6 Things To Take Off Your Resume Today
If it’s been a
while since you’ve looked for a job, you may not have updated your
resume in quite some time. Or maybe you’ve updated your resume but did
so based on advice you heard long ago. Either way, your resume may
contain items that can make you appear out of touch, unprofessional or
just don’t add anything to why you should get the job.
Space
on your resume is valuable real estate and should be reserved for
important accomplishments. You don’t want anything distracting
recruiters and hiring managers from your best qualities and
qualifications.
With that in mind, consider these six things you should take off your resume right now.
“Responsible for…”
With that in mind, consider these six things you should take off your resume right now.
“Responsible for…”
If you accomplished something, of course you were responsible for it. This phrasing is redundant and distracts from your accomplishment. “Responsible for designing supervisory curriculum” is less effective than “Designed supervisory curriculum,” says Melissa Cooley, founder of career consultation and resume-writing service The Job Quest. “The phrase ‘responsible for’ doesn’t show anything of value, and, upon seeing it, a hiring manager could mistakenly assume that the entire accomplishment is less important.”
Weird Formatting and Design
Of
course you want your resume to stand out, but it shouldn’t be because
you chose Comic Sans as your font. Pick a classic format, a common font
and be consistent. For example, if you use bullet points and use periods
after each point, do that throughout, advises Carl Schlotman, author of
“Cash In Your Diploma.”
Schlotman
also advises against using color anywhere in your resume. The hiring
manager probably won’t waste color ink when printing it and once
converted to black and white, your text may appear different than you
intended.
Old Experiences
Old Experiences
It’s
unlikely any job experience you have from 10 or more years ago is still
relevant to jobs you’d be applying for today, says Jeff Altman, host of
Job Search Radio.
Your level of responsibility and core job functions, not to mention
accompanying technologies, have likely evolved quite a bit in the past
10 years and are only relevant to show how far your career has
progressed. If you feel the progression is important, Altman says this
can be demonstrated with a line elsewhere, perhaps in your cover letter.
A Laughable Email Address
If
your email provider hasn’t been a popular choice for the past several
years, you may be subtly communicating to managers and recruiters that
you’re out of touch. BritneyNJustinForever@ancientemailprovider.com is
unprofessional because it includes your personal interests, yes. But it
also, through a specific cultural reference and outdated provider, shows
that you haven’t embraced newer and better technology that’s come along
since. A Laughable Email Address
If
your name is Britney and your spouse’s name is Justin, this is
unprofessional for another reason: Shared email addresses are a no-no.
Excessive Information About College
Many
recent graduates will include information about their fraternity or
sorority affiliations on the off chance a recruiter or manager will feel
some type of kinship. That information is just a waste of space, says
Bob Bentz, president of ATS Mobile,
a mobile marketing agency in Philadelphia. He says he’d much rather
that space show off a candidate’s internships and job experiences. Excessive Information About College
Bentz feels the same way about grade point averages on resumes for anyone other than a recent graduate. “Except
for obtaining an entry level job, your GPA is meaningless. It offers no
indication of whether you will have a positive ROI for our company.”
The same is true for listing every school you
attended. The hiring manager doesn’t need to know you bounced through
three institutions before graduation. Just list the school that’s on
your diploma.Your Home Address
At
best this information is unnecessary, and at worst, it can hurt you. If
you’re looking to relocate and applying for positions in other areas of
the country, showing your current address in another location can make
hiring managers feel like you may not truly be interested or may want
relocation assistance that they hadn’t budgeted for, says Ian Jackson,
managing partner at Enshored,
a business operations optimization service. You’ll put your address on
your formal application and on numerous forms once you’re hired. It
doesn’t need to take up valuable real estate on your resume.
Source:monster.com
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