- So you're applying for a job.
Everything right now is going great.
You've entered your
name in the first field
and you've even spelled it correctly,
but then you come to the next part,
which says please upload your resume.
Oh no, I don't even have
a resume, you think.
And what's worse, you don't even know how
to properly write one.
Fortunately, at some
point your future self
traveled back to the past
and uploaded an entire video
about how to write a
resume full of amazing tips
and tricks that are nearly guaranteed
to help you land that job.
This is that video.
Thanks, time travel.
So in this video, I'm gonna
be sharing some useful
tips that you can use
to craft a great resume,
and along the way, we're
going to establish the five
maybe six, depending on who you are,
sections that should be on that resume.
Before we go on, though,
I do want to mention something important.
There is no best way to craft a resume.
Go online looking for
resume tips and you're
gonna find 18 billion differing opinions,
all from so-called resume experts.
Why?
Well, think about the purpose of a resume.
A resume is a brief
summary of your skills,
your achievements, and your experience,
and how those relate to the specific job
or company that you're applying to,
and the job of that resume
is to get your posterior
into the chair across the
desk from a hiring manager
so you can explain in further detail
why you're the best person to hire.
So your resume is
essentially an advertisement,
and as I'm sure you're well aware,
advertisements come in all
sorts of different forms,
there's no one perfect way
to craft an advertisement
that will work every single time.
So keep in mind you're
crafting an advertisement,
there are definitely
general best practices
that you should follow,
but nothing so specific
as never have an objective statement
or always hae an objective
statement is going
to apply in every single case,
and this means that there is no one way
to craft a perfect resume.
There's no perfect resume template.
All you can do is seek
to make yours great,
and to the end, let's get
into the tips and sections
that you should have on yours.
All right, first and most importantly,
you're gonna wanna have
a section that lists your
favorite anime, Fullmetal
Alchemist Brotherhood
and Space Dandy are great picks,
but if you have Naruto as number one,
you're probably dead in the water.
Wait, I read that wrong,
actually first section is
gonna be your name and
contact information.
That actually makes more sense.
So obviously this section should
include your name, and if
you're submitting this resume
directly to a company, it should also
include your phone
number in case they want
to call you directly for an interview,
though I will note that if you're going
to be posting your resume
online somewhere publicly
like on a personal website, I
would leave the phone number
off just so you don't get spammed.
In addition to all those
basics, you should also
include a website and
portfolio if you can.
I think this is really really important.
So believe it or not, I've
been running my company
for almost 10 years at this point,
and I have hired several
people during that time,
and every single time I've
set up to hire somebody,
the thing I'm most interested
to see on applications
is examples of completed work,
and I am not alone in this desire,
so use the rest of the
tips that we're gonna go
through in just a second
to craft your resume
and make it shine as best as it can,
but also give the hiring manager an option
to go look at a portfolio or some examples
of the work that you've
done if they so choose.
That brings us to the next
section on your resume,
which I believe should usually
be your work experience.
And the first thing that I have
to say about this section is
that you should be putting
your most relevant experience
first given the job that
you're applying for,
which means that you should
be tailoring your resume
to every single position you apply for.
Yeah, it's more work, but it is worth it.
Now for the people out there
who already have established
careers, and who aren't
jumping into a completely
new industry, reverse
chronological order usually
achieves this, but this
tip is very relevant
for students and for new grads,
because you often have
great summer experience,
great internships, things like that,
but then you have to make
ends meat during the semester,
and you flipped burgers and mowed lawns,
but if you're applying for a great job
at a tech company, and you
had a great tech internship
last summer and then
afterwards mowed lawns just
to make some extra pocket money,
you don't want to put
the lawn mowing first,
because if I'm a tech
recruiter, I'm looking
at your resume and the first thing I see
is lawn mowing experience,
I'm probably gonna move
on to the next resume,
I'm not gonna look down
further and see that you
have great experience
on your second item that's listed.
The most important
thing you can understand
about your resume, other than the fact
that it is an advertisement,
is that recruiters don't
have a whole lot of time
to look at it, you might
put a lot of time into it,
you might put all your
work into crafting it
and making it the best that you can,
but when it gets to a recruiter's desk,
it's probably in a stack
of hundreds of others,
and according to an article put up
by the ladders.com a few years ago,
the average resume only gets
six seconds of attention
before the recruiter makes
a fit or no fit decision.
