resume writing tips

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

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!

by Rebecca Henninger Rebecca Henninger No Comments

5 Things to Stop Doing in Your Job Search if You Want to Find a Job

Job Search TipsMost of my advice is around “how to’s”. How to write a resume. How to optimize LinkedIn. How to demonstrate your value to an employer. While all of this is very important, like anything else, the “how not to’s” can be equally as critical.

  1. Don’t copy and paste your resume into your LinkedIn. Are they very similar? Absolutely! Are they exactly the same. Not really. LinkedIn is not as formal, hard hitting, or as private as your resume. By doing a blanket copy-paste you are exposing yourself to various issues. Your resume, by design, should be quantified like crazy – numbers used as much as possible to demonstrate your effectiveness. LinkedIn is not the place for these kinds of numbers. It feels different – show-ier and boastful – and can offend a current or potential employer who feels you are not discrete with proprietary data.
  2. Don’t just rely on job boards. Sure, there is a place for job boards. Fill out a profile and post your resume to LinkedIn and Indeed. Career Builder if you must, and niche job boards if you are in an industry that warrants it. But please, if you are going to invest time and/or money in your resume, don’t just send it out using job boards. It’s a waste of time. You absolutely need to be networking, using LinkedIn, thinking and acting outside of the job board box if you want to stand out.
  3. Don’t send standard form letters as thank yous. While you absolutely need to send a thank you letter. I don’t even offer thank you letters as a service to my clients! I feel so strongly that they should be written after the job interview and targeted around the actual content of my interview that I will not craft them before my clients as part of the resume writing process.
  4. Don’t rely on the opinion of one person when writing your resume. Whether that person is a professional resume expert like myself or an HR director like your favorite aunt, it’s one person’s opinion. The effectiveness of the resume in many ways parallels the housing market. If your house is priced effectively and the market is efficient, the house will move. Our job market is currently relatively efficient. There are great opportunities out there and companies are hiring. If you are realistic in your expectations and have a resume that effectively showcases your value, anchored by quantifiable or demonstrable achievements, and you are working your network, it is very likely that doors will open.
  5. Don’t forget to do your homework. If you have made it to the interview stage, it is up to you to close the deal. At the very least, Google the company, find the company page on LinkedIn, locate the person who is interviewing you on LinkedIn, read the website, and come up with a few conversation starter questions. Who are their competitors? What are the primary challenges faced by the person in this role? Is this a new position? You get the idea.

 

Wondering what I can do for your resume and your job search? I help my clients refine, quantify, and clearly communicate their value to potential employers. The modern resume needs to be eye-catching, concise, and powerful. There is no risk to reaching out and if you’re reading this post, you are probably struggling with an aspect of your search. Mention code 5DONTS to receive a free cover letter with your resume project. Let’s get started today!

by Rebecca Henninger Rebecca Henninger 8 Comments

What Keywords Should I Use In My Resume?

This is a question I get from almost every prospective client. How do you know what keywords to use in my resume? They’ll invariably test me with “I’m assuming you know which keywords the scanners need to get my resume past the computers?”

And while yes, I do – I also have a lot of mixed feelings about this topic. Here goes!Β  Read more

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