This Week: National Resume Writers’ Association New Business Owners’ Call
In my function as New Business Owners Director of Industry, Eastern Region for the National Resume Writers’ Association, I will be co-hosting our first quarterly business call together with my esteemed colleague Kathi Fuller on Friday, March 30th, 2018. Together we will share business strategies and best business practices to enable our colleagues to grow their resume writing businesses. You can find further information about the event on the NRWA calendar here. We will also have special guest Teena Rose on the call. Teena has been a resume writer and career coach for the past 19+ years. She is the owner of the NRWA affiliated resource ResumeBiz. Stay tuned for NRWA member access details later this week. The Missing Link in your Toolbox:The Networking Resume
It’s no secret that jobseekers need a stellar resume. However, particularly when actively unearthing job opportunities through reaching out to your network you might not always want to send a full-blown resume to every contact you have. The Resume Disconnect Even if you feel comfortable circulating your full-blown resume, there is some vital information the receiving end will not pick up from your resume. For example, your resume typically does not address some of the following questions:
I could go on, but you get the point. Typically, you would include this type of information in a respective email that you send to your network contact. However, when doing so, you now face the dilemma that the “pointers and guidelines” for your network contact of what you are looking for are now separated from your resume. Suddenly, it is up to your networking contact to put the pieces together when introducing or connecting you with another person. And that is obviously not good enough. Why? Because you don’t want to depend on a third party for this important networking step. Everything that is “too much work” or “too confusing” for your contacts bears the risk of your outreach going nowhere. So, what to do? The Networking Resume Fix Enter the networking resume. The networking resume is a great hybrid of an abbreviated version of your resume combined with a section or two of highlighted guidelines where you specify how your network can help you and whom you would like to meet and talk to. For this purpose, you will want to radically trim down your resume to create the necessary whitespace for including the “networking part.” I personally, have found compact 1-page formats to be very effective. Anything longer carries the risk of being too much to “digest” for your network connections. Remember, attention spans are getting shorter every day. Of course, you have heard the advice out on the web numerous times of how networking is all about giving first. Well, I am not advocating to be rude to people or sending your new networking resume out to people you haven’t spoken to in 5 years. However, it is a simple fact in job searching as well as life in general that most people will actually want to help, but they usually don’t know how to help. And with a no-nonsense networking resume, you can avoid exactly this dilemma. Let me know how it works out for you! The #1 hack to make your cover letter actually digestible The #1 hack to creating an actually digestible cover letter is really not much of a hack at all. All it takes is taking on the role of the potential cover letter recipient for a moment. Do you like reading cover letters? If you are like most people, chances are, you don’t. But why exactly is this so? Because the vast majority of cover letters is long-winded and full of schmaltzy and antiquated phrases. Is it fun and informative to read long-winded texts full of antiquated phrases? Obviously not. If you are hiring or recruiting yourself, you will usually have a pressing company need that your prospective hire is supposed to solve. So, you will want to know if the person that is contacting you can solve your specific problem. And for figuring this out, you don’t want to read a discursive essay. Don't re-tell your resume So help your reader out and cut-out all unessential parts and fluff. Eliminate anything that looks like you are simply retelling your resume. Double check if you “filled” your text with unnecessary adjectives. Does anything sound too braggadocios? Where you can make it shorter without changing your message? After implementing those steps, you will have greatly enhanced the digestibility of your cover letter. Any questions about crafting a compelling executive cover letter or resume? Simply shoot me an email: tim@windhofcareers.com PS: If not, don't forget to check out my job search checklist |
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