Clare Dight
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YOU know that you're a star but without a knock-out CV no-one else will believe you. Here’s how to impress and write yourself into a better job.
1. The nuts and bolts. The edited highlights of your working
life should be no more than two pages long, says Andy Sharman, the head of
recruitment for UK and Ireland at Procter & Gamble. “Less than two
(full) pages suggests that you don’t have enough experience,” he says.
Acceptable cheats include easy-on-the-eye spacing and increasing the font
size.
2. Avoid vague statements. “Quite often people start with a
profile — a short statement setting out who they are — but we see an awful
lot that fall into generic phrases,” says Lorna Froud, the head of careers
at Oxford Brookes University. “ ‘I am an excellent team worker’ is
meaningless without evidence to back it up.”
3. Be concise. “It’s not War and Peace,” says
Steven Kirkpatrick, the managing director of Adecco Staffing. Recruiters who
have to plough through hundreds of CVs don’t enjoy flowery prose. Use active
verbs and bullet points to ensure that every sentence counts.
4. Tell the truth. “The most important thing is not to lie,”
Kirkpatrick says. “People augment their CV by adding senior this and that to
make themselves a more attractive candidate,” he says, only to embarrass
themselves later in a competency-based assessment. “If your first impression
is a lie, it’s not a great basis for moving forward.”
5. Focus on your skills. A CV is a selling tool and how you
break down what you have learnt and what you can do is crucial. “It’s OK to
simplify job titles to make them clearer,” Sharman says. “Write a few bullet
points that outline your achievements and experience to back that up, and
say more about your recent roles.”
6. Personalise it. “There’s nothing as bad as getting an
automatically created CV from a website,” Kirkpatrick says. “What they are
buying is you, so sell them you. It’s always nice to have personal
information on the interests that make you a human being,” Sharman says. But
do try to stand out from the crowd; if you like curling up with a book, tell
them what you read.
7. Less is more. Show you have done your homework on the
prospective role by tailoring each CV that you send. Pick out the
competencies that each job advertisement specifically mentions, then
demonstrate your experience. Don’t send out hundreds of generic CVs because
your application is sure to be found wanting compared with those who have
really targeted theirs.
8. Avoid gimmicks. Most CVs find their way via e-mail, so
avoid the temptation to use a rare and unusual font or layout, Sharman says.
9. Get the basics right. It can be hard to spot your own
spelling mistakes and grammatical errors but, as Kirkpatrick says: “For
God’s sake, you’re typing it up. Use the spellcheck.” The Association of
Graduate Careers Advisory Services says that one big graduate recruiter
rejects 56 per cent of applications because of poor spelling.
10. Finished? So you’ve written the perfect CV, that’s the job half done. Now check out how to write the perfect covering letter.
FIND OUT MORE
Give your CV a makeover with Brilliant CV: What Employers Want to See and How to Say It, by Jim Bright and Joanne Earl (Prentice Hall, Pounds 5.99)
You have 20 seconds to make an impact on the person reading your CV, says John Lees, a career coach, in How to Get a Job You'll Love (McGraw Hill, Pounds 12.99)
Search for the latest graduate jobs from Times Online by industry
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