via Dumb Little Man – Tips for Life by DLM Writers on 8/21/10

I like opening blog posts with something that everyone can agree with me on. I think I learned that technique from some “how to get people to like your blog post” article or book or something. So here we go — job searches suck.
- List your top three most marketable skills
Think about all the skills you can offer a company like “management,” “communication,” “leadership” and things like that. Decide what your top three most valuable skills or talents are (only the top three, you’re trying to build the most effective selling resume you can).
Remember, employers don’t know you so you need to prove your skills to them. You can do this by mentioning past job experiences or responsibilities, education, successes, awards, and any other support fact. Take the time to write ten support points for each of your top three skills.
After you’ve got ten for each, you should have at least three or four strong points to support each skill. Pick the strongest ones. Again, stick with the top three or four because they’ll be your most effective selling points.
Rewrite each of your support points so they are specific, in the active voice, and result oriented. (Bad example: “Responsibilities included bookkeeping, accounts receivable, and budgeting”; Better example: “Streamlined financial management at XYZ Company by efficiently managing budgets, maintaining accounts, and keeping accurate books.”)
After you have your three skills and your three or four support points for each, you need to decide which skills are your best selling points for the job you’d like to get. Rank them.
For each skill, order the three or four support points by their strength.
Writing Your Resume
- Qualifications Summary
The first thing after your name and contact information should be a qualifications summary. This should only be three or four lines long and should give the reader a highlight of your best selling points. In slightly more professional language it should communicate “I’m awesome because I can do X, Y, and Z.” If someone reads only one thing on your resume, these are the three or four sentences you want them to read.
The main body of your resume, the section that most resumes list each job you’ve had, should be about your top skills. Each skill should be in bold with the support points in bullets underneath. Put your best selling points first on the page, so that’s the reader’s first impression of you.
Yeah, the reviewer still wants to know your work history, but it comes after your skills because you want them to focus on your best selling points and what you can bring to their organization. This should only show company, location of the company, dates of employment, and job title. You can discuss the details about these work experiences during an interview.
It’s depressing, but a college degree doesn’t tell an employer anything about your qualifications. Degrees are generally just used to weed applicants out, so it belongs at the bottom of your selling tool. If there is any other bit of information that you’re dying to include in your resume, but it didn’t make it into your support bullets, and cannot wait for an interview, put it at the bottom too. But remember, if it wasn’t impressive enough to make it into your top support bullets, it probably won’t add to your selling points all that much.
Tada, you have an effective skills resume. This style of resume will help you in a few important ways.
- First, it makes your resume look distinct and refreshing compared to most of the other ones in the resume pile.
- Second, it forces the reviewer to consider your strongest selling points and your best selling messages first. That way you can directly tell the employer exactly how you can add enormous value to their company.
- Third, it forces you to weed out weak support points.
- Last, by not divulging your entire work story, it encourages an interested reviewer to call you for an interview to learn more.
So that’s your quick and highly effective resume. Remember, your resume should convince an employer to interview you and learn more about you, so don’t give them your life story without a bit of face time. Hope this is helpful and feel free to click “comments” and ask any questions.
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Written on 8/21/2010 by Joey Weber. Joey is an expert in career development and marketability. For more on what he does check out www.joeyweber.net. | Photo Credit: woodleywonderworks |

