
5 Resume Flaws to Avoid
by Kevin Donlin - Guranteed Resumes - Click for Info
Are you sabotaging your job search?
You may be -- right now -- if your resume contains serious flaws in design, like the kind I see every day.
Here are five of the most-common design flaws I've found in the nearly 6,000 resumes people have sent me to review since 1995.
Avoid them and prosper!
Dense text
Nothing slows a busy reader faster than sections of text that go on and on ... and on. I try to limit all paragraphs in a resume to three or
four lines at most.
You can improve the readability of your resume by using bullet points throughout, to break up text-heavy sections. This will make it
easier to read, and thus, much more effective.
The "ransom note" effect
I've seen resumes with five or more different fonts and sizes, making them look as though they'd been pasted together with letters cut
from a magazine. To avoid distracting readers, limit yourself to two fonts in your resume -- three at most.
Tiny type
If you need miniscule letters to fit the text of your resume onto one or two pages, you're hurting your chances. A font smaller than 11
points will cause most readers to do one of three things: squint, look for a magnifying glass, or pitch the offending resume. All bad.
I use 12- or 11-point Times Roman or Garamond fonts for resume body copy. You should consider doing likewise.
All capital letters
LIKEWISE, ALL CAPITAL LETTERS ARE PROVEN BY YEARS OF RESEARCH TO BE HARDER TO READ THAN STANDARD CAPITALIZATION.
WHY HANDICAP YOURSELF?
The "trash compactor" effect
Too many folks try to cram too many words into each page. The jam-packed resume that results will look unprofessional.
Try to leave a margin of at least 0.5" along the top and bottom, and 0.9" on the sides. A two-page resume is perfectly acceptable in many
cases, so feel free to use more than one page if you just can't cut the content.
Follow these guidelines to avoid the design flaws that prevent employers from giving your resume serious consideration. When in
doubt, run your resume by at least three friends for their honest input.
Best of luck to you!

Kevin Donlin - Owns and operates Guaranteed Resumes. Since 1995, he has provided
resumes, cover letters and online job-search assistance to clients on five
continents.
Kevin has been interviewed by WCCO and WLTE radio, and KMSP
TV, among others. His articles have appeared in the National Business Employment
Weekly, Minneapolis Star Tribune, Twin Cities Employment Weekly and others.

Career Tips
Career Books
Career Magazines
If you are a career coach, email
webmaster@chicagojobresource or
webmaster@SeasonalJobResource for details on how to contribute to the
websites:
Chicago Job Resource and
Seasonal Job Resource.

Career Coach Institute - Want to become a
CERTIFIED career coach?
CCI has just unveiled an entirely new format for our career coach training, combining our one-of-a-kind self-paced core training, tele-classes,
and mentor coaching into a blended learning approach designed to fit your
changing needs.


Home | About | Links | Privacy | Search