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AUTHOR: Business Insider: Jacquelyn Smith and Rachel Gillett
Hiring managers receive, on average, 75 resumes for each position they post, according to CareerBuilder.com They don’t have the time or resources to review each one closely, and they spend about six seconds on their initial “fit/no fit” decision.
If you want to make it past the initial test, you need to have solid qualifications and the perfect resume to highlight those qualifications.
Here are 29 things you should never include on your resume.
Vivian Giang and Natalie Walters contributed to earlier versions of this article.
If you applied, it’s already obvious you want the job.
The exception: If you’re in a unique situation, such as changing industries completely, it may be useful to include a brief summary.
Yes, you might have been the “king of making milkshakes” at the restaurant you worked for in high school. But unless you are planning on redeeming that title, it is time to get rid of all that clutter.
But as Alyssa Gelbard, career expert and founder of career-consulting firm Resume Strategists, points out, past work experience that might not appear to be directly relevant to the job at hand might show another dimension, depth, ability, or skill that is relevant.
Only include this experience if it really showcases additional skills that can translate to the position you’re applying for.
Don’t include your marital status, religious preference, or Social Security number.
This might have been the standard in the past, but all of this information is now illegal for your employer to ask from you, so there’s no need to include it.
Nobody cares.
If it’s not relevant to the job you’re applying for, it’s a waste of space and a waste of the company’s time.
A CareerBuilder survey asked 2,000 hiring managers for memorable resume mistakes, and blatant lies were a popular choice. One candidate claimed to be the former CEO of the company to which he was applying, another claimed to be a Nobel Prize winner, and one more claimed he attended a college that didn’t exist.
Rosemary Haefner, chief human-resources officer at CareerBuilder, says these lies may be “misguided attempts to compensate for lacking 10o% of the qualifications specified in the job posting.”
But Haefner says candidates should concentrate on the skills they can offer, rather than the skills they can’t offer.
“Hiring managers are more forgiving than job seekers may think,” Haefner explains. “About 42% of employers surveyed said they would consider a candidate who met only three out of five key qualifications for a specific role.
If you don’t want to be discriminated against for a position because of your age, it’s time to remove your graduation date, says Catherine Jewell, author of “New Resume, New Career.”
Another surprising way your resume could give away your age: double spaces after a period.
When you use a 0.5-inch margin and eight-point font in an effort to get everything to fit on one page, this is an “epic fail,” says J.T. O’Donnell, a career and workplace expert, founder of career-advice site Careerealism.com, and author of “Careerealism: The Smart Approach to a Satisfying Career.”
She recommends lots of white space and no more than a 0.8 margin.
If you took time off to travel or raise a family, Gelbard doesn’t recommend including that information on your resume. “In some countries, it is acceptable to include this information, especially travel, but it is not appropriate to include that in the body of a resume in the US.”
If your employers want to speak to your references, they’ll ask you. Also, it’s better if you have a chance to tell your references ahead of time that a future employer might be calling.
If you write “references upon request” at the bottom of your resume, you’re merely wasting a valuable line, career coach Eli Amdur says.
The format of your resume is just as important as its content, says Amanda Augustine, a career-advice expert and spokesperson for TopResume.
She says the best format is the format that will make it easiest for the hiring manager to scan your resume and still be able to pick out your key qualifications and career goals.
Once you pick a format, stick with it. If you write the day, month, and year for one date, then use that same format throughout the rest of the resume.
Your resume shouldn’t include the words “I,” “me,” “she,” or “my,” says Tina Nicolai, executive career coach and founder of Resume Writers’ Ink.
“Don’t write your resume in the third or first person. It’s understood that everything on your resume is about you and your experiences.”
Never describe past work experience using the present tense. Only your current job should be written in the present tense, Gelbard says.
If you still use an old email address, like BeerLover123@gmail.com or CuteChick4life@yahoo.com, it’s time to pick a new one.
It only takes a minute or two, and it’s free.
Amdur says there is no reason to put the word “phone” in front of the actual number.
“It’s pretty silly. They know it’s your phone number.” The same rule applies to email.
