength and areas for future development.
- Personality fit with team dynamics, management and leadership of the organisation.
- Cognitive ability - where they evaluate the aptitude for learning and the applicant’s ability to apply new and abstract information.
- Comprehension skills and spatial awareness.
- Reliability and character - which evaluates people through the eyes of their referees and reports from people who previously worked alongside the individual applicant.
Soft skills are very important, as mentioned, “they are the glue that sticks an employee to an employer after the technical competency has been established."
What is the most common mistake made in resumes?
There is no 'one' common mistake made in resumes. However, there are many mistakes that are common. Simple obvious mistakes are:-
- spelling mistakes;
- grammatical errors;
- use of different tenses in a document - which talks about things in the past tense, in the current tense or in the personal tense, that is 1st person, 2nd person or neutral; and
- a regular mistake is Capitalisation. People seem to want to use their own way to capitalise words. They assume that if the word is important it should be capitalised. That is, if they talking about a particular skill, such as management accounting, unless management accounting is part of a headline it should not have a capital 'M' or capital 'A'. It should be treated like all other words. Capitalisation is one of the most glaring errors and it happens at everybody all levels.
How can I ensure that my resume will be kept confidential?
If you are still employed, when you apply for a job you’re very conscious about giving away a lot of information to someone that you don’t know and you will want to make sure that they are not going to divulge that information to your current employer. It's fair to say that, generally speaking, most recruiters understand that the information exchanged between the applicant and the employer or recruiter is 'confidential', but we often include the word 'confidential' at the heading of a resume, particularly for an individual who’s in a very sensitive or senior position and they are really concerned about leakage of their information.
There are a number of steps a professional resume writer can take but we deal with that as a general day-to-day issue when compiling someone's resume.
How many pages should my resume be and can you explain why?
There are a lot of stories out there on how long a resume should be. Basically, it depends on the country:-
- America - a resume is one page long.
- England - they are very concerned that a resume or a CV, should be kept within 2 pages.
- Australia - there is general consensus that a resume should not exceed 3 pages, if possible, but 2 pages would be ideal.
A resume length should not be kept short at the expense of valuable information. This is where using a professional resume writer comes into play. A professional resume writer has the words and tools to write about a job applicant in a much more dynamic and therefore concise way and generally keep a resume to not more than 3 pages.
Should I hire a professional resume writer?
Yes, you should hire a professional resume writer.
Would you cut your own hair? Would you extract your own teeth?
There are professional resume writers who have had many years of experience in compiling resumes professionally. Some people on the Successful Resumes team have been writing resumes professionally for 20 years:-
- They know what makes employers and recruiters tick;
- They know the language to use when compiling a resume; and
- They know the format and the wording that will gain attention and put the applicant in the best possible light.
Also, most people are inherently shy or lacking in confidence on saying positive and dynamic statements about themselves. It’s a quality that’s natural but a professional resume writer will look at you from an external prospective. We will view you as another person, another product, and we can 'sell' you because we are not emotionally involved. You, as a person, would be very emotionally involved as far as writing your own resume and you would probably underplay or underscore items on your resume that should be stated about yourself.
I have resume templates in my word procession software. Are these good enough for my resume?
Generally speaking, resume templates from the internet and from word processing software are not good enough. They are of the most basic type of document. Why a resume template isn't good enough:-
- They do not guide you in completing achievements in your resume;
- They do not guide you in the personal profile section of your resume;
- They do not assist you in completing your professional assets; and
- They do not include details of 'soft skills' that are really important in your overall application.
We certainly do not recommend that you use templates.
Is hiring someone to write my resume expensive? I don't want to spend money because I'm out of work.
Obviously there is a cost involved in hiring a professional resume writer, but it shouldn’t be looked upon so much as a cost, but more as an investment in your future. If you do not spend that money you may be out of work for longer than if you do spend that money. It’s literally one of the most valuable investments you can make.
Generally speaking, and certainly in our organisation, we don’t just give a client their resume and see them on their way. We are available for telephone consultation and follow-up work at either no cost or very reasonable cost to our client. Successful Resumes have been in business for 20 years and we pride ourselves on giving our clients quality and value for the money they spend on their resume.
What is selection criteria?