So you want to make
those six seconds count.
All right, on to the next main tip.
When you're listing out
your job descriptions,
highlight achievements rather than duties,
and if you can, back up those
achievements with numbers.
The reality of the situation
is that hiring managers
are not that interested
in what your duties were
at your last job, what
you were expected to do.
They're a lot more interested
in what you actually
accomplished, especially if
there are specifics involved.
So for example, listing
something like organized
an introductory program attended
by 3,500 incoming freshman
and helped book four professional speakers
and workshop leaders, works
a lot better than just
responsible for organizing
introductory program for new freshman.
And I will say for this tip
in particular, you may want
to into the description down below
after watching the rest of the video,
because I'll be linking to my own resume
which has some great
examples of using specifics
and numbers in that
work experience section.
But of course, there is
one elephant in the room
for many of you, which is the question,
what if I don't have any experience?
Well, this is known as
the experience paradox.
Many jobs needs you to have experience
before they'll hire you, but
to get experience you need
to have a job, right?
Now, while the experience
paradox is difficult
to overcome, it is not
impossible to overcome,
and one thing I want to
note here before I talk
about my main tip related to it,
is that a lot of companies
offer internships,
and when a company builds
an internship program,
they're often looking
for promising candidates
that show a lot of potential,
but maybe who don't have
a whole lot of industry experience,
so if that what you're lacking,
then show some other qualities
and you may get hired in
those kinds of positions,
but here's my main tip.
For many, many fields out there,
nobody has to give you permission for you
to go and do work that's
worth showing off on a resume.
Want to become a web developer?
Well, then spend a few weeks learning how
to build a website or a
web app I your own time,
build it, post it on the internet,
and list that on your
resume as work experience.
My friend Martin actually started working
with me as a web developer and I hired him
because he had build a
blog in his spare time
and I knew that he knew
word press design, PHP, CSS,
all the skills that I was looking for
in a web developer when I
needed my website rebuilt.
That one is easy, though, right?
What if you want to compose film scores?
Well, get yourself a copy of Reaper,
find some cheap or free
virtual instruments
and go rescore public domain movies
that you can get on archive.org
or ask a friend who's a
videographer if you can
score their work, post it online,
use that to get bigger and bigger gigs.
And what if you want to be a doctor?
All right, admittedly that is a tough one,
and I'm not gonna sit here and pretend
that you can get resume experience
in literally any profession
just by tinkering
on a computer in your bedroom,
because, well, you can't.
Some professions out there
are just ore gate-kept
than others, and many require experience
with equipment that you
just cannot get on your own.
But there are still things
that you can do to stand out.
For example, my friend Ryan,
back when he was a pre-med,
volunteered for an organization
called Doctors Without Walls.
And due to his experience
with that organization,
he was able to put together
a really really impressive
med school application,
which got him accepted
into several schools,
even though his grades
as a pre-med weren't as
good as some of his peers.
All right, let's move on
to the education section,
which on my resume actually comes
after my work experience section,
so I guess the first tip I want to talk
about here is how to strategically
place your education section,
so if you are in college
or if you just got out of college
it may make sense to put
your education section
before your work experience,
especially if you're trying
to get into a more established field
with bigger and older
companies who may still
put a lot of value on
the school you went to
and your academic achievements,
but as a general rule, solid,
impressive experience is
gonna matter to most companies more
than the school that you attended,
especially for newer companies
and companies in fields
like design and technology,
so as your experience gets
more and more impressive
as you accumulate more of it,
think about highlighting
that before your education.
That just leaves us
with the question of GPA
or grade point average.
Do you include it on your
resume or do you leave it off?
Well, here's what I was
told when I was in college.
If your GPA is a 3.2 or
above, put that on your resume
right alongside your
degree in your school.
If not, leave it off.
And the reason that I'm
including this in the video is
that I generally agree with
this logic, and here's why.
Your resume's job is to
get your foot in the door,
just like your Tinder profile's job is
to get you a date, right?
So in general, you're not
gonna go advertising your flaws
front and center on your Tinder profile,
unless you can find a way to do it
that's endearing and funny, and even then,
that doesn't apply as
much to the job market
as it does to dating, but,
once you're dating somebody,
they're naturally going
to learn about your flaws,
and if those flaws are
outweighed by the good stuff,
then they're probably gonna stay with you,
and it's the same with the job market.
