Recruiters are generally looking to screen out - rather than screen in - candidates at first pass. Getting NOTICED is the first step!
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Scooped by
Tim Tonella
onto Insights for Candidates October 24, 2016 6:12 PM
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This blog post from Undercover Recruiter hits on some basic 101 mistakes that anyone can make in putting together an effective resume. I also really appreciated all the graphics and charts regarding how recruiters quickly vet through the oceans of resume databases and incoming email attachments. However, for senior executive roles, we’re actually a bit more forgiving on things like spelling or punctuation issues. We prefer to actually coach C-level candidates and help them prep their presentation docs prior to submission to an actual client. That said, what’s more important is understanding the candidate’s overall “message,” and how he/she will position themselves as something truly different in the marketplace. Telling a great story about yourself – your uniqueness and success – and how that experience and history maps to a potential client need, is the first order of analysis. Resume formatting, wording, chronological history, and so forth are all secondary to first understanding why the candidate is, or is not, special. We cannot always infer this from a resume (or any other communications piece for that matter), so it’s up to YOU to sell yourself quickly. I refer to my first sales training class – eons ago – and our instructor's final send-off statement: “Remember, if the customer has not bought, it’s because the sales person has not yet effectively made the case!”