8 Things to Avoid on Resumes
Steve Wyrostek, MBA, CPRW at www.noclicheresumes.com has been my go to person when you are ready to look for a new job or refresh your work documents, avoid the following when you are preparing your resume:
- An objective statement. Use a summary, instead. Objectives are often seen on first resume out of school or a Word template resumes. No objectives at any time. A four to five line, succinct, modular summary is best.
- Using dates past 20 years and if possible, keep job experiences in the 2000s. Never date degrees or certifications.
- Listing volunteer activities unless they relate directly to the job applied for.
- Too large or small font. Use 10 to 11 sans serif font (Arial, Calibri).
- Placing acronyms like MBA after your name. This can garble the automatic tracking system readers that most companies run resumes through.
- Block paragraphs. Use no more than three lines for a job description or bullet.
- Clichés. Hiring managers glaze over phrases like good communicator, like to work with people, detail-oriented, etc. Instead show those traits with job achievements.
- Forgetting to list achievements. Your job description is what you did and achievements are what you accomplished while doing it.
There are more but these are the most common things to avoid when preparing your resume.