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Resume format

Question:
There were a few "makeovers" in PDF format as illustration of ways to make a resume more scannable and readable. One of the suggestions was to re-organize the resume so skills and experience were grouped by type, not the position at which the skills/experience were gained/used. Employment was listed later, with just bare bones information.

Ex. Old Resume

ABC Finance Co. Anytown, IL May 1995-Sept 1997

Created manual for a blah blah application using HelpTool.... wrote and presented training on blah blah...

Ex. New Resume

END USER DOCUMENTATION

Created manual for blah .... etc. etc.

EMPLOYMENT

ABC Finance Co. etc.

I thought this was a great idea, and created a new version of my resume in this format.

Last week, I was contacted by a recruiter who wanted to submit me for a position (that I'd incidentally love to land: it's a temp to perm with a big finance company and I think I'm perfect for the job). She asked me to send her my resume, so I sent her the new version. First she told me on the phone that the format was terrible, that employers aren't used to seeing resumes in that format, and that they want to know at which jobs I got or used skills. I said no problem, and sent her the old version. Then, through a series of calls and emails, she had me re-tweak the resume several times to include specific mentions of every job at which I used MS Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, because the job description specifies that these are required tools. I pointed out that I had MS Office listed on my rez, but she said that wasn't enough, and that HR people wouldn't necessarily know that Word, Excel, and PowerPoint are part of the Office suite.

She told me my resume would be reformatted and that any errors would be corrected by her company. I told her that I would want to make any necessary formatting changes and corrections myself, because as a technical writer, format and spelling are so important on a resume. She got hugely defensive, saying she's been in the business x years and knows what she's doing, etc. Every email she's sent me has had several grammatical and spelling errors, so that makes me more nervous about this company futzing with my resume. (I didn't say that to her: I figured she's already defensive.)

So I guess I have a few questions about this experience:

* Do you think it's a good idea to sort the meat of a resume by skills rather than by employers? * Should anyone doing a first pass on resumes for a tech writer position know that MS Office contains Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, if these are required tools? * Should I have even the most basic tools on my resume, everywhere I used them, or should I only apply this treatment to more TW-specific tools like RoboHELP and just mention once that I know how to use these tools? * Was this recruiter definitely rude and defensive, or is it just my neurotic opinion?


Answer:
1) Possibly, but more when freelancing or if you have a spotty work history. I have had the same experience, that most employers prefer my chronological resume, rather than my functional resume. 2) Probably, but you can say you used MS Office and only have used two of the three listed tools. Being specific is more clear. 3) Only for this job. Otherwise, the resume is to get your feet into the door. I think listing each tool in each job description *usually* is too much information. But the recruiter knows the company and if that is what they are looking for, so tailor your resume for the audience. I have been asked to do this once, so it is rare but not unheard of. I still use my more generic resume, with tools and areas of expertise on top in a Summary section and summarized job history (as well as education etc.) in order of job for most jobs. However, I have been known to tweak the resume slightly for a specific job or for a specific new area of interest. 4) I have no idea, not having been there.

I do, however, ask for an *edit* of their formatting changes rather than *doing* the formatting for them. Many consulting companies have a specific set of fonts and styles they use. For me to ask to proof that is not an insult to them, but they may not want to let me do the formatting.

If a recruiter got defensive on me, I would just reply that I totally trust her, but even the most experienced person sometimes could use a proofing, and it would make me feel better. I would just soothe her hurt ego and go ahead and make it like a little favor she is doing for nervous li'l old me to let me proof. It is a professional courtesy that most consulting companies have allowed me. The only time I don't get to do it is when the turnaround to get the resume out is too tight. It also helps to avoid misunderstandings with clients, like when the recruiter puts skills on my resume that I don't have. Not that I would suggest to the recruiter that she does that -- just that some other, less scrupulous recruiters have in the past. It's not about her; it's just my policy.


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