The New Year ushers in exciting possibilities for reinvention. Whether you’re a new grad poised to take on your first professional role or a seasoned pro primed for new challenges, strut your savvy in 2019.
Step one is to ensure the cornerstone of your personal brand, your resume and LinkedIn profile, reflect your experience, skills and enthusiasm.
It can be intimidating to put yourself out there; minimize that anxiety by strategically formulating materials that turn heads.
Flex that structure
How you order the section headers on your resume can look different depending on where you are in your career. “New grads are likely to put education first—that’s their main experience and they are going for an entry-level position. But for executives, their education is going to be less important to feature prominently. They’ve already proven themselves. They’re going to have a stronger summary about their careers,” explains Nick Francioso, an Army veteran, mentor to career transitioning veterans and founder of resume optimization tool SkillSyncer.
Francioso points out that while there’s some wiggle room for ordering resume sections, it’s important to adhere to standard headers such as education, experience, summary and skills. He explains: “These are what the ATS (applicant tracking system) looks for. No matter what kind of resume you’re creating.”
Busting resume myths
Your resume isn’t a comprehensive professional history; it only needs to capture your last 10 years of professional experience. Francioso explains, “Your resume is what gets you the interview. Then you can talk about all the other positions you’ve had.” Of course, if you’ve worked for your most recent employer for longer than 10 years, you want to include those details.
Francioso points out another myth: you don’t have to limit your resume to a single page. His rule of thumb: “If you’re doing two pages, fill two pages.” Francioso recommends that job seekers refrain from leaving excess white space, which can make the resume looks weak or incomplete.
Show me the data
Keep your content concise and avoid over-used buzzwords like “action-oriented” or “hardworking.” A reader can’t tell the difference between a candidate whom such words truly describe and one who’s just making that claim. This is where data comes in; it makes your case.
Offer data that demonstrates your success and productivity. Francioso explains: “If you have a good employer, they tend to help you create bullet points for your resume because they share performance data with you—sometimes at year-end or quarterly reviews … They are tracking performance data to calculate raises and evaluate performance.” Francioso notes that you can also track data yourself by noting reports you run or moves you make that have a measurable impact.
Metrics are concrete indicators of performance. Use them to tell your story.
Befriend the bots
Francioso explains that job seekers have two audiences to keep in mind: “Write your resume for an ATS. If it makes it through that, a human is going to read it.” You reach each audience by speaking its language.
It’s also important to create multiple resumes, each tailored to various job descriptions. Francioso’s recommended approach for getting a high match score from ATS is to “Mention those things that they really emphasize in the job description more than once in your resume— take the hard skills and word them the same way.” If the job description uses an acronym to describe a hard skill that you have, for example, use that same acronym in your skills section.









