Resume & Job Search Tips

by Rebecca Henninger Rebecca Henninger No Comments

How to Choose an Executive Resume Writer

As an accomplished executive with extensive experience and a proven track record delivering results, you need an executive resume writer who can convey your achievements in 6 seconds or less to connect with a recruiter or hiring manager.

A high achiever with the credentials to prove it, you need a resume writer with clear editorial perspective and a strong point of view who can concisely convey your goals and experience in results-oriented language that conveys a narrative that sets your apart.

The world of resume writing can be daunting if you have never searched for one before. With pricing ranging from $25 to $2500 (and up), it’s incredibly challenging to navigate through all the different options and offerings. When prospective clients come to me, I educate them first before ever trying to sell anyone. Here are a few of the major myths, misconceptions, and harsh truths about the industry. Like anything else, it has to be a right fit to get the best results. Being armed with knowledge and inside insight will help you to make the right decision when you need to find a resume writer.

  1. Avoid the bargain pricing. Like anything else, you get what you pay for! The entry price points are often writing mills overseas, inexperienced writers, or very low touch. If you are looking for a writer to connect with you over the phone, listen and ask questions, you will have to pay accordingly for their time and expertise.
  2. Ask questions about the writer. Often bigger resume writing companies outsource the writing and it may not always be 100% transparent. In may cases, you may speak to the principal but the actual writing is done by a subcontractor. This arrangement can certainly work, but I would recommend getting clarity around how many drafts you have, if there is a prescriptive process for submitting change requests, and what type of interaction you can have with the writer. In the case of a resume, I believe that the output is more meaningful and authentic with personal connection between writer and client.
  3. Evaluate the amount of work you will need to put in. Every resume writing company has a different intake process, often including some type of worksheet or questionnaire. While many find this to be an interesting exercise, many clients are overwhelmed by the process. Also, if you are not confident that you will be able to express things in writing the same way you would in a two-way dialogue, this type of process may not be the most effective.
  4. Revisions! The first draft of your resume should be clear of errors and omissions and in general be ready for prime time, however you as the client are the expert on your career and in some cases can be an unreliable source! The revision process is crucial to the success and impact of your resume. Not only should you find out the number of revisions allowed (2 is typically sufficient) but also how the revisions will be implemented. Similar to the intake process, if you are better verbally than in writing, it’s important that you have the option to connect live with your write to discuss the nuances and get your resume where it needs to be.
  5. Pricing. This is the hardest part. For a senior manager or executive, expect to pay a minimum of $800 but ranging well above $2000 in many cases. Your career is complex, layered, and often long. Your resume writer should be compensated for the research they will need to conduct, deep wealth of experience they will need to call on, and mastery of design language they will leverage to create a customized, branded resume that does your career justice.

Finally, avoid review aggregator sites that are often paid or sponsored by companies that are monetizing your views as an ad server. Your best source of information is reviews (Google/LinkedIn/Yelp/Facebook), personal referrals, and your own due diligence.

by Rebecca Henninger Rebecca Henninger No Comments

How to Add Bullets and Characters to Your LinkedIn Profile

Wondering how to add cool bullets and characters to your LinkedIn profile summary, headline, and professional experience sections?

NINJA Secret Alert: It’s easy!

Writing your profile can be so challenging for so many reasons – you’re insecure about promoting yourself, not sure what keywords, to use, and there is so much advice out there that is confusing. This is not one of those things!

Adding white space and bullets to your profile is a great way to help the reader work through the profile. Big blocks of text (really anything more than 2 or 3 lines) gets skimmed over. In our lightning-fast, hyper-distracting world, if you don’t showcase the highlights for a reader clearly, they may miss it.

LinkedIn, unlike resumes, does not allow for bold, italics, font changes and other tactics used in resumes. To overcome this obstacle, I use a few strategies:

CAPS! You can’t bold but capitalization helps to identify headers and areas of emphasis for the reader to pull them through your profile.

BULLETS. You can copy and paste various bullets using EDIT/COPY, CTRL/C (Windows), or Β COMMAND/C (Mac) and paste using EDIT/PAST, CTRL/V (Windows), or COMMAND/V (Mac).

Here are a bunch of my favorites. Feel free to bookmark this page and refer back often πŸ™‚

βœ”οΈŽβ–ΆοΈŽβ—†c β™¦οΈŽβœ¦

βœ¦πŸ“§β€’ ●βœͺβ˜…

β˜› ☚ ☜ ☝ ☞ ☟ ⇨ β–Ί β—„Β  Β»

βœ” ✘ ☐ β˜‘ β˜’

β˜… βœͺ ✯ ✰

βœ‰ ✍ ✎ ✏ βœ‘ ⌨

βœ† ☎

πŸ‘πŸŒŸπŸ‘πŸ’—πŸ’™πŸ’œπŸ’πŸŽ€β˜€οΈπŸŽ‰πŸ’₯

LINES

Using similar copy/paste instructions, paste these characters a few times in row to make lines. One caveat, this will use up characters, and depending on your screen size, the line may appear definitely.

