Are You Making These 10 Mistakes On Your Resume?

Are you making these mistakes on your résumé? Chances are, you’re making at least one or two — if not more! Go through this list, identify the mistakes you’re currently making, and then follow the suggestions to stop making those mistakes!

1 – Being Unclear About Your Job Target. Have a goal in mind for what job you’re pursuing and be ruthless about what you choose to include on your résumé. For each position you’re interested in, before you submit your résumé, review it and make sure everything listed relates to the role you’re pursuing.

2 – Confusing Your Résumé With a Career History. A résumé is not a “career obituary” listing everything you’ve ever done. You can keep a master career document that includes all of your education, experience, certifications, and accomplishments — but excerpt that content to create a marketing document that is focused specifically on the job target you’re pursuing. The résumé needs to tell a story of your career journey while also demonstrating to the employer how you can be a valuable asset to their team.

3 – Using the Same Résumé for Every Job Application. Don’t try to use the same résumé for very different job targets. A customized document demonstrates the alignment between what the company wants in their next hire and the skills, experience, and education you have to offer. First, save a copy of the file. At a minimum, you will want to customize it with the desired job title and company name at the top of the résumé. You can also analyze the job posting and make sure you’ve addressed all the key requirements.

4 – Neglecting the Keywords. Most career documents are “read” by computers first, not humans. To make it out of the automated screening process, you need to make sure you are including the most important keywords. Analyze job postings to optimize your résumé for the specific keywords that will be queried in the applicant tracking system software.

5 – Using a Dated Format. Do you have an objective on your résumé? Is the phrase “References available upon request” on your document? Both of these are signs of a “dated” résumé. Do you have a branding section at the top of your résumé that identifies the type of position you’re targeting and your value proposition and/or key qualifications that will be further detailed in the rest of the document? Newer formats focus on accomplishments, not simply job duties. In addition, some modern résumés only include a phone number, email address, LinkedIn URL, city, state, and zip code – not a physical address.

6 – Forgetting the Accomplishments. This is one of the biggest mistakes made when writing your own résumé. You may feel uncomfortable highlighting your contributions, but it’s important to “toot your own horn” by documenting specific accomplishments that demonstrate the value you offer to your next employer — quantified with numbers, dollars, and percentages whenever possible.

7 – “Setting It and Forgetting It.” Your résumé should be updated regularly. At a minimum, review it at least once a year to add new accomplishments, trainings, and certifications. Being ready to apply for a great opportunity right away or send a résumé to be considered for an unadvertised opportunity — is an advantage.

8 – Taking Résumé Advice from Family and Friends. Everyone has an opinion about résumés — but the only one that matters is the hiring manager for the specific job you’re pursuing. So, while you can solicit input on your career documents, remember that most of the feedback you’ll get is an opinion, not a fact. Well-meaning friends and family can often give you outdated advice (“Your résumé should only be one page.”) because they don’t keep up with current research on the job search. When working with a résumé writer, ask questions, but remember that you’ve hired a professional for a reason. Trust their judgment.

9 – Not Making It Easy to Get Ahold of You. Be sure to include your best phone number on the résumé for you to be reached. (Usually, this is a cell phone, not a home number.) Make sure your voice mail is set up (a personal message is better than a recording of the number or “this caller is unavailable”) and make sure there is space available to leave a message. (One big pet peeve of recruiters and hiring managers is calling an applicant and not being able to leave a message because their mailbox is full.) Include a good email (not your current work email or a “cutesy” email like cutie_pie@fauxemail.com.) If necessary, set up a free email account specifically for your job search. Include your LinkedIn profile URL on your résumé (but make sure you’ve scrubbed them of anything controversial).

10 – Relying on the Résumé Alone. The résumé is just one tool in your job search arsenal – albeit a major tool. But there are other career documents you should have: an updated LinkedIn profile, a cover letter template (that you can customize for the specific position you’re targeting), a networking letter, a list of your references, a thank you letter template, a biography, and a 30-60-90-day template. And, have a job search plan to guide your daily and weekly actions!

Of course, one of the best ways to avoid making mistakes on your résumé is working with a professional résumé writer to optimize your résumé, career documents, and overall job search!

Previous
Previous

5 Tips to Increase Your Chances of Obtaining a Federal Job Interview

Next
Next

The Cost of Umemployment