i need to punch up the look of my resume, anyone have any links to resumes that you find really appealing?
3/31/2007 5:30:05 PM
i heard about this cool website that does, or that can at least find them.
3/31/2007 5:31:42 PM
Use the templates that come with MS Word. Those are AWESOME Have you checked the typical monster/careerbuilder/whatever websites? Typically they have some good examples.
3/31/2007 5:55:41 PM
only thing i have heard that helps is to make your name bigger than the rest of the text in the resume so it stands out. but you probably already knew that
3/31/2007 6:11:32 PM
i have a pretty solid two pager if you need one of those. it's been through sas hr critiques and all kinds of ncsu career center mess in the mba program. http://chris-moody.com/v2/library/Moody_Resume.pdfi have a good format for one pagers too. if you want that pm me.
3/31/2007 9:30:40 PM
^dude. there is no way i would wade through all that mess. not trying to be a jerk, you usually present yourself pretty well on here, i was expecting a more readable resume
3/31/2007 10:31:12 PM
I agree. I would never have paragraphs written on a resume and the interests section at the end, come on.[Edited on March 31, 2007 at 10:48 PM. Reason : ]
3/31/2007 10:48:27 PM
3/31/2007 10:49:57 PM
two words: CLIP ART
3/31/2007 10:51:42 PM
^^no, i would trash it and move on to next MBA.[Edited on March 31, 2007 at 10:53 PM. Reason : MBAs are a dime a dozen]
3/31/2007 10:52:26 PM
3/31/2007 10:57:38 PM
3/31/2007 11:06:45 PM
put it on pink smelly good paper! :-)
3/31/2007 11:07:44 PM
3/31/2007 11:11:42 PM
Yeah, but there is a big difference between that and blogging.
3/31/2007 11:13:15 PM
3/31/2007 11:50:01 PM
Just to comment on Moody's post.That isn't a resume, it's a CV. Most americans don't seem to know the difference (I know I sure as hell didn't until a year or two ago) but the rest of the world works with both.My CV is like 4 pages now, but I try to keep my specific resumes to one page and under a two minute read.^All very good advice. For a cold application, or one without a portfolio, definitely go with the CV and be specific to the job. I have now 4 or 5 resumes that are all industry or position specific. Can be a bitch to update every year or so, but it's completely worth it.[Edited on March 31, 2007 at 11:55 PM. Reason : .]
3/31/2007 11:53:04 PM
^good points...i confuse resume and cv a lot, but cv's are used 99% of the time in every country BUT the US (according to my international classmates)
3/31/2007 11:57:54 PM
can you define CV and tell me what "CV" stands for? i was reading cover letters and resumes for the vet i work for the other day and one applicant mentioned she attached her CV and I had no clue what she was talking about.