Selection criteria is a tool used by governments at state, federal and local government levels as well as for statutory authority employers, to level the playing field for all applicants. It ensures that recruiters who don’t know you have a good idea whether you can do the job or not, without first having met you. This allows them to cull to a refined number of applicants and all applicants are asked the same question. It's not so much a question as them asking you to prove your experience or demonstrate your capability in general and specific aspects of the job. Selection criteria are complex for people that are not experienced, but for the team of Successful Resumes, selection criteria are simple and they cannot be avoided if you are applying for a job in government.
Is it necessary to send a cover letter with my application?
Cover letter expectations by a recruiter:-
If you’re applying for a job with a recruiter, then when you first see the advertisement, we suggest you ring the recruiter to find out if the job is still available and the closing date for job applications. This is your opportunity to make contact with them. They will probably ask you questions about yourself as a precursor to deciding if you’re a worthwhile applicant for the job. This is where you establish that there is no real reason for a cover letter, unless they ask for one, because, in your general email or in your online application, you can say “further to our conversation about the position, I am attaching my resume here with.” You might decide that you want to say something about yourself personally that relates to information provided in the job application, but, otherwise that is all that is needed in a cover letter.
Cover letter expectations by a prospective employer:-
Writing a cover letter for an employer is a different situation. An employer wants to know a number of things. He does not want to hear your resume rehashed in the cover letter. The cover letter should not be about you, it should be about the employer:-
- why you want to work for them;
- why you admire them; and finally
- what you can do for them in respect of the specific job.
A five paragraph letter well-worded on one side of one page is all you need to ensure that you get a job interview.
What are the benefits of employing a Successful Resume professional?
The benefits of employing a member of the Successful Resume professional are numerous, but in essence, it comes back to experience. Successful Resumes has been around for 20 years. The size of our organisation and the breadth of talent that we have in our writing team, currently of which there are 35 in Australia, have acquired specialist knowledge in areas such as in mining and I.T. That’s not to say that any of our team can’t handle resumes for other industries, but those two areas do require a need for specific technical knowledge. Successful Resumes is a caring organisation. That might sound a bit trite, but the truth is that the Successful Resumes team does care about our clients. We do like to know how our clients are going after they leave with their resume and any other items or application material we prepare for them, including cover letters and selection criteria, or the guidance on interview skills that we provide, or the toolkit of documents that we prepare to help them understand more about the application process.
Successful Resumes is a caring organisation of talented individuals with a depth and breadth of knowledge that far transcends any other professional resume writing organisation in Australia.
For more information on how to create a great resume, check out Successful Resumes
Give your resume that X-factor
Vital to create resumes with stand out qualities that can WIN interviews
Are you new to the work force, thinking of a career change or promotion, seeking employment in another sector or planning on entering the work force after a few years off work?
If your answer is yes and you don’t know where or how to start, you should seek professional advice.
You can cut your learning curve and avoid some time wasting and costly mistakes that can ruin your chances of winning the interview for that dream job.
What you need, first and foremost, is a WOW factor resume and cover letter. Your resume is your strategic marketing tool. Jobseekers have been writing resumes or CV, as known in some countries, for decades, yet they are boring, the lack excitement, passion and dynamics and are totally devoid of thought, style or flair.
After you have submitted application after application and haven’t got that call back, you really need to re-look at your resume . You need to do a better job selling yourself. Your resume has to convince your would-be employer that you have the skills needed for the job and the abilities to do it successfully and proficiently. And it needs to do that in less than 45 seconds, which research shows is as much time as a recruiter or employer will give to your document before deciding if you are worthy of an interview.
The most important purpose of a resume
The specific purpose of your resume is to win an interview. If it doesn’t, then, it is not effective; bearing in mind competition to win that interview is often fierce. A resume is like an advertisement, nothing more, nothing less. Your resume has to be:-
- a strategic marketing tool
- easy and quick to read
- and sell YOU as well as your skills and experience
Your resume must, after being read within 30 seconds, convince, inspire and excite the Human Resource Manager or Recruiter in wanting to reach for the phone and invite you for that very important interview.
Your resume should:-
- Highlight your skills and achievements as well as who you really are as a person.
- Focus on delivery of skills needed by your would-be employer.
- Provide evidence of your abilities, qualities and achievements.
- State clearly your career objective and why you are the perfect candidate for that specific job. Target your audience.
- Lead with your 30 second elevator pitch . In most cases, this could be the only section to be fully read by your would-be employer. This can make or break you.
- Use power words, be concise and keep to the point, yet make your resume look great and appetising.
