Thursday, April 16, 2020
Ive Reviewed Over 50,000 Resumes. Here Are the 7 Most Annoying Mistakes I See Applicants Make
I've Reviewed Over 50,000 Resumes. Here Are the 7 Most Annoying Mistakes I See Applicants Make When Tina Nicolai began working as a recruiter for Walt Disney World in the late 1990s, she noticed that many job seekers were submitting flawed résumés. âI realized people simply did not know how to market themselves or their achievements,â Nicolai tells Business Insider. âAnd thatâs how I knew there was a market to educate job candidates at all levels and in all industries.â So in 2010, she founded Résumé Writersâ Ink. âSince launching my company, Iâve read over 50,000 résumés,â she says. And there are a few mistakes that sheâs seen over and over again that are âpretty irritating.â Since hiring managers often base their first impression of you on your résumé, itâs imperative that you review it closely before hitting âsubmitâ on your job application. Especially when an opening yields a high volume of eligible, talented candidates, employers may be quick to toss your file in the ânoâ pile for even the smallest mistake. So, as you give your résumé a final look, make sure it doesnât include any of the following faux pas, which employers may find to be annoying. And when in doubt, have a friend or expert give in one last read, too. According to Nicolai, these are seven of the most annoying mistakes people make on their résumés: 1. Sloppiness âThe biggest mistake job seekers make: They are sloppy. They pay poor attention to detail. They are lazy!â Nicolai says that she has seen too many résumés with typos, unprofessional fonts, outdated information, and irrelevant information. 2. Summaries that are too long Summaries are annoying when they are written in a formal tone and include too many adjectives, she says. âAfter a while, the summaries can read like a lengthy chapter in a book. Itâs better to list a few bullets with pointed achievements and a branded tag line stating, âknown for achieving XYZ.'â 3. Stating the obvious âStop stating the obvious!â she says. For example, thereâs no need to write âcell phone,â âhome phone,â or âemailâ in front of the phone numbers or email address. 4. That infamous âreferencesâ line Donât waste precious résumé real estate with the âReferences available upon requestâ line. âEmployers know to request references. Save the space and brand yourself with your personal branding statement or add your LinkedIn URL,â says Nicolai. 5. Starting a bullet point with âResponsible forâ This is another âlazy thingâ that she has seen too many times on résumés. âCandidates need to understand that starting a sentence with âresponsible forâ tells the reader what the job requirements were supposed to be, but it does not state that the candidate actually performed the functions,â Nicolai says. âIt does not state that the candidate was successful in these functions. Donât be lazy: Take the extra few minutes to explain what you accomplished â" not what you were expected to accomplish.â 6. Too many buzzwords Résumé jargon such as âout-of-the-box,â âteam player,â and âexceptional communicatorâ are âbaseline expectations in todayâs market,â Nicolai says. âA person who truly is a âunique problem solver who works well in teamsâ will convey this succinctly and creatively on their résumé through a combination of few words and imagery.â 7. Being too formal Finally, she says that she finds overly formal résumés annoying because theyâre not engaging and donât allow the reader to get a good sense of the applicantâs personality. This article originally appeared on Business Insider.
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