3/31/2007 11:59:48 PM
curriculum vitaealso: cameron village, as in: CV what what!a CV lists everything that you have done, starting from high school (or earlier). a resume is job specific, and hence, lists education/work/activities specific only to the job applying for.[Edited on April 1, 2007 at 12:05 AM. Reason : LATIN: course of life]
4/1/2007 12:01:10 AM
4/1/2007 12:06:42 AM
thanks!speedy and informative, i never would have expected italso, no rude comments (yet)
4/1/2007 12:08:30 AM
4/1/2007 12:11:09 AM
^I think some people DO need to be a little bit more selective about the interests they put on their resumes.Just to let people see the difference between a CV and resume, as well as an example (although definitely not any amazing) for a professional portfolio, here's the ones I used to apply to Google in the fall. Got me through to interviews from a generic monster.com job posting, so apparently they liked something about it.http://www.ncsuroot.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/04/tyler-gibson-resume.pdfhttp://www.ncsuroot.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/04/portfolio-interface-design-april-2007.pdf
4/1/2007 12:21:26 AM
^ true.looked at your resume... very nice.you need to add Vista to the competencies at the bottom
4/1/2007 12:33:04 AM
if you don't have solid work experience, interests and hobbies are good filler
4/1/2007 8:38:02 PM
i think i'm alright from a content standpoint, i just meant visually appealingsomething that'll make it stand out in a good way without compromising how easy it is to read
4/1/2007 8:57:59 PM
Moody's resume is too wordy....HR person probably will have 100 resumes, do they really want to read a short story? Get to the point...hell, when you are 40, yours will rival Mary Ann Foxes in length
4/1/2007 9:06:23 PM
^^ noen's design is very good. It's clean, he's using an easy to read font (something people often look over), and it's spaced out well, with subtle but effective use of a graphic.[Edited on April 1, 2007 at 9:09 PM. Reason : ]
4/1/2007 9:08:58 PM
print ur resume on paper with naked chicks all over it
4/1/2007 9:13:54 PM
there is a difference between a resume that gets you here:and here:if you're looking for a design/technical job...keep it short and sweet (Noen gave you a great example for one of those), but if you're targeting a c-level job...you'll want details and quantified accomplishments. two of the executives i interviewed for our vp of manufacturing position had resumes/cv's in excess of 4 pages.any applicant should be able to determine which works best for each application/company. have a one page version, and a detailed version that will each be tweaked a little for EVERY DIFFERENT APPLICATION.
4/1/2007 9:22:09 PM
4/1/2007 9:27:12 PM
which one is your office?
4/1/2007 10:03:45 PM
So when you say your interests include "contributing to online communities" you mean posting on Tdub right? Just kidding man, all in good fun.Seriously though, I would have thought that hobbies and interests had no place on a resume but sometimes they help you make a personal connection with interviewers or managers that have similar interests. Also it might lead them to think of you for particular assignments that are somehow related to your interests.
4/3/2007 12:57:05 PM
more http://www.dailypharmacist.com and http://www.moviesbythor.com and stuff like that. it was a big deal when i was at sas because i was targeting a position building online communities with sas americas and other global units...[Edited on April 3, 2007 at 1:19 PM. Reason : .]
4/3/2007 1:19:31 PM
http://www.craigslist.org/about/best/wdc/291196665.htmlMade me laugh a bit....
4/3/2007 4:38:51 PM
^excellent dude, A++, would read again
4/3/2007 4:45:15 PM
4/3/2007 4:55:20 PM
What's the difference between a head hunter and a prostitute....The prostitute is honest.
4/3/2007 6:21:49 PM
http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/SortingResumes.htmlLong, but worth a read along with his other pages.
4/4/2007 4:43:18 AM
i think i'll pay around in photoshop and see if i can come up with something i can duplicate in Word
4/4/2007 7:14:11 PM
I have to maintain a CV It's almost 2 pages
4/4/2007 7:32:10 PM
me too - sucks.
4/4/2007 8:10:39 PM
what do you guys think about putting references on a resume? if i were to do that, all my references would be with my current company, and i don't really want them to get calls or know that i'm looking for a new job
4/5/2007 1:51:00 PM
yeah.. i just put references by request..
4/5/2007 2:01:12 PM
But isn't that kind of a given?
4/5/2007 2:13:00 PM
i assume it's a given
4/5/2007 2:19:17 PM
Someone help me find a full time job for the love of all that is holy. I can't find much of anything and the ones that I do find, no one calls me back.
4/5/2007 2:36:43 PM
4/5/2007 2:52:07 PM
Most places will tell you which they want. Academic jobs require a special form of CV - education, thesis and dissertation topics, committees, academic service, publications, conference presentations, courses taught, research interests, and professional memberships. You might be surprised at the length of some of your professors' vitae. I made a website for a graduate program director whose publication list was about four pages long. I saw another, from a guy who can't be over fifty, who's published fifteen books and seventy academic articles since beginning graduate school.
4/5/2007 2:57:02 PM