新聞內容

8 Résumé Editing Tips

  • 2012-03-01

2012-3-01
Source From: MSN Careers

Depending on how it’s written, your reacutesumeacute can make or break your job search. A professional, well-written reacutesumeacute can have employers banging down your door but a sloppy, mistake-laden reacutesumeacute can turn off a hiring manager in a split second. Proofreading is a must. Neglect doing it and you could send out a reacutesumeacute with simple mistakes that could have been avoided.
Before you send yours to an employer, follow this checklist to ensure it is the highest-quality representation of yourself.
1. Grammar and spelling– Use the grammar and spell check function in Microsoft Word. When you are finished with that, print out your reacutesumeacute and read the document word for word. Spell check won’t know that you meant to enter quotmanagerquot when you actually typed quotmanger.quot
2. Capitalization– Use a manual such as the quotGregg Reference Manualquot or quotStrunk and White’s Elements of Stylequot if you do not know capitalization rules. The most common capitalization errors are with job titles. You capitalize a person’s job title only when it precedes his or her name. (Example: President Peters) You do not capitalize a job title when it comes after the name as a description. (Example: Mr. Peters, the president of XYZ Corporation…)
3. Punctuation– Check for proper and consistent use of punctuation. Again, if you are unsure, refer to a reference manual. If you don’t own one, there are many accessible for free online.
4. Run-on sentences– Check to make sure you do not have run-ons: They are difficult to read and comprehend. A run-on sentence is defined as two or more sentences that have been joined together without a conjunction or the correct punctuation. (Example: I produced strategies for growth management and market contraction and identified profitable acquisition and diversification opportunities and facilitated negotiations for sale of software division to Fortune 500 company.)
5. Consistency– You must be consistent with your number usage (dates, money, numbers), plurals and abbreviations. For example, don’t list one date as quot8/2004quot and then list another as quot3/15/2004.quot Also, be aware of listing software consistently (abbreviation use). MS Word and Microsoft Outlook are both correct, but not consistent when used in the same document.
6. Education section– When you have a degree, list only the year that you obtained your degree. When you list your dates, (i.e.: 9/1998 to 1/2002) many reacutesumeacute-scanning systems will not recognize that you obtained a degree, only that you attended college for a period of time.
7. Ampersands– Ampersands (amp) generally do not belong on a reacutesumeacute. There are a few exceptions. One exception is a well-known company name (ATampT). Another exception is well-known industry terms (PampL). Overuse of the ampersand indicates laziness when repeatedly substituting it for quotand.quot
8. Hyperlinks– Sometimes, your e-mail and Web addresses may be automatically hyperlinked when typing your reacutesumeacute and will need to be deactivated. The reason is that many spam filters treat links of any kind as potential junk mail. You don’t want your reacutesumeacute destined for the recycle bin before it’s even read. To deactivate hyperlinks in MS Word, highlight the link, go to the quotInsertquot drop down menu, scroll down to and click quotHyperlinkquot, and on the lower left-hand side of this screen there should be a little button that says quotRemove link.quot When you find it, give it a little click and, voila, the hyperlink is gone. Or, just highlight the link, right click on it and scroll down to quotremove linkquot to deactivate the link.

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