Welcome to Resume and Cover Letter Tips Guide
Resume Tips College Teaching Article
. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.
Free Resume Tips – What Could Be Better?
from:While everyone likes free candy, free food or even free time, there are some bits of information that may actually make you money, while costing you nothing. What could this be? How about some free resume tips?
Sure, you say, nothing is really free. But, at least in this case, there is no catch. Some of the most experienced job-hunting professionals and career counselors provide important, free resume tips that will help get you started on the road to that dream job. Let's take a look at a few.
•Managers and supervisors see dozens, even hundreds of resumes during their careers. Make your resume neat and thorough. They will appreciate it and it may get you in the door.
•Do not overdo it, for the same basic reasons as mentioned above. These busy folks will quickly discard a complicated resume about as fast as they toss aside a sloppy one.
•Don't try to be "cute." Tricks, jokes, brightly colored paper etc. will not impress the company manager or supervisor. In fact, it will probably make them a bit angry.
While this is just a small sample of the free resume tips you can find with a little effort, there are hundreds more. The key is knowing where to look. For our purposes, one of the best free resume tips you can get: When in doubt, ask. Talk to friends and family members who have been through the resume and interview process. Find out what worked for them.
Asking relatives and friends for free resume tips may lead to some of the best advice you ever get. But then again, it may lead you to some bad advice. So don't accept everything you read and hear at face value. Think about it and see how it fits into your situation. (That's another among the many free resume tips.)
To wrap things up, let's take a look at a handful of tips to add to those already mentioned. Again, think about these and see how they fit your job hunt.
•What are three important aspects of a successful resume? Content, for sure. It must be complete and honest. Organization, of course. Style is also important. Cute doesn't work. Professional and straightforward would be best. (Richard H. Beatty, 1984).
•Start with the idea that you have competition for the interview process, not for the job. Be good at resumes and interviews.
•Overall appearance of the resume is very important. The resume is a reflection of you that will stay with the manager or supervisor for a long time. It's a cliché, but you really don't get a second chance to make a first impression.
Resume Tips College Teaching News
Zero Tolerance: Do School Suspensions Harm Students?
The teenage girls knew they were being loud when they belted out Michael Jackson's "Man in the Mirror" and the gospel favorite "We Lift Our Hands" during lunch at New Orleans' Sojourner Truth Academy charter school. But they never expected that school officials would slap them with out-of-school suspensions just for singing in the cafeteria.
Read more...Being Deaf: How Different the World Is Without Hearing [Inspiration]
# inspiration Technology makes life so easy, and advances at such a breakneck clip, that sometimes we forget that all the tech in the world still can't change the way some people experience the world. David Peter explains how the world works for the deaf. More »
Read more...Evergreen processor takes home top state award
A funny thing happened on the way to Don Clapper’s contemplated career as a physical education teacher and wrestling coach.
Read more...Community Events and Public Meetings
Eighth Annual JFP Chick Ball July 28, 6 p.m., at Hal & Mal's (200 S. Commerce St.). The fundraising event benefits the Center for Violence Prevention, and this year's goal is to start a rape crisis center. For ages 18 and up. Seeking sponsors, auction donations and volunteers now.
Read more...Guide to 2012 western Montana summer camps
Summer is coming – we promise. That means no school for the kids, which means lots of opportunities to attend summertime camps.
Read more...