☲☲☲☲☲☲☲☲☲☲☲
β–„β–€β–„β–€β–„β–€β–„β–€β–„β–€β–„β–€β–„β–€β–„β–€β–„
β–¬β–¬β–¬β–¬β–¬β–¬β–¬β–¬β–¬β–¬β–¬β–¬β–¬β–¬β–¬β–¬β–¬
β–“β–’β–‘β–“β–’β–‘β–“β–’β–‘β–“β–’β–‘β–“β–’β–‘β–“β–’β–‘

Be sure to check the appearance on mobile and any other devices you have available. Happy profile updating!

Linkedin-Profile-Development

by Rebecca Henninger Rebecca Henninger No Comments

Targeting Your Resume for Different Jobs

personal-brandingAlmost every client I work with has some nuances to their search. Really, aren’t we all a little diverse in our experiences? Interestingly, for the ones who are not, that’s always the biggest roadblock in their pursuit of happiness…they are stuck in a box and can’t get out.

For the rest of you, the challenge is this. How do I create a resume that will allow me to apply to lots of different jobs? Do I need lots of different resumes?

It’s a doozy, right?

Here’s the deal. Applying to jobs is time-consuming. No one is organized enough to maintain 7 different resumes and keep track of changes you make, then apply that across each. If you are, you should immediately change your career focus to professional organizer!

What I do with my clients is work with them to identify their professional brand. Figure out that particular brand of awesome that makes them different, whatΒ sets them apart from the competition, and then – most importantly – how to sell it and to whom.

It can be daunting (torturous, even) to work on things like this alone. Endless evaluation and self-examination, comparing yourself to the competition, figuring out the competition, back to the self-evaluation. It’s exhausting!

Then how do you apply to different jobs – what are the keywords from the job description that need to be in your resume to attract the right recruiters?

Before you know it, you’re stuck on a hamster wheel, running around and around in circles.

How do you get off? Simple! Stop focusing all your attention on the online job market.

  1. Differentiate yourself with a powerful resume. Create a resume that is unique and that clearly articulates your value, then quantifies the results that come from that value.
  2. Start building a strong network. Once the job hits the open market, it likely has already been filled. Only 20% of jobs are filled through online application.
  3. Don’t apply for jobs that you are not qualified for! Just because you “could” do that job, doesn’t mean someone you have never met will contact you to interview you for it. If your dream job is a reach job, you need to work that from another angle. The job boards will not work for you.
  4. Stop obsessing over your resume. Work with a certified and proven expert, invest in yourself, and then focus your efforts on your search strategy. Instead of tweaking your resume every hour, spend that same 15 minutes on LinkedIn, using the powerful search feature to find 5 hiring managers. Reach out to them!

While your resume is always a work in progress, it’s only 1 component of your search. If done right, it should be very easily customized for different opportunities. The trap that many people fall into is focusing only on the resume because it feels controllable.

I challenge you to flip the script! Take control of EVERY aspect of your job search. Start building a rich network with connections that will enable you to access jobs before they hit the open market. Take control of your personal brand – don’t let others interpret what you are and what you can do. Make it easier for people to help you find your next opportunity by getting clear on what you are great at and where you can add the most value.

BookΒ an intro call to learn more so we can get started creating your story – https://calendly.com/rhresumes

by Rebecca Henninger Rebecca Henninger No Comments

How The Resume Writing Industry Has Changed – And What You Need To Know About It

resume writingThe resume is not going away. This much we know, although for a few years that very thought was a topic of discussion.

What is happening is that the resume has become just one component of your search. Albeit a very important one – but in no means will your search be uplifted and transformed by addressing the resume only.

My current resume practice has shifted as well. Clients need a great resume but the heavy and overstocked resumes of 2010 are dead. Hiring managers are reading for only a few seconds – recruiters are giving your resume a 6-second scan. You had better make sure that you grab their attention!

So what do you need to know today? Here’s the deal:

1) Do keep paragraphs less than 3 lines and bullets less than 2. If necessary, add supporting detail in a secondary bullet.

2) Do organize information using keywords or subheaders.

3) Do keep your resume achievement oriented. Even if you spent a lot of time answering phones for your boss, that’s not going to get you the interview. Focus instead on the new filing system you implemented.Β 

4) Do frontload the achievements and results delivered in the beginning of the bullet – Delivered a 40% productivity improvement by implementing streamlined processes and procedures. Recruiters read down the left side of the page. Leverage this by strategically placing info you want read first.

5) Do get a second and third eye on your resumes. Have them read for content and accuracy. Take their advice with a grain of salt, Β if they do not actively hire.

6) Do hire a professional if you are overwhelmed.Β  I not only provide writing support to my clients, but also moral support and confidence-boosting insight.Β 

7) Don’t expect to find a job simply by applying online. An average open posting receives 250 applications. Even great resumes get lost in the clutter.

8) Don’t rely on only the people you know. While the age-old adage remains true, you don’t know everyone so you need to expand “who you know”. The best way to do this? Cold networking. Put on your big girl / big boy pants and start reaching out to people that can actually help you get your foot in the door.

9) Don’t fixate on your resume. Yes β€” make changes if needed to meet the job posting, but no need to rewrite it every time.Β 

Reach out today to learn more about my tactical job search coaching and resume creation services. Book a 15-min call today to find out how I can help!

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