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  • I'm Louise Fletcher. As President of Blue Sky Resumes my mission is to help people take charge of their job search, build confidence and advance their careers. I founded Career Hub to further that mission by connecting job seekers with the best minds in career counseling, resume writing, personal branding and recruiting.

    I'm Chandlee Bryan. As a career coach and resume writer with experience from Manhattan to Main Street, I help job seekers connect with opportunity by sharing news, trends and best practices. I'm the Managing Editor of Career Hub and run Best Fit Forward, a boutique career management firm.

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Comments

Deb Dib

Louise, you are absolutely right--simplicity is powerful and value speaks for itself. If job seekers would do the mental preparation needed to de-clutter their message and get it defined /refined to what makes sense for the employer, then that strategy would carry them right through the resume, letter, elevator, speech, and interview.

Louise Fletcher

Such a good point! I'm just working on a resume now for a client whose worksheets are filled with jargon and long-winded sentences and technology terms. If I wrote the resume the way the information is presented here, no one would understand what my client does or why it was important.

His new resume is going to be so much more effective because it tells a clear and compelling and easy-to-understand story of his considerabe accomplishments.

JibberJobber Guy

Hey Louise, I'm curious how you would handle this on a very technical resume? It may not be good for HR but if a hiring manager can see real stuff (like languages, etc.) then that would be important.

I can see a fine line here because some of the technical resumes where overboard, while others were easy to follow and even believable. Just wondering what you would do.

LouiseKursmark

Jason, you're right - it can be a bit of a balancing act, to include enough technical (or other specific) information without weighing down the resume or removing all meaning from the sentences.

I recommend keeping as much technical jargon out of the accomplishment statements as possible. I might add a parentheses at the end of each statement describing the specific environment, languages, tools, etc. And/or I might include a technical summary - essentially a listing of various areas of knowledge and expertise, either as part of the introduction or toward the end of the resume. This can be scanned (by humans or computers) for a keyword match but doesn't have to permeate the language of the experience and accomplishments.

But even technical people need to be sure their resumes are focused on not just the "what" but the "why" - how their efforts contribute to company goals. If they give the big picture, include benefits, and include the specific keywords that are essential for the jobs they're seeking, they should get the opportunity to interview. Then they can engage in as much "techie talk" as they like with people who will actually understand it!

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