When you send your resume in for a job, you hope the job recruiter or hiring manager reads it thoughtfully and thoroughly, picking out all your best qualities and noticing your relevant experience. However, nowadays, there is a good chance that the first reader of your resume is a computer. Computers scan for keywords and highlight certain resumes for the hiring manager to read in person. The secret to getting your resume read is to figure out what keywords the hiring manager choose for the computer's search. So how do you unearth the mystery keywords you need?
Look at the Job Description to Find Keywords
One way to find keywords to seed into your resume is to look at the job description for the position for which you are applying. Read each job description with a highlighter in hand, and look particularly at the nouns and verbs in the description. Ask yourself whether a hiring manager might consider that word useful in weeding through candidate resumes. Make a list of the keywords from the job description, and compare it to your resume.
Just one or two keywords is not enough. A computer search is likely to place the resumes it reviews in a rank order, placing those with the most keywords at the top of the list. Rewrite your resume to reflect the keywords you have discovered, rephrasing as necessary.
Take your keyword search one step further by checking out the job descriptions for similar positions, even ones that are already filled. You may find keywords there that express qualifications or experience vital to the position that simply did not appear in the job description. Some hiring managers may even leave out a few key terms deliberately to help sort through candidates and find the most qualified. Tweak your resume one more time to incorporate your new findings.
Develop Your Own Personal List of Keywords
Another great way to find the right keywords for your job search is to evaluate yourself, your skills and your background. Make sure everything that might be relevant to a given job is included in your resume. Ensure you use the same version of your name on your job applications, your resume and all job-related sites, such as LinkedIn; don't list yourself as "Kathy Smith" in one place and "Kathryn Smith" elsewhere.
Include specific skills by their most common name, including any foreign languages you speak, especially when applying to a global company. List any certificates or formal qualifications you hold, as well as any formal training you have that is relevant to the job. Remember to include job-specific software with which you have experience. If you held a position with major companies, worked with recognizable clients or received significant awards or honors, make sure to list them all by name.
Cover All the Alternatives
Sometimes you might include a perfectly good keyword on your resume only to find the computer doing the keyword search does not notice it because it was looking for a slightly different variation on the word. Remember that computers are extremely literal; they cannot pick up on typos, and they can only respond to their programming. Cover all the possible alternatives for keyword terms to make sure you give the computer everything it needs to find you.
If your job search is partially defined by location, include all the possible locations on your resume. Go ahead and list "Los Angeles," but make sure you include "Southern California" as well. If your experience includes a relevant position, but your old company used a different name for that position than the new company does, list both titles with a slash between them to make sure the computer notices.
Alternative names are particularly crucial when you are in a field that uses a lot of shorthand or acronyms. Find a natural way to include them all. For example, if you are applying for a job making corporate videos in a communications or public relations department, find ways to describe yourself as a director of photography, a cinematographer and a DP. Acronyms show up repeatedly when discussing industry training and tools, equipment or software you know how to use, relevant laws or regulations for your industry, memberships in industry-related organizations, and technical terms used by your industry. Don't forget standard abbreviations, such as PR for public relations and HR for human resources.
Once you develop a list of probable keywords for a job you are interested in, do not just glance at your resume to see if you have a few already in place. Rewrite your resume to include keywords, keeping your phrasing as natural as possible. Once your resume catches a computer's attention, you increase your odds of actually getting in front of and speaking to a real person.
Resources:
http://www.job-hunt.org/personal-SEO/top-25-job-search-keywords.shtml
http://www.theladders.com/career-advice/using-right-keywords-essential-when-applying-for-jobs-online
http://www.cnn.com/2009/LIVING/worklife/06/01/cb.use.keywords.for.job/index.html?eref=rss_tech
Photo Courtesy of Cristian Cardenas at Flickr.com
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