Presentation and layout of your resume
Your resume must be like a work of art, appealing to look at and engaging to the reader. You must pay attention to uniformity and consistency in the use of:-
- Punctuation
- Syntax
- Grammar
- As well as the use of
- Fonts
- Capital letters
- Italics
- Bold faces
- Bullets
The unique style of presentation developed by the Successful Resumes Group has conquered two basic barriers to information assimilation:-
- We beat the 45 second barrier
- Seven Plus or Minus Two: [brainchild of Prof George Miller of Princeton University] citing limits on our capacity for processing information.
Your resume is YOUR strategic marketing document and it has to be right the first time.
So we suggest you seek the assistance of a professional resume consultant if you feel challenged writing one yourself. You never get a second chance to make a good first impression.
Article by Lim Larry, Co-founder and Consulting Principal, Successful Resumes Singapore
Is some of your resume or CV content putting your application at risk?
Questions on what to include in your resume or CV
Should your resume or CV detail reasons for leaving previous positions?
“I showed my resume/CV to a recruiter. She said I should add the reasons why I left each previous position and my salary expectations for the job I’m applying for. What should I do?”
You need to take what recruiters say with a grain of salt. Recruiters don’t get paid for hiring the best candidate for the job – they get paid for finding a low risk candidate who fits the job specification.
The only reason a recruiter would want to know why you left a job is to quickly eliminate you from the pool of applicants as a potential risk. This information can never convey a benefit – at best its neutral. Thus, anyone ever fired or with slightly strange reasons for leaving a job might get eliminated at a first cut without the recruiter even looking at the person’s suitability for the role.
Your reason for leaving a job is always contextual and should only be dealt with in a phone or face-to-face interview where you can provide the background detail. Perhaps if you were internally promoted, you could mention that as part of achievements. Otherwise, leave this information out of your resume or CV.
Should you advise your salary expectations in your resume or CV?
Providing salary information is more difficult. In Singapore and Hong Kong it’s the norm for applicants to be asked to give their salary expectations up front. It seems to be creeping into some hiring in Australia and New Zealand and in the UK and the USA it is not expected.
Expecting applicants to state their salary requirements up front is lazy HR and unfair on applicants because they cannot yet know what the job involves in detail. Stating your expectations up-front, without full knowledge, potentially limits your ability to negotiate a fair salary later on in the hiring process.
Clearly the recruiters do a first cull of the pile of resumes and CVs by looking at salary bands (too low as well as too high). If you haven’t included your salary expectation, you risk being left out anyway.
The way to deal with this requirement (only if asked for in the job advertisement) is to add it as a paragraph in your covering letter, rather than into your resume or CV. The price you give should be highly qualified and cover a wide range:
“My salary expectations depend on the requirements of this job and market rates. This is likely to be $ 50,000 to $ 70,000 per year.”
The lower rate is your current salary or whatever is your minimum for considering a move to the new job.
While your resume or CV needs to be accurate, honest and clear, it remains a concise document focused on selling your strengths. There’s lots of other information the HR types want (but isn’t relevant to getting you into the interview). You can fill that in on their multipage forms once they offer you the job!
Article by Denis Odlin, Co-founder and Consulting Principal, Successful Resumes New Zealand
Resumes, cover letters and interview preparation – Why are you the best for the job?
Resumes, cover letters and interview preparation
Once the resumes and cover letters have been prepared, and you get to an interview, you have to give the interviewer much more than the ‘right’ answers. HR Managers say:-
Major employers such as the big banks, Teleco’s and the major recruiters have their own perspectives when it comes to assessing resumes, cover letters and applications generally.
NAB
To select an applicant for an interview, the NAB looks at reviews and cover letters that reveal the applicant’s suitability:
- Good cultural fit: whether your values are aligned with those of their organization
- Leadership values: do you look after your people and look after their talent?
- Will bring new ideas to their business?
- Demonstrate potential for future growth?
One of their favourite questions is: -
If I spoke to five or six people who worked with or for you, how would they describe your leadership style?
Avoid stock answers, listen to what they are asking and craft your answer honestly and carefully.
Telstra
When reviewing resumes and cover letters, shortlisting applicants for an interview, Telstra says it looks for:-
a sense of your motivation and drive; what you think and how you behave.
Among their favourite questions:-
Tell me about a recent role you were excited about, and what was it that made you excited?
Besides crafting great resumes and cover letters, they encourage job candidates to prepare for an interview by reviewing the great experiences they have had in previous roles.
