This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Jobs

6 Ways To Make Your Resume Stand Out

In today's tough job market you need a way for your resume to stand out from the rest.

Over the last few months, I have been working hard with a client on where he wants to go in life and how to get there. We are now working on the resume and it needs to stand out in today’s tough job market. Below are a 6 tips that we are using to make his resume stand out from the others.

1) Address your submission to a specific person. It’s unfortunate that many job announcements don’t include any information about who’s doing the hiring. Many businesses have multiple people involved in the process, which makes fulfilling this suggestion; addressing your resume to a specific person, difficult. However, if you can ferret out who’s in charge of hiring, adding their name to the cover letter and/or email will set you apart. Most applicants will go with “To Whom It May Concern” or “Dear Sir,” which could be a problem if a woman is doing the hiring. Adding a name makes it personal. If you can’t find the name, include something that personalizes the resume to a specific company, such as “To Whom It May Concern at ACME Inc.” This at least suggests that you’re not sending a generic resume.

2) Match your skills and experience with the needs of the job. Employers are looking for people to fill specific jobs that can vary depending on the industry and/or business. An administrative assistant in a tech company will likely have different duties than an admin assistant in a real estate firm. Read the job announcement and circle key items the business wants the applicant to have knowledge of or experience in. Match these items to your own skills and experience, and highlight them in your cover letter and resume.

Find out what's happening in Merrimackfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

3) Speak the industry’s language. Each industry has its own jargon and language. If you know it, use it in your resume. It shows you know the job, and also that you understand the industry.

4) Focus on what you know and have, not on what you don’t know and don’t have. A friend of mine wants to apply for a job that he’s skilled at doing. In fact, he’s been asked to cover 90 percent of the duties in this job. However, he doesn’t have the right educational degree. Because he’s planning to pursue the correct degree, I’ve encouraged him to apply. When he showed me his cover letter, he’d made a statement “I know I don’t have the degree.” While you never want to lie or embellish, because hiring professionals often scan first and read later, pointing out your shortfalls will get your resume purged from the bunch. Instead, focus on all the qualities you have that shows you can do the job. The goal is to make it to the next round, where you’ll have an easier time pleading your case regarding shortfalls.

Find out what's happening in Merrimackfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

5) Back up your statements. Numbers impress. Did you improve sales by 25 percent? Can you type 80 words per minute? Did you graduate top 1 percent of your class? Quantify your qualifications whenever possible.

6) Submit clean, clear copy. Sometimes applicants try to set themselves apart by being clever in fonts, colors or formatting; however, these tactics don’t necessarily work to stand out in the right way. You’re better off to deliver a clean, easy to read resume that stands out because it uses strong verbs to describe you, than one with fancy formatting. Further, if you’re emailing or pasting your resume into an online form, fancy formatting will be lost and instead you’ll submit a hot mess. For email or online submissions, create a basic resume that has no fancy formatting (no bullets, bold, tabs etc) that’s justified left. For a print resume, you can use bullets, bold and tabs, but again, it should make your resume easy to read and understand.

If you need help in writing a resume or need help in understanding what you want to do in life please contact me with the information below.

David Trippett, Executive Coach: MBA, ICF, Six Sigma, 603-321-6911 DTEC@comcast.net http://coachdtec.com www.facebook.com/pages/David-Trippett-Executive-Coach-MBA-ICF-Six-Sigma

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?