America is back, baby!
With more and more U.S. cities raising their minimum wages, job applicants are more excited about their employment prospects. Some people are even looking at changing their careers to chase higher pay.
But before you start working on your CV, you should freshen up your resume writing skills. With the unemployment rate still at 5.4%, you're likely to face strong competition, so you need to do everything you can to stand out from the crowd. (See also: 10 Resume Mistakes That Will Hurt Your Job Search)
To prevent your resume from landing in the HR black hole, here are four resume rules that you should be breaking.
Just like the objective statement, the one-page resume rule is a habit that you picked up way back in high school. The idea behind the one-page resume is that hiring managers have very little time to review applications so you need to be as succinct as possible.
However, forcing your resume into a single page ignores two key facts:
If you have solid and relevant work experience for the position that you're applying for, feel free to showcase it using two pages. As long as you're telling a compelling story about your employment history, the extra page will be welcomed. And it will provide extra space to include keywords directly connected the job description, effectively increasing your chances of passing the ATS test.
HR professionals often feel overwhelmed. For example, Starbucks attracted 7.6 million job applicants for about 65,000 job openings and Procter & Gamble received close to one million applications for 2,000 job postings.
In hopes of keeping their sanity, hiring managers set up as many hurdles and obstacles between them and applicants. The idea is that hopefully only the "truly great candidates" will be left once the application-process dust settles. The reality is that's very often not the case.
To circumvent this "resume black hole," former Fortune 500 Human Resources SVP and current HR consultant, Liz Ryan recommends to craft a compelling pain letter to start a conversation directly with your target hiring manager.
Ryan breaks down the pain letter into four parts:
Hiring managers welcome messages, as long as they're hyper-personalized. Remember the Google Job Experiment? Alec Brownstein created Google ads for top advertising creative directors, so that when they would google their own names, they would receive a message from Alec asking for a job interview. By reaching out directly to the hiring managers in a creative way, Alec impressed the ad execs and landed a job at Young and Rubicam. (See also: The 6 Craziest Things People Have Done to Land a Job)
Unemployed job applicants seem to never get a break.
Whether employers do this intentionally or unintentionally, the reality is that listing yourself as unemployed may do more harm than good on you resume. However, this doesn't mean that you should lie. Misrepresenting any information on your resume may bite you back and make you subject to immediate dismissal.
Functional resumes aren't viable solutions, either. HR veterans see them as major red flags because resumes in that format often hide lack of experience and don't provide enough information to employers.
Instead, a resume expert at Monster recommends that applicants leverage volunteer work on a resume. While you may not having gotten paid for making traditional and online media buys for your local Red Cross, or preparing taxes at Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program, you definitely gained and demonstrated expertise in skills that employers want. Even better, you may also have professional references ready for employers.
During unemployment periods, sign up for meaningful volunteer or internship opportunities so that you can prevent the employers' bias towards unemployment. This is a helpful technique for recent grads to avoid the challenge of having no experience.
As many as 58% of employers have caught a lie on a resume. That's why more and more companies are ditching the idea of the traditional resume altogether.
It goes to show that some resume rules are meant to be broken. If you believe that the hiring practices of your industry are outdated, there may be a company in yours or in another industry that agrees with you. That may very well be the key to landing your dream job!
After all, nobody wants to work with a company that is completely inflexible and that prefers to stick with outdated resume rules.
What are some resume rules that you broke — and still got the job?
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