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Blog Post: Resume rant...all our cars have steering wheels


posted Monday, September 14, 2009 7:48 PM

Taking a break from my regularly scheduled work today to rant about the junk at the top of most resumes...

Job seeker - please...read:

You say:

"15-year, senior-level experience in process improvement and implementation."

I say:

So what?

Why do I say that? Because that's precisely what the person reading your resume is thinking. They're probably nice corporate HR or management types who don't say career limiting things, so they won't say it out loud, but they're thinking it.

Why? Because 15 years of senior-level process improvement experience is merely a description of the 'no-duh' stuff on the job ad.

It's the minimum bar. They're not excited that you have it: they expect it! Everyone that sends in a resume is saying they have the basic experience. It's like everyone in prison saying they're innocent.

Saying you have the minimum is NOT taken at face value, and doesn't give the reader one tiny scrap of help making a decision about whether you're worth 30 minutes of interview time.

Think about it. You go to the Ford dealership, withstand the initial ickiness of meeting a car salesman and give him an overview of what you're looking for. He looks you in the

eye, nods his head and says, "All our cars have tires and steering wheels."
What would you say? "Uh great...OK...is there another sales person around I could talk to?"

That's exactly what's happening if you open your resume with "15 years of blah, blah..."

To tell people you have what they're looking for at the basic skill level doesn't mean a thing. Zero. Zip. Nada. Zilch (just to add one more "Z" term for 'not a damned thing.')

And if you try to spice it up with some concocted verbiage from the Dilbert resume terms generator, or try to make yourself seem 'extra nice' by including personal information,
you're just going to get a faster, more vigorous stabbing of the 'delete' button.

dFjjj-Delete.jpg

They'll probably even feel a justified indignation when they do it!

CONNECT - tie what you do to the results the company wants. Even better, connect it to the pain, greed or fear the individual you're trying to convince is feeling because they haven't yet got the result.

Then say it - at the TOP of your resume where it's important.
Not "15 years blah, blah, blah..." Instead try:

"7 solid examples of helping teams eliminate the frustrating, meaningless, stupid work that keeps them from turning the profit the VP's neck is on the line for."

Or -

"Three real-life jobs where I helped companies stop pissing off (and losing) customers by finding the holes in their sales and delivery process where customers stopped being interested, and started complaining to their friends."

Or -

"Instantly stopped huge financial losses in small, newly acquired companies by taking charge and re-inventing work processes to refocus exclusively on dollar-producing activities."

PLEASE - stop selling tires and steering wheels.

You look like an idiot when you do it. It's not why people buy cars and it's not going to get you hired.

Thus endeth the rant.

 

**Need a resource, a hint, a review of what you're doing. Just shoot me a note and tell me you saw this on Jobing.com and I'll gladly help you in any way I can.

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Community Comments
Sandra Johnsey Tuesday, September 22, 2009 3:48 PM
Good advise - I had that line for years and always had to stop and update number of years each time I dusted off the resume. I removed my "junk" and shortened my resume to 2 pages. Just hope it gets some attention when I start looking for work again next week.
Anna Nunez Tuesday, September 22, 2009 8:40 PM
On the flip side, we job hunters are tired of job descriptions that are incredibly wordy yet still vague. To go with your analogy, how is the sales person supposed to help you find the right car if you tell him what you're looking for is something with brakes--and then proceed to go into great detail about how exactly you expect your brakes to perform? How often have you seen something like this:

"Qualifications include excellent written and oral communications skills and a demonstrated ability to take initiative and interact with all levels of management."

Also, I would tend to match the tone of my cover letter to the tone of the job description. Most of them are fairly conservative; I'm not sure I'd use the phrase "pissing off" unless the job description had a casual tone as well. You wouldn't want them to think you'd write business letters to their clients that way (unless, of course, that was appropriate for their particular industry.)

Basically, the advice is similar to what you always hear about talking up your accomplishments rather than just your experience. It is harder to put into practice, though!
Robert Widmann Thursday, September 24, 2009 4:52 PM
I can see both sides of this,and agree to have your cover letter and resume be more of a short bit of information on how you are going to solve the HR managers problem of filling said position, and here is how.
I have not had much response too my resume and am still looking for work despite applying to 100's of job posting with or with out cover letters, changed resume to try and "fit" to what ever "widget" maker position that was posted.still no interview.
SO?????????????? what is the answer
Scott Birkhead Wednesday, September 30, 2009 11:43 AM
Sandra - I hope you do too!

Anna - as a recruiting consultant, that's advice I give time and time again, and you're right on: companies would get better, faster, cheaper hires if they'd just advertise better :)

Robert - if you're at 100's of applications and no interviews, you probably aren't doing the job you think you are at connecting the dots. Often we left the most important parts in our heads...we can 'see' it on paper, but we're not being explicit enough. If you want, shoot me your resume and I'll gladly take a look for you.
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Scott Birkhead

 

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15 years in the trenches in recruiting - 3rd party, corporate and consulting. 5 years of hard-won direct-marketing experience...and both of those are what I teach job seekers so that they can more easily find work they love...that loves them back.
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