I've got some stuff I want to add to my resume for a particular job, but I was already pushing the end of one full page with my 'standard' resume.All of the stuff I have is good and relevant for this job, so I don't want to take anything out.By changing section titles to 11 (bold) and points in the body down to 10.5 (not bold), I've got enough room.I really don't want to go to two pages, because the second page would be very weak and light. That, and while I've got more experience than most new grads, it just doesn't justify two.It seems pretty ok to me on a test print. Anyone think it's not a good idea?
6/18/2008 11:50:20 AM
go for it
6/18/2008 11:53:23 AM
4 point font
6/18/2008 11:53:43 AM
google says that min should be 10 and max font size should be no bigger than 12
6/18/2008 11:55:10 AM
As long as the body is 10 it's fine.
6/18/2008 11:55:42 AM
^^thats what i was thinking...between 10 and 12
6/18/2008 12:06:48 PM
Awesome, thanks.
6/18/2008 12:10:42 PM
8pt font is too small.]
6/18/2008 12:59:53 PM
6/18/2008 1:02:37 PM
Thanks for the previous help, hopefully this one won't get locked since I have more questions. Everything's past 90 days, there's no other resume threads in the lounge, and I don't need writing or tech help so the tech talk place doesn't work either. Please refer me to the CORRECT thread if this one doesn't suffice either, but for now I'll post here. Is it appropriate to deliver resumes to companies that may not have openings? Also, if it is should I just leave my resume for the HR director or someone else?
8/21/2008 6:36:50 PM
I think 4 pt is an acceptable size.
8/21/2008 10:35:24 PM
min = 10
8/21/2008 10:36:33 PM
use Garamond font, it looks much nicer than Times New Roman or Arial
8/21/2008 10:44:38 PM
Palatino is pretty nice, too
8/21/2008 11:11:13 PM
8/21/2008 11:14:06 PM
If I ever saw a resume with bullets on it, it would be deleted/trashed immediately.Same goes for clipart, colored paper, any stupid font, more than two text weights or sizes.
8/21/2008 11:49:19 PM
8/22/2008 10:01:15 AM
haha, my resume had bullets and i got the first job i applied for and wanted with a highly competitive salary
8/22/2008 10:50:05 AM
8/22/2008 10:53:28 AM
first google hit on "bullets on resumes":
8/22/2008 11:00:09 AM
^ i agreethe worst thing is when someone's resume looks like this. the worst thing is when someone's resume looks like this. the worst thing is when someone's resume looks like this. the worst thing is when someone's resume looks like this. the worst thing is when someone's resume looks like this. the worst thing is when someone's resume looks like this. the worst thing is when someone's resume looks like this. the worst thing is when someone's resume looks like this. the worst thing is when someone's resume looks like this. the worst thing is when someone's resume looks like this. the worst thing is when someone's resume looks like this. the worst thing is when someone's resume looks like this. the worst thing is when someone's resume looks like this. the worst thing is when someone's resume looks like this.[Edited on August 22, 2008 at 11:26 AM. Reason : PS. HIRE ME]
8/22/2008 11:25:46 AM
i always include a picture of a lolcat in the bottom righthand corner of my resumejust as an icebreaker
8/22/2008 12:34:17 PM
It's all about how you lay it out. They suggest bullets because many people writing resumes don't know how to present info in a readable format without them. They'll put in a shitty titled paragraph or huge blocks of text with no whitespace and make it tedious to glean the least bit of useful info from the resume. If you are a little creative with a resume and keep it looking professional and keep the data presented in a logical format, you'll probably be fine. HR departments don't throw resumes out just because they don't all look cookie cutter with the same format you find on the first google result for "resume". They throw them out because once they pick it up it's multiple pages, a big horrid block of text, or they can't find the keywords they're looking for.
8/22/2008 11:07:00 PM
^We have a winner folks.Bullets are for retards who have no sense of composition. I stand by my statement even more after seeing the replies.
8/25/2008 2:38:28 AM
damn, those offices must be filled with douchebagsan afternoon laugh..over bulleted resumes
8/25/2008 8:44:25 AM
^^I'm pretty sure he wasn't saying that bulleted is the wrong way to go. I think his point was whatever or however you want to present your resume, it needs to be clear. That means if you don't like bullets, then be creative without them, and if you do, it will also emphasize the keywords and points you're trying to show.
8/25/2008 9:04:46 AM
i just knew that noen would come in here to defend his stance b/c he is the most smartest person on the planet and he knows everything about everything.
8/25/2008 9:15:20 AM
yea, I disagree with Noen on this... sort of.he comes from the design school, so I don't expect anything less than his stance, and somewhat agree with him about bullets, design composition with a little creativity, etc etc...what I disagree with is the fact that it would be thrown away. this is simply not true. maybe Noen would throw it away, and maybe people looking for graphic designers or industrial designers would throw it away. but this does NOT apply to all industries and to imply that your opinion applies to all industries is just arrogant.it's a starting point, but the higher up you go, you'll realize there's more creative formats than bullets. there's font weight, font style, margin, kerning, tracking, leading, indentation, there's all SORTS of other more creative ways to handle text.to the OP: minimum 10pt, maximum 14ptI use 10/12/14 and that's it, and the only place i use 14 is my name, also depends on the font.[Edited on August 25, 2008 at 11:57 AM. Reason : ,]
8/25/2008 11:56:36 AM
^Yeah I was just referring to design positions I just like to ruffle feathers
8/26/2008 2:02:02 AM
I agree with the no bullets point for text-only submissions on the web.
8/26/2008 9:51:38 AM
Use OpenOffice and export it to PDF, then it is in a proper format to email if needed
8/26/2008 10:18:35 AM
I'm a big fan of 10pt Arial, with Bullets and Bold for job title/company etc. Also try and put technical stuff in your job description (keywords). That will help HR departments pick it up in their searches. Also avoid self inflated job titles. If you're a Industrial Designer (pretty much a glorified drafter, btw) don't call yourself a Sr. Account Executive Prototype Developer.Typically in the body:Job TitleCompany, Location, DurationJob description (in bullets)will sufficeWe keep a file of funny stuff we pull off resumes on our server. We've got a crap ton of them and it's 5 so I'm outa here. I recruit Civil/Mechanical/EE, but here's some stuff NOT to do, courtesy of our guys recruiting the slop pits:Utilize my Skillz(resume title)To be the Best Professional Land Surveyor, father and husband that the LORD, GOD of Abraham, allows me to be.(objective)Hunting, Fishing, Harleys, CNC Programming, Slinging Chips(interests)Hard labor, rough on your body, it will ware u down. Up and down all day and mostly on your knees. Some days are really long about 18hrs long some times.(job description)
8/26/2008 5:15:08 PM
8/26/2008 5:26:41 PM