Saturday, May 30, 2020
5 Ways to Simplify a Long CV while Maintaining Sophistication and Nuance
5 Ways to Simplify a Long CV while Maintaining Sophistication and Nuance Confession time: recruitment is as much about quantity as it is about quality, and most recruiters work in a permanent state of overdrive to hit volume and placement targets. As a result, successful recruiters are efficient recruiters: those who are able to quickly get through the huge stack of CVs sitting on their desks. What does this mean for you? Thereâs no surer way to make a recruiter run screaming in the other direction than to hand over a multi-page monstrosity of a CV. If your CV is more than 4 pages long or doesnât follow a simple, easy-to-read format, youâd be well served by taking some time to simplify. The good news is: simple doesnât equal plain, and itâs possible to have a sophisticated and nuanced CV without causing recruitersâ eyes to glaze over, beginning with these 5 strategies. 1. Use Grouping to your Advantage. While reverse chronological CVs are certainly the most common and preferred CV style, you shouldnât be afraid to tweak this tried and true format if you have a legitimate reason. Professionals with significant project experience, consultants or sole traders with multiple clients, and people whoâve switched positions frequently within the same company are most likely to benefit from this technique, as it allows for a succinct summary of multiple roles. The trick is to group responsibilities together whilst still highlighting individual projects and accomplishments. My team does this by describing role mandates and common responsibilities in 5 or 6 bullet points, and creating a âKey Engagementsâ or âProjectsâ section with 1 to 2 bullet points per project to describe your role and highlight results. 2. Use the Russian Doll Approach. I swear by this approach, because it allows me to subtly direct the readersâ attention to the most important experience, which is typically also the most recent.* Think of your current role as the largest in a set of nesting Russian matryoshka dolls: because itâs the most important, it should take up the most amount of space around 5 to 7 âresponsibilitiesâ bullet points and 3 to 5 âaccomplishmentsâ bullet points. As you move further back in your career history, imagine each role as a smaller doll, and give it less space on the page. This will keep the overall length in check, while allowing you to give the most important information the detailed approach it deserves. *Of course, this approach only works if your most recent experience is indeed the most relevant. 3. Master the Mandate. If Iâm honest, most long and complex CVs donât have to be; the writer simply didnât do a great job at presenting the information succinctly. Considering you only have 6 seconds to capture a recruitersâ attention, its crucial you make the time you have count. That means putting the most important information for each role up-front, so even recruiters that stop reading past the first bullet point get a good idea of what you did. Make the first bullet point for each role a âsuper bulletâ that includes: a high-level overview of the role, the mandate, and the main target. Hereâs an example: Divisional leadership role [overview] driving market expansion across 5 APAC markets [mandate] to turn around financial performance and restore divisional profitability [target]. 4. What-Why Writing. Many people have difficulty summarising a role using less than 10 bullet points, and as a result, role descriptions spiral out of control and take up way more space than they need to. The solution is to create fewer, but more complex, bullet points, using What-Why writing. For each âresponsibilityâ bullet point, express what you did, leading with an action verb, and why you did it, showing the positive impact your actions had. For example: Forged cross-functional partnerships with senior client stakeholders (what) to identify business requirements and ensure the project plan aligned with organisational priorities (why). 5. Be Selective. It always baffles me when clients list every job and short course theyâve ever completed on their CV. Itâs hugely distracting, and often has the opposite effect to that intended, detracting from the experience and qualifications you really want the recruiter to notice, or making you look unfocused or out-of-touch. While deleting irrelevant qualifications and experience is a must, sometimes itâs not enough. If thatâs the case, use grouping and formatting to your advantage: Create a âSelected Qualificationsâ section on the first page to draw attention to 3 or 4 of your most impressive credentials. Move all other relevant qualifications to an âAdditional Qualificationsâ section on the back page. Group similar qualifications together rather than listing them out separately: Australian Marketing Institute Short Courses: Public Relations Writing Tactics (2015), Event Promotions Sponsorship (2013), Social Media Marketing (2012). List your most recent career experience in a âProfessional Summaryâ section on the first page, providing details for each role in the Career Experienceâ section. Create an âAdditional Experienceâ section to list, but not detail, roles prior to the past 10 years. Before you hit SEND on a job application, ask yourself if the recruiter has to go digging for the good stuff. If they require a Rosetta stone to decipher your CV, chances are theyâll move on to the next candidate. Remember that the best CVs are both sophisticated and easy to read. Do yourself a favour and take a few hours to simplify in a smart way and enjoy the results.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.