|
What Not to Put On Your Resume
Article by Susan Dunn
"Should I admit a weakness?" one of my coaching clients
asked me. "Something tells me I shouldn't". "Something" was telling her right. Your best tool in
writing a good resume, is your intuition, or common sense
aka Emotional Intelligence.
WEAKNESSES:
Don't talk about your "weaknesses" unless you're asked. In
my years as a Career Counselor for college students, I
received fledgling resumes that read "I don't like people"
or "I hate talking on the phone." On the one hand, such
statements of extremes are rarely true, and on the other
hand they are open to gross misinterpretation.
How do I know this? First-hand, of course, the way hard
lessons are learned.
When I took my first job, I announced "I'm horrible at
math." To MY horror, all work demanding "math" was removed
from my desk, grossly limiting my chances for advancement,
and also leaving me to puzzle how to address this situation
without appearing to "Methinks the lady doth protest too
much". [Shakespeare] "Wait, wait, I didn't mean I was BAD
at math." And there goes my credibility. Save yourself
some grief.
Later I made it through graduate statistics just fine. I
had MEANT "in relation to my other skills, my math is lower,
and also that I don't wake up in the morning hoping to
balance someone's books." However, I've done it.
A resume is in writing and you don't get to "explain," so be
conservative.
Focus on what you're good at. Extremes are rarely true.
I'm thinking of the young woman who wrote on her resume, "I
don't like people." Upon query, it turned out she liked ME,
and I like to consider myself a person, doncha know. She
didn't like a CERTAIN KIND OF PERSON, which could be said of
us all, and her gross generalization didn't hold up under
scrutiny. However, scrutiny is not what you'll get from the
recruiter who looks at your resume. What you'll get is the
roundfile.
So, unless you're in a specialty so in demand you can apply
with a bone in your nose (as one young male client told me
back in the days when his field was, yes, desperately in
demand), avoid leading with the "bone in your nose."
The "bone in your nose" is also anything that will elicit a
possibly negative reaction from the hirer. If you can put
"president of a political organization" instead of
"president of the young republicans," this is better.
Better yet put "president of an organization with 500
members". (They will ask you about this, but talking allows
more latitude.) You can also leave it off. If you put that
you volunteer for the young republics, you stand the chance
of alienating a percentage of your reviewers, depending upon
their political beliefs, and how "open" they are to people
in the opposing camps.
Avoid such statements as "I study metaphysics," or "I'm a
born again Christian." Why? Because they aren't pertinent
to your ability to do the job. When you do bring it up, it
can open a can of worms, i.e., "Well do you hire people
according to their astrological chart?"
Talk to your broadest audience. For hobbies, put "working
out" rather than "Chi Gong," and "music" rather than "rap
music".
If you're asked to reveal your weaknesses, use your head.
Here are some suggestions:
When applying for a high-stress unpredictable job, "My
love of variety, though in a job like this that might come
in handy."
When applying for an accounting job, "My need for things
to be exact and attention to detail. I want everything to
be right."
When applying as a paralegal, "Creativity. I like things
structured, to know what I'm supposed to be doing and to do
it."
When applying for a position where there's been lots of
turnover, "One weakness I have is that I like to stay in one
position and not job hop. I tend to take a position and
stay there."
When applying to work at a children's shelter, "My
weakness is kids."
IN PROCESS:
Present a weakness as "in process," i.e., "In moving into
management, I've realized becoming an excellent manager is a
lifelong proposition, and I'm always eager to strengthen my
skills."
Other suggestions (in an organization large enough to offer
training):
Cold calls. Do you have training in this?
Computer skills. Seems like there's always something new
I want to learn.
Excel. Haven't had the opportunity to use it much.
Trade shows. Will I get a chance to learn this?
There's no reason to serve up your weakness without a little
whipped cream on top!
AVOID SAYING:
I've been told that I'm weak at managing people .
I'm hopeless on the telephone .
My last boss said I wasn't good at .
LIKE EVERYONE ELSE:
You can also use phrases such as
Like most people who work for nonprofits, I'm sometimes
too soft-hearted.
Because of my military career, I'll need to learn some new
vocabulary.
PUT SOME THINGS EASILY REMEDIABLE:
PowerPoint. Never had access to it.
Public speaking. Have only given about 10 speeches.
Grant management, financial. The last place I worked, the
bookkeeper did that.
Keyboard speed.
Training others. Would love to learn more.
Making sales calls. My partner did that.
SELF AWARENESS:
When you're asked about your strengths and weaknesses, it's
also to find out how much you know about yourself.
In an interview to become a Development Officer, I was asked
why they should consider me when I hadn't done it before. I
replied with the proven strengths I had that would transfer
and that showed my ability to learn and then said, "This job
would put me on my growing edge. That's why I want it." I
got the job.
Saying it's on your growing edge shows many things,
including the fact that you have one, and that's something
of great value to most employers - someone who's willing and
eager to learn new things, welcomes challenges and is
resilience.
AUTHENTICITY:
If you don't want a job requiring that you make cold calls,
stick with it. If you refuse to learn yet another computer
program, say so. If you don't want to be a manager, say so
and eliminate the possibility they'll be grooming you for a
management position.
But if you don't intend to work for a woman/man/star-bellied
sneech again, look at it this way. If you put this on your
resume, first of all it throws up a flag - "And what else
will he refuse to do? He's too picky, too opinionated."
And secondly, why eliminate yourself out the starting gate?
You could be offered a job meeting your requirements.
Remember, you're always free to refuse a job that's offered,
but you're never free to accept one that isn't.
LYING:
Don't. Don't misrepresent yourself - your degrees, your
former jobs, or anything else. It's not the right thing to
do, and it also can damage you in your field, because people
talk.
Emotional Intelligence is about Intentionality, Personal
Power, thinking ahead, putting yourself in the other
person's place, and not shooting yourself in the foot.
©Susan Dunn, MA, The EQ Coach, http://www.susandunn.cc.
Coaching, distance learning courses, and ebooks around
emotional intelligence. For daily EQ Tips, send blank email to EQ4U-subscribe
@yahoogroups.com . I train and certify EQ coaches. Get in
this field, dubbed "white hot" by the press, now, before it's
crowded, and offer your clients something of real value.
Start tomorrow, no residence requirement, global student body.
|
|