Saturday, April 11, 2020
Resume Nightmares Part One - Work It Daily
Resume Nightmares Part One - Work It Daily For fans of reality shows like âThe Profit,â âKitchen Nightmares,â and âBar Rescue,â there is familiarity with the strong statements from the showsâ stars: âIâm 100% in charge.â âThis is the worst kitchen Iâve seen!â âYou canât keep doing this. Youâre giving away too much food and drinks.â âWhat a disaster. This place is disgusting!â Related: The Right Resume Format To Get You Noticed Iâve left out the extreme language used to aggressively attack the failing businesses, restaurants, and bars. They point out every flaw in the structure, confront bad relationships â" and make a passionate attempt to improve the business with expert advice. And in many cases, they confront owners who think everything is OK â" and theyâve done nothing wrong, despite the failures. I present this introduction because, over the last two years, Iâve been voluntarily reviewing resumes for many people, with a particular focus on veterans. Too many of the resumes Iâve received have been âResume Nightmares.â I donât mean just the boring, somewhat typical âjust the factsâ resumes. I mean resumes that having me going very âGordon Ramseyâ and wanting to be â100% in chargeâ of making changes. The Initial Review On all of these reality shows, it starts with an overall review of the business, touring the site, sampling the food and/or service. Itâs all about measuring first impressions. On âKitchen Nightmares,â Gordon Ramsey wants to sample the menu and meet servers before he gets in-depth information from the owners and chefs. My response to a resume that I receive is similar. I very deliberately turn on my âfirst impression monitorâ and imagine seeing this resume as if it had been submitted to me for a job. Frequently, Iâll print it out for a different visual impression than I get on a monitor. It is not uncommon for the resume to generate a strong negative reaction: poorly formatted, small font, long narrative paragraphs, longer lists of âskills.â Itâs taken just a few seconds but, as a potential employer, itâs ready for the âC-Pile,â and Iâm moving on. I just received a resume to review. I was immediately distracted by the personâs current job title appearing under his name at the top of the resume â" a job title having very little if anything to do with the positions he told me he was interested in. Then I was drawn to long, 14-15 lines long, 9pt paragraphs on his current and previous position. This resume also had a highlighted âWilling to relocate anywhereâ line right after his contact information. Relevant but it seemed to distract at the top of the resume. Watch just a few episodes of these reality shows and youâll often see multiple âdistractions.â This resume has three strikes against it from the initial review â" a highly probability for that âC-Pile.â The Deep Dive After the first impressions, each of these reality shows proceeds with a âdeep diveâ into the business. In some ways, each provides an interesting structure for considering a resume. âThe Profitâ carefully examines the businessâs âpeople, product, and processâ while âKitchen Nightmareâ is eager to examine and sample the menu. For a resume, itâs time to read it carefully, from top to bottom, which is the way the vast majority of HR and Hiring Managers read a resume. So, I read the candidateâs description of his or her current position and my first reaction is âWhereâs the beef?â Gordon Ramsey is frequently frustrated by the lack of ingredients in the dishes he orders. The fish is cold or undercooked. The sauce is bland. My exact reaction to a resume that contains a list, or worse a 15-line paragraph, of just tasks and duties. I can see what youâve done â" but not what youâve accomplished. Itâs bland, and the main ingredients are under- or over-cooked. Back To The Beginning There are many common elements in these reality shows â" in addition to the strong language. One of them Iâll label as âsimplification.â For restaurants and bars, even many of the manufacturing or retail businesses, a primary goal is not expansion, itâs reduction. Often itâs reducing the number of items on a menu from over 150 to less than thirty. Another frequent problem is these businesses have a âsave everythingâ mentality for useless inventory and distracting memorabilia. And Iâve had both of these reactions to several resumes Iâve received. One of them followed the introductory contact information with a section listing more than 25 different skills. Several other resumes Iâve seen have listed too many jobs going back too many years, too many courses, too many awards â" Too much information â" thatâs not relevant to a resume. Iâve noticed that Gordon Ramsey almost always asks âwhatâs the special?â or âWhat do you recommend?â On Bar Rescue, the âRecon Teamsâ ask the same questions. Even Marcus Lemonis on âThe Profitâ is often asking âWhat business are you really in?â When I see a resume with âtoo much information,â either with lists of skills or duties from an endless job description, I want to ask, simply, âWhatâs your special?â Itâs Time For âResume Makeover!â Each of these shows follows a very structured process for remaking the target business. Iâm thinking that each might also provide an interesting alternative structure for developing a more effective resume. Or perhaps this might provide a different way of finding ways to improve a resume for todayâs highly competitive market. Letâs start with Marcus Lemonisâs clearly focused strategy of âPeople, Product, and Process.â While there remains some debate over the appropriateness of an objective statement, a professional summary, or nothing at the beginning of a resume, I believe that a well-written summary statement that emphasizes your professional strengths is an effective way to personalize the start of your resume. The summary statement should be customized to the position and company youâre applying to. This is similar to understanding the cuisine of, for example, an Italian restaurant. Itâs understanding the mission of a manufacturing or retail business. The most important part of your resume, the track record of your accomplishments should clearly consider this model. For each of the positions recorded on your resume, craft a statement that clearly addresses the results achieved (product), how you achieved that result (process), and who (people) was involved (for team and leadership accomplishments). Describing the process is where you demonstrate your skills, not with a list of general terms. Summary This is one different way of looking at improving your resume. In Part II, Iâll examine structuring your resume based on some of the principles for âKitchen Nightmaresâ and âBar Rescue.â Disclosure: This post is sponsored by a Work It Daily-approved expert. You can learn more about expert posts here. Photo Credit: Bigstock Have you joined our career growth club?Join Us Today!
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