Tuesday, November 12, 2019
Choosing the Right Words for Your Resume
Choosing the Right Words for Your Resume Choosing the Right Words for Your Resume With so little time to stand out, a candidateâs resume word choice can be an interview-maker or a deal breaker. âAchievedâ or âexcelledâ? âStrongâ or âsuperbâ? Here, hiring experts break down the dos and donâts for each word you write: 1. Use Action Verbs According to Rosemary Haefner, vice president of human resources at CareerBuilder, recruiters prefer strong action verbs to define specific skills and accomplishments. In a survey of over 2,000 hiring managers, words such as âimproved,â ânegotiated,â and âlaunchedâ were considered standouts on a resume. Search your resume for passive verbs like âdidâ and âwasâ and replace them with more specific and engaging terms, like âoversawâ and ârepresented.â For examples, University of Michiganâs career center provides a comprehensive list of strong resume action verbs. 2. Make It Job Specific Donât send out one single resume to all possible employers; instead, make your resume specific to each position. Eye-tracking software proves that hiring managers spend 20 percent of their time looking for specific keywords in resumes that match the open position. Indeed, some HR departments even use software to search for keywords across resumes â" and those that donât have the keywords get trashed before a human being even sees them. According to Pierre Drescher, founder of job-database The Creative Loft, itâs essential to âstudy the job posting and look closely at the kind of words they use to describe the position.â This means that choosing the right words for your resume ultimately comes down to the specific position that you are applying for. 3. Address Three Themes ZipRecruiter, which boasts a database of over 3 million resumes, recently conducted a study to determine which resumes earned top rankings from hiring recruiters. Three main themes emerged. Tesumes that were most sought after online used words that implied management skills (not necessarily as a manager, but skills such as time management); a proactive approach to working (âproviding support,â or âresponsible for clientsâ); and problem-solving skills (âdata,â âoperationâ). 4. Watch Your Adjectives The adjectives you choose to use on your resume should stand out without making it seem like you overused a thesaurus. Grammarly, a proofreading company, analyzed 500 active job postings from 100 of the most profitable U.S. companies. According to their studies, the most common adjectives used on corporate listings were âstrong,â âenergetic,â âstrategic, âcompetitive,â âcreative,â and âeffective.â In turn, your resume should mirror these terms without repeating them. Try âproductiveâ instead of âeffective,â or âdynamicâ for âenergetic.â Check out Grammarlyâs infographic for resume adjectives here. 5. Avoid Clichés Just as important as the words to include on your resume are the words to leaveout. To avoid having your resume sent straight to the trash, avoid words that overhype yourself or words that are overused across resumes. For instance, the word âexpert is an immediate warning sign according to recruiting director Debra Gioeli, because âno one person knows everything about one topic.â Similarly, âresults-orientedâ is meaningless without hard data to back up a job seekerâs experiences. Finally, words like âhardworking,â âloyal,â and âdependableâ should be avoided even if they are true because they are consistently overused. An employer might simply skip over the clichés: a dangerous habit when every word on a resume should be used to your advantage.Master the art of closing deals and making placements. Take our Recruiter Certification Program today. We're SHRM certified. Learn at your own pace during this 12-week program. Access over 20 courses. Great for those who want to break into recruiting, or recruiters who want to further their career.
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