What Every Good Resume Needs

No matter what type of resume you choose to profile your abilities, experiences, and skills, you'll need to package your information in a clear and concise way.

All resumes should start out with the most important information at the top (your name, address, phone number) and the least important items at the bottom. The following is a list of the most common resume elements. Use as many as are appropriate to your professional experiences and skills.

Additional Tips for Communicating Your Skills

Quantify - Utilize numbers or percentages whenever possible. Don't say you merely increased sales. Say you "Increased sales by 75 percent while reducing waste by 25 percent."

Be concise - Combine information in one clear statement, beginning with an action verb.

Example: "Implemented new computer system for accounting department in accordance with client and sales staff requirements, training office personnel on new procedures including going online with electronic communications."

Be active - When stating the action you took to improve a situation, express specifically how it was beneficial. Be as dynamic as possible. Explain how you improved efficiencies, saved time, or streamlined procedures. "Provided critical market analysis to the marketing and promotions staff which resulted in a 50 percent increase in direct revenues." Use whatever is on your list of achievements to your best advantage. Creating a new filing system, no matter how ordinary it may seem, is actually a benefit if you did it in such a way as to save your past employer time and increase productivity.

See our Samples Page for examples of resumes and helpful resume worksheets.

 

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