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Target Tuesday 3

Target Tuesday

Target Tuesday

 

If you’re wondering what Target Tuesday is all about.. Read here and if you’d like to join in, display the button on your blog and link back to this post.

Today’s target is to write a great CV.

Nowadays, the employment world is a buyer’s market. Increasingly jobseekers need to ‘sell’ themselves and having a great ‘Curriculum Vitae’ or CV is crucial.

A CV provides a concise profile of a person’s background, qualifications and experience in words. It is your personal advertisement, the marketing tool enabling you to stand out from the crowd, earn you an interview and the opportunity to talk yourself into that ‘dream job.’

For most, the CV represents the first contact with potential employers. It’s difficult to over-stress its value and the importance of getting it right.

Employers are often bombarded by the CVs and can barely afford a few seconds each before deciding whether to ‘bin them’ or invite them for interview. Thus, immediate impact is everything, impressive qualifications count for nothing if the CV fails.

Potentially, your CV holds the key to the rest of your life. So, how do you acquire that edge to defeat the opposition?  Today, there is no set format to a great CV, but there are a few time-honoured principles that ought to be observed.

Simplicity is the key – remember the employer and their few  seconds. Keep it concise, make sure it quickly sells you and what you have to offer. Customise it to meet the reader’s requirements. Ideally, use no more than two sides of A4 paper – the time to elaborate is at the interview stage.

As with all advertising, you seek to maximise your chances by being better than the rest. If the content is concise, then presentation must be professional.

Word-process your CV on quality paper, in a clear font such as Times New Roman or Arial. It needs to be well-spaced and effectively outline why you are the ideal candidate for the skills the job requires. Avoid fancy fonts, colours, designs, dotted lines, pictures or fancy borders.

Remember, with CVs, less is more. Employers or recruitment agencies won’t wade through cluttered pages of type – white spaces actually draw readers in to the concise information within. A well-presented CV indicates you are professional and business-like.

Always consider the employer’s viewpoint. The closer you can match what they are looking for, the better the chance of securing an interview.

CVs can be chronological or functional. The position you are applying for should determine your approach.

A chronological CV allows you to plot career progression. It is equally applicable if you have stayed with one employer for a long time or undergone several changes. 

A functional CV is useful if you are looking to change career direction. It concentrates on transferable skills that you can demonstrate and bring to the new position.

Your name, along with CV or ‘Curriculum Vitae,’ should be typed in bold as the heading of the first page.

The following order can be changed, but all should be included in your CV. With immediacy at a premium, a personal profile is first recommended. A series of crafted, powerful and positive statements to describe your strengths will introduce you. Take your time, be creative – but don’t make things up!

Clearly, employers need to know your career history, even if you are a student applying for your first job you will find something. Summarise employment history, starting with your present or most recent position and work backwards to the first. Include dates of starting and finishing (just years can suffice), employer’s name, address if appropriate and position held.

Training and Education should be outlined, but where you place it probably depends on work experience. A recent graduate might position this after the profile, but if you have worked for several years, then experience is probably more relevant. Work backwards chronologically, including dates, institutions attended and appropriate qualifications achieved.

Experience and achievements can be separate headings or combined. What have you achieved in your various roles and responsibilities? How are these applicable to the position applied for? Concise, powerful statements should provide evidence of your suitability.

Personal interests and contact details. Whatever you feel is relevant should be included here, but keep it tight and compact.

Covering letter This should be as brief and professional as you can make it. Make it personal, outline your aims and ensure it reflects the relevant key attributes, skills and experience that appear in the job ad. Tailor the letter for each application that you make – make it sound personal to the company and the job.

Be careful, be confident, be concise and always keep a copy of anything you submit to prospective employers or agencies.

Above all, be positive. Good luck, that dream job could be just around the corner!

If you’d like to join in with Target Tuesday – make a blog posting on the subject each Tuesday, linking back to this post and show a link in the comments. Every Tuesday, we’ll all make a posting that focuses on us moving one step closer to our vision of what December 2009 will be like. It could be simply a thought, or something you’ve made or an action you’ve taken.

Previous Target Tuesdays:

3 Goals

Career Questions

Create a perfect CV

Be a resolute success in 7 steps

Beat Procrastination

Work life balance

How many days can you afford to live, if you lose your job

Turn your hobby into a business

Calligraphy

Finances

Explore Locally

Will Writing

Time Management

The Great Outdoors

University

 Learning to fly

Exploring outdoors

Drive a supercar

Top 100. Have you?

Explore your city

11 Responses

  1. [...] Target Tuesday 3 Possibly related posts: (automatically generated)Target Tuesday 3Tantrum at Target [...]

  2. [...] Firstly, ensure your CV is up-to-date and published on jobsites.  Even if you’re not looking, it is good to be on the mailing lists [...]

  3. [...] Target Tuesday 3 « woollywotnots, on June 16th, 2009 at 7:16 am Said: [...]

  4. [...] Target Tuesday 3 « woollywotnots, on July 21st, 2009 at 12:00 pm Said: [...]

  5. [...] Take on an additional paid job – put together a good CV / resume [...]

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