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Friday, August 30, 2013

Laser Hair Removal: Take Two

This post has been in the editing box for a long time.  It's the second part of my experiences and research with laser hair removal in Korea.  Click here for Part 1.

I almost can't believe I've subjected myself to such extremes, but after not getting the results I'd hoped for at S Deul, I started going to a different place called NOVA Clinic in Gangnam before I had to head back to the States.  Read ahead for all the details!

Monday, August 26, 2013

6 More Things to NOT Include On Your Résumé

Résumé Killers

Here's Part 2 of a list of things I've found to be big résumés turn-offs.  (Click here for Part 1.)  Have any extras to add or have you had experiences with these?  Comment below, because I'd love to hear!

#1 A boring heading

It's important to have your name and contact information at the top where the reader can see it.  It's best to use a different font or style or size (or all three) to help it catch the eye.  Here's one area where you might consider a little color to help your name pop.  Remember, hiring managers and recruiters look at hundreds of résumés a day.  Make sure yours is memorable.

#2 Your picture

That's what LinkedIn is for.

#3 .txt format

 Save your résumé in a .doc, .docx, or .pdf format.  I know some websites require .txt files, but Every Other Time, use a different format that will allow you to get creative with style and to show your professionalism.

#4 Your reason for leaving a position

This is information that's discussed in the interview.  These things may need more explanation than what you would fit on a résumé.  Don't shoot yourself in the foot by giving a poorly dictated reason for leaving for possible employers to consider before they even meet you.  Also, you have just a few seconds to grab your reader's attention and get them to call you up for an interview.  Don't waste time with information they can ask you later.

#5 References or even "References available upon request"

It's just not necessary.  Obviously, you would provide references if they were requested.  This is another thing talked about in the interview.  On the résumé, they just take up valuable space.

#5 Salary information

This is another thing employers don't need to know right now.  In fact, it might not be important at all until you begin to negotiate salary.  The purpose of a résumé is to secure an interview, not to work out the details of employment.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

6 Things to NOT Include On Your Résumé

 I've recently become an administrative assistant for a recruiting firm, and I get to look at a lot of résumés each day.  Literally hundreds.  Before working here, I used to hear stories about how your résumé can't have a single error, that it had to be perfect, and that you have 7 seconds to catch the hiring manager's eye before you're deleted.

I'm  the first filter before résumés move onto the recruiters' desks.  Because I have so many to look at, I try to spend as little time on a résumé as possible.  If I can determine within 2 seconds whether to pass it on or not, I'm happy.

I can't get anyone a job (don't contact me about that), but I would like to share some résumé tips to help where I can.  I've got another post in the works already, but here is the first set of DO NOT's to keep in mind when you're drafting up your résumé.  Good luck!

(Click here for Part 2, by the way.)

Résumé Killers

#1 A generic objective

 Seriously, they're almost always the same.  Most objectives are just saying "I want a job" in fluffy, wordy language.  Sometimes I'll be looking at a résumé that says the person is looking for a medical job when they've actually applied for an administrative job.  That's another obvious faux pas.

#2 Poor or inconsistent formatting

PLEASE don't think that using fonts like papyrus will make you look creative.  If you're bolding the companies where you worked, make sure you bold all of the companies where you worked.  Make sure you have all of your bullet points and edges lined up to the same measurement.  Even all of the dashes between your work dates (2010 - 2012) should be the exact same.

#3 Your interests or hobbies

 Unless you're applying for a small family business that loves to go hiking, I can't imagine why a recruiter would want to know those things.  Sorry.  When I see hobbies listed on résumés, I immediately think that they aren't taking the application seriously.

#4 Every single thing you did at your previous jobs

 You're allowed to summarize, and if you mention everything, your résumé will span more than one page very quickly.  No one wants to read a huge wall of text, especially not a busy recruiter.  Just pull out the most pertinent things from your experience to highlight.

#5 An address far from the position's location

If you're applying for a job in Atlanta, and your address is listed as New York, you have a much higher chance of getting looked over.  Consider putting a "Current address/Permanent address" bit somewhere at the top to let your audience know you're going to be in the area.

#6 The color green

For some reason, it just never looks good coming from a résumé on screen.  It is so hard to find a good shade of green; please just stay away from it.  Trust me.  There are other colors to use.  But, um, not pink, either.

Extras to be aware of:

Gaps in your employment history can look suspicious.
Working at Wal-Mart can look unprofessional.
Many short periods of work in a row can look inconsistent.
If you were hiring for X company or X position, what do you think you'd like to see?  What do you think you'd not like to see?