Hays Recruitment
Hays Recruitment select applicants to interview from their resumes and cover letters by looking for:
candidates that have pre-prepared examples of past successes, situations or results to use when answering questions. These should also be highlighted as achievements in your resume and cover letter.
A favourite interview question from Hayes is to spotlight a weakness to see how you have overcome it and become a strong performer. They say the best answers at an interview, come from candidates who reflect how happy they are about the improvements they have made to address their weakness.
This post is based on an article sourced in: The Weekend Australian: Weekend Professional on 18 September 2011 www.theaustralian.com.au/
Businesses Step Up Use of Social Media for Recruiting
A staggering 14.4 million Americans used social media to find their last job in 2011 already and it seems that a majority of businesses are going to be turning to social media to find and evaluate job candidates says Erica Swallow from Mashable.
So it is going to be increasingly important for jobseekers to be up-to-date and technically savvy with LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and YouTube.
From now on it will not only be necessary to have a WOW factor resume to win an interview, it will also be extremely important for jobseekers to ensure that their resume and social media profiles are in alignment, because a survey has shown that 1 in 3 hirers rejected job applicants after reviewing applicants candidates online information.
The same survey, carried out in the USA in 2010, indicated that 89% of employer companies intended to use social media to recruit in 2011 and 86% said they believed that candidates should make their social media profiles more employer-friendly.
92% of hiring managers last year used or planned to recruit via social media and of these 86% used LinkedIn, 60% Facebook and 50% Twitter. Growing in importance is “fit and personality” in the success of candidates because 24% of hiring managers said they found these attributes from social media profiles.
What makes up a Successful Resume?
We do emphasise that Successful Resumes is not a typing service and we do not use commercial templates to create your resume.
A dynamic layout and a professionally designed front cover are key elements of the visual impact needed for your resume to be successful in the battle to gain attention.
Strategic development of your resume with the aim of injecting a marketing orientated approach to selling you and to maximising your potential of winning that interview in a competitive employment market.
A personal profile because employers hire people based on more than just experience and skills, they are highly motivated by personal qualities and attributes especially when this information is presented in our unique and proven style.
A highly readable, succinct writing style, enabling the employer to reach a positive decision to interview you without having to wade through numerous pages of rambling text.
Your successful resume will be a powerful “selling tool” as opposed to being just the traditional list of employment and task related details created by most people.
We pay special attention to grammar and syntax as well as to the tense and tempo of the language. Our Resumes are written in a neutral, third person style (widely considered by most employment industry specialists to be the most dynamic and credible style for Resumes).
Interview Advice is included with every Successful Resumes package and is a professionally written summary of how to handle the interview process with advice on how to prepare yourself.
If copies of references are available, we may use ‘excerpts’ from them within the body of your resume. We have found this to be a highly effective marketing and image building strategy because it brings the positive opinions of past employers into clear and dynamic focus.
Each successful resume is a carefully personalised document written by caring professionals who have many years of experience in business as employers, employment industry specialists, public relations consultants, teachers and copywriters.
Each document results from a process that involves careful consideration of all the facts and of the environment in which you are seeking employment.
At Successful Resumes we believe you cannot afford to simply put your career potential in the hands of people who are going to just ‘type up’ your resume.
Contrary to the opinion of some people who purport to be resume writers, most employers will not be motivated by a traditional ‘humdrum list’ of boring dates and task related facts. See our Testimonials Page.
You have a unique opportunity to make the right first impression and that’s what we do for our clients; first time, every time.
Resume Services
Resume Writing and other services
Interview skills coaching and career advice, Entry level and graduate packages – ask your nearest branch for their special prices. Our clients range from entry level positions, administration and middle management through the professions to senior management up to CEO (check with the branch of your choice about their individual prices):
- Each client’s needs are individually assessed before work commences.
- Packages include Personal Profile because employers have always selected people on more than just skills and experience.
Resume Services can include variations of the following:
- Specially tailored information gathering process for interstate & international clients.
- Personal Stationery with Cover/Application Letter.
- Interview Techniques and Govt Selection Criteria brochures.
- Soft Copy in Word & PDF
- Life long electronic storage.
Resumes include (according to individual assessment of client needs):
- Personal Profile.
- Objectives.
- Summary of Professional Assets.
- Summary of Work History.
- Educational Qualifications & Attainments.
- Technical Skills.
- Key Experience & Achievements.
Resume Special Features (included with all resume packages):
- Designer covers (a hard copy feature).
- Multiple Copies.
- Free Binders.
- Premium papers.


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