Your résumé or CV (curriculum vitae) has one purpose: to get you an interview. And it needs to accomplish this in 30 seconds (less for résumés!).
Therefore, it should be clear, concise, well organized, and easy to read. It should highlight your accomplishments and qualifications in a way that will quickly grab the attention of a prospective employer.
Résumé or CV: What’s the difference?
Although the terms are sometimes used interchangeably, a résumé and a CV are different documents used for different purposes.
A résumé is a one- (or two-) page summary of your skills, experience, and education, usually used to apply for employment in the United States. A résumé is brief and concise, and highlights the information most relevant to the job for which you’re applying.
A curriculum vitae (CV) is longer (at least two pages) and provides a more detailed summary of your educational and academic backgrounds, as well as teaching and research experience, publications, presentations, awards, honors, affiliations, and other details. In Europe, the Middle East, Africa, or Asia, employers may expect to receive a CV for job applications. In the U.S., a CV is used primarily when applying for academic or research positions. It is also applicable when applying for fellowships or grants.
STUDENT’S NAME
Seattle, WA | (206) 555-5555 | CCC@6lwboc.com | LinkedIn.com/
QUALIFICATIONSA relevant skills statement, highlighting key strenghts related to the job. This is your "movie trailer" that makes an employer read on!ℹ
- Reliable, purposeful, and solutions-oriented team member
- Experienced with financial analysis, risk analysis and small business accounting
- Highly proficient in Microsoft Access, Quickbooks, and Constant Contact
EDUCATION Highlight degrees, accomplishments and relative courseworkℹ
Bachelor of Arts in History
Seattle Pacific University (Seattle, WA)
- Minor in Human Development and Family Studies
September – December 20XX
University of Limerick (Limerick, Ireland)
RELATED EXPERIENCE
Business Manager, The Lingua Journal
Seattle Pacific University (Seattle, WA)
- Manage $7,000 of funds in support of the literary and visual arts publication.
- Negotiate with local vendors to reduce printing and advertising, reducing costs by 5%#'s and %'s convey accomplishmentℹ
- Lead a group of 15 peers in real, active budget management.
ABC Company Inc. (Seattle, WA)
- Handled, collected, and inspected over 60 employee timesheets daily.
- Calculated and recorded hourly rates for private, state, and federal certified wages.
- Updated employee records and generated daily reports using Dexter & Cheney Software.
- Arranged and recordedStart with powerful action verbsℹ all equipment usage to improve equipment records.
ADDITIONAL EXPERIENCEThe final section can be designed to highlight honors, awards, leadership, volunteer, etc.ℹ
Computer Information Systems Help Desk
Seattle Pacific University (Seattle, WA)
- Address 15-50 daily customer service questions via phone, email, and desk
Sonrisa Preschool Camp (Nogales, Mexico)
How to share your experiences
- Include experiences of all kinds — paid positions, volunteer roles, extracurricular projects classwork, and more.
- Focus on the following to show the employer how you are qualified for the position for which they’re hiring:
- What did you do? Be specific. Highlight skills that you want to bring to the new role.
- How did you use these skills? Be sure to use strong action verbs to paint a clear picture. (See 185 verb examples in Deeper dive section below!)
- What was the result of using these skills or what impact did you make? Use specific numbers if you can, and be sure to give yourself credit for your hard work!
Sample experience bullet points:
OK
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Helped with volunteers at local library book sale.
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BETTER
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Recruited and trained 15 volunteers at local library book sale.
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BEST
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Recruited and trained 15 volunteers at local library book sale, cutting the average customer queue time by 10%.
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OK
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Active member of Haven, a club for LGBTQ+ students that sponsors community events.
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BETTER
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Volunteered at events as a member of Haven, a club for LGBTQ+ students that sponsors community events.
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BEST
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Coordinated four open mic nights that raised $500 for local charities as a member of Haven […]
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OK
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Successfully completed a class project using coding and design tools for iPad environment.
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BETTER
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Designed and implemented coding and design tools for iPad environment.
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BEST
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Designed and implemented multiple MVCs for iPad environment using Objective-C.
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How to tailor your résumé to a specific job
Master résumé vs tailored résumé
Master résumé = pantry
First, we recommend that everyone keep a master résumé as a Word document in your files. Store all your experiences from work, volunteer, and significant coursework here. Think of this like the pantry in your kitchen where you keep all your ingredients (e.g., flour, sugar, oil, etc.). This document will get long — and you don’t need to share this résumé with any employers (or even print it!).
Specific résumé = recipe
Then, when you’re applying to a specific position, think of your résumé as a recipe to get that position. On this résumé, include only the experiences and skills that the position asks for. (To extend the kitchen metaphor, a certain position might want flour and oil but no sugar, so you’ll leave that off.)