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Joseph Turner
Keywords, Keywords, and More Keywords The magic is in the keywords and how and where you can use them. Focus on the keywords most likely to be used by a human resources person or recruiter doing the resumé search for a particular job requirement. The greater the number of relevant keywords, the higher relevancy score your online resumé will receive. Let's look at the four major keyword areas you need to account for in an online resumé that will get an employer to pick up the phone and call you: 1. "Keywords Competencies": A.) List this section at the beginning of your resumé to introduce your skill sets from an interviewing standpoint. B.) Include no more than 75 keywords. List as many relevant, searchable keywords that describe your potential job title, technical skills, management or organizational skills, relevant software and/or mechanical abilities and expertise as you can. Include anything that might be important to the particular job. For example, if you were a Java Programmer, your Keyword Competencies section might look like this: "Java, Visual C++, perl, ticl, application development, visual basic, Windows NT/XP, programming, GUI, html, project management, layer 2, BSEE, etc". 2. "Job Description" : Include every title that may pertain to your duties and function. For example, if your official title is "Member of Technical Staff", other companies may call that a Software Engineer, Software Developer, or even a Programmer. Take this into account when you write your resumé for online use. The computer doesn't care as long as you have all your bases covered for whatever human-based search may arise. 3. "Objective" : Once again, keep it limited to specific keywords when you identify your present and/or aspiring job title with an added major skill or function (such as project management, mergers and acquisitions, electronic design, product verification, quality control, etc). 4. "Past Experience" : Many searches are performed in the interest of finding people who have worked for or with certain companies. This can mean not only working as an employee, but also having worked with their products or with them as a client or vendor. Be sure to list all the major companies with whom you have had connection. This includes experience with their tools or products or your roles as either a vendor or a customer. Summary The bottom line is not how pretty your resumé looks. The most important element is to cover all the possible keywords that an employer will be searching for. There's potential gold in your background and you want to make certain that it is brought to the surface. Keywords are truly powerful for this. Joe Turner, the "Job Search Guy", makes it easy to quickly land that next job. Click here for your Free 6-part Recruiter Secrets Minicourse. Article Directory: Article Dashboard Other articles from Business... |
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