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          <td class="pageName"> The Six Secrets</td>
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    <p class="quote style3">This  document is provided as a public service to friends and clients of Cluff &amp;  Associates. <br />
      Duplication for nonprofit purposes is allowed. Publication for  sale is strictly prohibited. </p>
	<p>&nbsp;</p>
	<p>There have  been hundreds of books and articles written about the right and wrong ways to  write a resume. While much of the advice offered by these various authors has  value, few if any of us have the time or interest to sort through all of it to  discern what our resume should look like. Over my twenty-five years in  recruiting and employment, I've learned that there is a recipe for success when  putting your professional credentials to paper. This is what I have come to  call the six secrets of successful resumes. </p>
	<p align="center" class="quote">1. </p>
	<p align="center" class="style2">Think of Your Resume as an Advertisement &#8211; </p>
	<blockquote>
	  <p align="center" class="style2">Not as an Autobiography.</p>
	  </blockquote>
	<p>The job  search process is, by nature, a marketing program. You are trying to get one or  more companies interested in buying your services. So, you advertise the most  salient features you have to offer. Consider the new car analogy. </p>
	<p>As a  potential buyer of a new car, you are unlikely to be interested in the history  of the company that made it, or the detail of the process by which it was  manufactured. You really want to know what it can do relative to your specific  needs and expectations of a new car. If you see an advertisement that addresses  most, if not all, of your needs, then you'll probably want to take it for a  test drive. So it is with company managers and recruiters who have to look at  lots of &quot;ads&quot; (resumes) before they find some who may be worthy of a  'test drive' (an interview). </p>
	<p>Tell the  readers of your resume about your major skills and accomplishments, not your  complete life history. </p>
	<p align="center" class="quote">2. </p>
	<p align="center" class="style2">Write for the Reader &#8211; </p>
	<blockquote>
	  <p align="center" class="style2">Not for Yourself.</p>
	  </blockquote>
	<p>A common  mistake many of us make is to record our proudest and greatest moments and  share them with the world in the form of a resume. For some, that becomes very  heavy reading (pun intended). The resume is supposed to get the readers  interested, not put them to sleep. </p>
	<p>As a general  rule, all unrelated work history and positions held more than 10 years ago  should be given only brief mention. Why sell features that are out-of-date or  have no apparent value to the potential buyer? </p>
	<p>A clean,  easy-to-read resume with lots of white space presented in a one- or two-page  format is more likely to be read by a busy manager or recruiter than one which  has the appearance of a novel. </p>
	<p align="center" class="quote">3. </p>
	<p align="center" class="style2">Make It Easy for Them to Screen You In &#8211;</p>
	<blockquote>
	  <p align="center" class="style2">Not Out.</p>
	  </blockquote>
	<p>In case you  haven't noticed, most advertisements and job postings call for the same basic  information&#8212;a minimum level of education, a range or minimum number of  years of experience, and a few key skill requirements. If you know what they  are looking for, don't bury it the narrative of your resume. Make it easy for  them to see these things at a glance. </p>
	<p>Group your  key skills in a special section and label it appropriately, e.g. Technical  Skills, Computer Skills, Areas of Expertise, etc. Also, group your relevant  education and training together and label it accordingly so it can be found  quickly. Your work history should include dates of employment for each employer  to permit the reader to determine the extent of your experience. </p>
	<p>An  alternative approach would be to open your resume with a Summary of  Qualifications and address these major points in a three or four line  paragraph. Don't make them look for it; put the important stuff where they  can't miss it. </p>
	<p align="center" class="quote">4. </p>
	<p align="center" class="style2">Tell Them Only What They Want to Hear &#8211; </p>
	<blockquote>
	  <p align="center" class="style2">Take Out the Fluff.</p>
	  </blockquote>
	<p>As you are  composing your updated version of your resume, see if the content you have  selected can pass these three tests. Is it Recent? Is it Relevant? Is it  Significant? </p>
	<p>Your recent  experiences and accomplishments deserve the greatest attention because they are  usually most representative of your current level of abilities. What you did 10  or 15 years ago seldom adds more than a sense of progression or chronology to  your resume, so don't waste a lot of space detailing your early career duties  and accomplishments. </p>
	<p>If you state  an objective at the beginning of your resume (and I recommend that you do),  then everything else in your resume should be relevant to that objective. If it  isn't, leave it out. For example, if you are applying for a job as a telephone  customer service agent, what relevance is there in detailing your outside  interests to include 'volunteer firefighters or &quot;ordained minister&quot;?  If you are trying to rationalize that it will give the reader a better feel for  you as a person rather than a commodity, go back to Secret #2. </p>
	<p>Recruiters  want to know only about the really significant stuff that you've done. If you  had ten significant accomplishments in your last job, prioritize them in terms  of what the reader may be interested in, then include only 3 or 4 in your  resume. Save the rest for the interview. </p>
	<p>On behalf of  all my fellow recruiting professionals, be it known to all parties that brevity  always wins over verbosity. </p>
	<p align="center" class="quote">5. </p>
	<p align="center" class="style2">Give Them Proof &#8211; </p>
	<blockquote>
	  <p align="center" class="style2">Not Promises.</p>
	  </blockquote>
	<p>If you get  past the first screen for key skills, experience and education, the final cut  is likely to be based upon the quality and credibility of the past  accomplishments you reveal. Significant, factual, verifiable past  accomplishments are far more believable than grand promises of what you plan to  do in the future. </p>
	<p>You may be  honest, trustworthy and dependable, but that won't get you a job. Results sell.  Tell the reader, &quot;I did this (for a former employer, or in a previous  assignment),&quot; and they'll infer that you can do the same for them. </p>
	<p>Nothing  succeeds like success. Sell your past successes. </p>
	<p align="center" class="quote">6. </p>
	<p align="center" class="style2">Rifle-Shot Your Resume &#8211; </p>
	<blockquote>
	  <p align="center" class="style2">One Size Does NOT Fit All.</p>
	  </blockquote>
	<p>A resume is  not a one-of-a-kind document. In this computer age, your resume should be as  easy to change as your clothes. If you care enough to dress appropriately for  the occasion, then you should be willing to change the look of your resume to  suit the opportunity. </p>
	<p>The generic  resume is a thing of the past, and, unfortunately, a lot of people are still  living there. These resumes are either too long and difficult to read, or they  leave too much to the interpretation of the reader. In either case, the end  result is usually no further interest. Shotgun approaches seldom hit the  bulls-eye. </p>
	<p>If you really  want a job, you must specifically tailor your resume to be the stand-out  candidate for it. Write the resume to make yourself appear to be the perfect  fit for the job for which you are applying. Reload your resume with the right  ammunition (see Secrets 1 through 5), then aim it well at the target job you  seek. </p>
	<p>&nbsp;</p>
	<p align="center" class="style2">Happy  Hunting! </p>
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Anon7 - 2021