You have tons of experience within your industry after working for many years. You worked your way up the corporate ladder to earn a management-level position before switching to another firm. Now you want to get a job that oversees a department twice the size of what you led before your current position. You think you must include all of your previous experience on a resume to give an employer a full view of your story.
Unfortunately, that means you might leave off some important skills or educational background. Refresh your resume and add the right kinds of work experience without sacrificing content. To do this, pick the most important aspects of your work history, as they relate to the position you're applying for, and use the right resume format to convey them to your potential employer.
Conciseness
Keep your resume concise by using bullet points as opposed to complete sentences, where appropriate. For instance, shorten a sentence like, "I took customer calls every day to ensure every problem was solved and the customers were happy," by turning it into, "Answered calls daily to ensure great customer service."
This type of sentence structure should prevail throughout your resume, whether you talk about experiences, skills or qualifications. This shortens the resume, creates more white space on the page and lets the HR manager's eye track to the right places with ease.
Relevancy
Your work experience does not have to represent a comprehensive view of your past employment. If you have 20 years of experience under your belt, for example, you can probably leave off your lawn mowing or babysitting business as a teenager, as well as the fast-food job you had for two years in high school, and focus on the positions that helped to get you ready for your upcoming job interview.
Suppose you apply for a plant manager job at a large manufacturing firm. Experience as a short-order cook in high school may not come into play in this case. Instead, focus on how you led a production line for three years and your team improved production efficiency by 10 percent.
Recency
Recent employment also looks better on a resume. Employers may look at the past 10 to 15 years of experience. Jobs in high school or internships in college may not show your experience and qualifications as much as maintaining full-time employment in your industry into your mid-30s.
List the most recent positions first, and leave out any irrelevant jobs you may have had in between major years of employment. The exception is if you had a job in your industry a long time ago that still remains applicable, such as the job you earned after the college internship before you moved on to another career choice.
Format
Two major formats prevail when it comes to the work experience section of your resume. Perhaps the most common is the chronological listing in which you work your way backwards in time based on your employment history.
This format is especially applicable if you worked in multiple positions for the same company. Begin with the name of the firm and the location. If you put the dates first, the applicant tracking system may misinterpret the data and lower your score. Below the firm and the location, list the position and dates of employment. If you had more than one position at the same firm, list a second position below the first in chronological order.
Once you display that basic information, write three to five bullet points of the most important accomplishments and achievements during your time at that particular company. If you held two vastly different positions at the same firm, create two separate entries. This lets you explain the chronology of your employment while adding accomplishments.
The second format for work experience deals with your skills rather than your employment. Each entry starts with a company and position, followed by the list of skills you learned at that job. This format helps if you switch careers or want to focus less on large gaps between employment.
Throw in Some Skills and Keywords
Put some skills among your work experience, especially if the job description lists specific talents you need for the position. This is particularly true for technology-based jobs, such as computer programming, that require a high degree of technical expertise.
Lastly, pick up keywords from the job description and incorporate them into your resume. Applicant trackers mine your resume for certain words to see if you qualify for the job.
The work experience section should be compact and contain the most important aspects of your past employment. Narrowing down what to include in your work experience takes a little practice, but this section could be what makes or breaks landing your dream job.
Photo Courtesy of Ambro at FreeDigitalPhotos.net
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