These fancy embeddings will have hiring managers thinking, “Could you not?”
While a well-formatted header and footer may look professional, and some cool tables, images, or charts may boost your credibility, they also confuse the applicant tracking systems that companies use nowadays, Augustine tells Business Insider.
The system will react by scrambling up your resume and spitting out a poorly formatted one that may no longer include your header or charts. Even if you were an ideal candidate for the position, now the hiring manager has no way to contact you for an interview.
Amdur writes at NorthJersey.com:
This is not only dangerous; it’s stupid. Do you really want employers calling you at work? How are you going to handle that? Oh, and by the way, your current employer can monitor your emails and phone calls. So if you’re not in the mood to get fired, or potentially charged with theft of services (really), then leave the business info off.
Don’t include your boss’ name on your resume, unless you’re OK with your potential employer contacting him or her. Even then, Gelbard says the only reason your boss’ name should be on your resume is if the person is someone noteworthy, and if it would be really impressive.
“Companies often have their own internal names for things like customized software, technologies, and processes that are only known within that organization and not by those who work outside of it,” Gelbard says. “Be sure to exclude terms on your resume that are known only to one specific organization.”
Links to your opinionated blogs, Pinterest page, or Instagram account have no business taking up prime resume real estate. “Candidates who tend to think their personal social media sites are valuable are putting themselves at risk of landing in the ‘no’ pile,” Nicolai says.
“But you should list relevant URLs, such as your LinkedIn page or any others that are professional and directly related to the position you are trying to acquire,” she says.
When you start including jobs from before 2000, you start to lose the hiring manager’s interest.
Your most relevant experience should be from the past 15 years, so hiring managers only need to see that, Augustine says.
On the same note, never include dates on education and certifications that are older than 15 years.
“Some people include past hourly rates for jobs they held in college,” Nicolai says. This information is completely unnecessary and may send the wrong message.
Amy Hoover, president of Talent Zoo, says you also shouldn’t address your desired salary in a resume. “This document is intended to showcase your professional experience and skills. Salary comes later in the interview process.”
“Don’t use Times New Roman and serif fonts, as they’re outdated and old-fashioned,” Hoover says. “Use a standard, sans-serif font like Arial.”
Also, be aware of the font size, she says. Your goal should be to make it look nice and sleek — but also easy to read.
Curly-tailed fonts are also a turn-off, according to O’Donnell. “People try to make their resume look classier with a fancy font, but studies show they are harder to read and the recruiter absorbs less about you.”
CareerBuilder asked 2,201 US hiring managers: “What resume terms are the biggest turnoffs?” They cited words and phrases such as, “best of breed,” “go-getter,” “think outside the box,” “synergy,” and “people pleaser.”
Terms employers do like to see on resumes include: “achieved,” “managed,” “resolved,” and “launched” — but only if they’re used in moderation.
Candidates often think, “If I explain why I left the position on my resume, maybe my chances will improve.”
“Wrong,” Nicolai says. “Listing why you left is irrelevant on your resume. It’s not the time or place to bring up transitions from one company to the next.”
Use your interview to address this.
Once you’re out of school, your grades aren’t so relevant.
If you’re a new college graduate and your GPA was a 3.8 or higher — it’s OK to leave it. But if you’re more than three years out of school, or if your GPA was lower than a 3.8, ditch it.
This may become the norm at some point in the future, but it’s just weird — and tacky and distracting — for now.
Don’t try to sell yourself by using all sorts of subjective words to describe yourself, O’Donnell says. “I’m an excellent communicator” or “highly organized and motivated” are opinions of yourself and not necessarily the truth. “Recruiters want facts only. They’ll decide if you are those things after they meet you,” she says.
Avoid including a job on your resume if you only held the position for a short time, Gelbard says. You should especially avoid including jobs you were let go from or didn’t like.
Mindfulness. Everybody’s doing it. From Google to the NHS and Transport for London. Even Harvard Business School includes mindfulness principles in its leadership programmes.
So what is mindfulness? Click here to learn more.