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The moment your resume is opened by a hiring manager
or admissions director, it must appeal to him or her
on an aesthetic level, while accurately reflecting
your industry or career goal. To do anything else
is to relegate your resume -- no matter how
brilliantly it is written -- to the rejection
stack.
In order to ensure that your resume receives the
initial attention it deserves, it's important to
adhere to certain formatting guidelines, which
include:
Template and Font Choice
In all cases, templates and font choice
should:
1. Be easy to follow. There is no greater
irritation to a busy hiring manager or admissions
director than to receive a resume where data is
presented in a haphazard or inconsistent manner.
That's why templates are used. An effective
template will present company names, dates, job
titles, academic information, and all other
pertinent data in a clear manner, so that a quick
glance will tell the contact person what they need
to know.
But consistency in format isn't the only point to
consider. Templates should be chosen because they
accurately reflect a candidate's career or goal. In
other words, a banker, accountant, or administrative
assistant would choose a more conservative format
than a graphic artist or interior designer. Nothing
is more jarring -- or disastrous -- than to receive
a financial professional's resume written in italics
or script with accompanying graphics.
2. Be easy to read. Resumes written in bold text or
italics are extremely difficult to read and project
a lack of professionalism. The same goes for
artistic fonts that resemble handwriting. It's a
common misconception that jazzing up a resume with
these stylistic tricks will get the document read.
On the contrary, the resume will get noticed -- and
discarded -- within seconds. It's not the font you
use that attracts attention, but rather the resume's
initial appearance and the words crafted within it.
When in doubt about font choice, always err on the
conservative side. Two good choices are Times New
Roman or Arial in 11 points -- no smaller, or the
text will be difficult to read.
Effective Use of White Space
There is no quicker way to get your resume ignored
than to create a document with (narrow or
nonexistent) margins, and block after block of
uninterrupted text. No one wants to read a
text-heavy document with sentences that run on for
four or five lines. In today's fast-paced world,
you must get your point across quickly, with a
minimum of words presented as bulleted sentences
within special sections (i.e. Professional
Experience, Education, Qualifications Summary),
separated by well-placed white space.
Think of white spaces as necessary pauses -- a
chance for the hiring manager or admissions director
to catch her breath, collect her thoughts, and
digest (and appreciate) the data you've presented.
Prioritization of Data
Imagine you're a hiring manager. It's 7:30 on a
Monday morning, and an important position needs to
be filled in your company's legal department. Over
the weekend, 200 resumes came in from eager
applicants all wanting to fill this one job. Most
of the resumes are attractively formatted and use
the appropriate font type. So far so good. But on
closer inspection, most of the candidates have
relegated their willingness to relocate for the
position -- a core qualification -- to the very end
of their two-page resumes. More than a few have
buried accomplishments within the text, figuring
this will force the hiring manager to search for
that data, which means the entire resume will have
to be read. Some have placed bar admission, another
important qualification, dead last on the resume,
believing that where they can practice law certainly
isn't as important as the fact that they are
attorneys. And a few misguided souls simply list
company names and dates of employment, assuming that
the hiring manager should know without asking what
legal duties they performed at these firms.
It's enough to drive a hiring manager to distraction
-- or another career.
But then, at last, there are those few resumes that
list the important data at the top of the first
page. In less than five seconds the hiring manager
knows that the first candidate is willing to
relocate and assume the cost of those expenses, if
required. This candidate also provides a special
section beneath the Qualifications Summary that
indicates where she is licensed to practice law.
The second candidate does the same, while also
pulling out Career Accomplishments and placing them
at the top of the first page. After all, why keep a
100% win rate at trial a secret, or the fact that
one can practice before the state's Supreme Court?
Given the above scenario, it's clear which
applicants will be called in for an interview. No
hiring manager will read every single resume that
comes across his desk. Nor will a hiring manager
search for data. In today's tight job market it's
up to the candidate to prioritize data so that a
hiring manager knows at a glance what the job seeker
has to offer the company in terms of achievement,
work experience, education, licensing,
certifications, and special concessions, such as
relocation.
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