Once you get into that
office and have an interview,
you get a chance to
explain why your GPA might
not be as high as you'd like it to be.
Maybe your skills and
experience outweigh it
and you realize that putting more effort
into other projects was more beneficial
than trying to get perfect grades.
But again, your resume
only gives a few seconds
of attention, so you don't
want to lead with things
that are going to throw up red flags.
Speaking of red flags, let's
talk about the skill section.
First and foremost, do you even need
to have a skills section on your resume?
Well, the answer is it
depends on who you are.
So typically it's useful
to have a skills section
if you have specific
certifications or skills
that the job is going to be looking for.
So if you have a SISCO
networking certification,
a CCNA, or you're really
proficient in Adobe After Effects
or CAD or you know how
to code and know .JS,
it can be really useful
to put those things
in a specific skills section.
This is especially useful,
since many bigger companies
these days use what are called
applicant tracking systems
or ATS systems, actually
no that doesn't work,
that's like ATM machine,
that's kind of redundant.
Anyway, ATSs basically scan
resumes for specific, key terms
that the company's looking
for so they can cut down
on the number of resumes an actual human
being has to look at.
So if you're applying to a
company that you know is looking
for a specific skill, you want
to make sure that skill is
listed on your resume, provided
you're actually proficient
in it, otherwise your
resume might get tossed
in the bin before anyone looks at it.
All that being said, don't
include a skill section
on your resume if all you're
going to include is something
like Microsoft office as a general term.
And more importantly, do
not list soft skill terms.
Don't put hard worker,
don't put good communicator
on your resume, do not let me
catch you putting these things
because the laziest person in the world
can write hard worker on their resume,
and because of that, for many
recruiters, it's a red flag.
Why are you putting
down hard worker instead
of listing experience that
proves your work ethic?
Bottom line, if you have specific skills,
if you have specific certifications
that you know they're looking
for, definitely include
a skills section or at least
make sure they're listed
in your work experience section,
otherwise a skills section
is probably not needed,
but what you do need are
the last two sections
that we are going to talk about today:
extracurriculars and awards.
These sections can bolster
the work experience
on your resume by showing the clubs
and organizations that you're a part of
by listing any leadership
positions you have taken
in those clubs, which you
should definitely list
and by listing any awards,
honors, scholarships,
anything like that that
you've won as well.
These sections are
essentially a non-pathetic way
of writing hard worker on your resume.
They might not convey specific skills,
but they do convey other traits
that recruiters are
definitely looking for,
a hard work ethic, the
ability to adapt and change,
the ability to work independently,
and your likelihood to
step into leadership roles,
so absolutely make sure that
you have these two sections
on your resume as well.
Of course, crafting your
resume is just the first step
to landing the job that you want,
and alone, it is not a very
strong tool for that purpose.
It needs to work in tandem
with a well-tailored personal brand,
a mix of online and offline platforms
and methods of communicating and help you
to show off your skills and
establish your expertise
in your industry, and this includes things
like a personal website with a portfolio
and your social media platforms,
but also the way that
you introduce yourself
and the way that you
engage and seek out others.
And if you want a good guide on how
to start building that brand,
I'm gonna recommend Hamza Khan's personal
branding course on Skillshare.
His course is short and
won't take up too much
of your time, but it's
also pretty comprehensive,
and it covers all the important bases
including the preliminary
work of figuring out how
to tell your story and present yourself,
along with the specifics
of channel selection,
building a website, and more.
And getting access to
that course means you'll
also have unlimited access
to the more than 28000
other courses that are also on Skillshare,
and that can boost your
skills in web development,
digital animation, graphic
design, audio production,
and lots, lots more.
Membership on Skillshare
is super affordable,
starting at less than 10 bucks a month,
plus once you have that membership,
you can go over tot he popular courses
of the business section
where you'll find my course
on productivity skills as well,
and if you want to try
out Skillshare for free,
you can actually get a free, two-month,
unlimited trial by being
one of the first 500 people
to click the link in the
description down below and sign up.
Big thanks as always
goes out to Skillshare
for sponsoring this video
and supporting my channel
and as always, thank you
guys for watching as well.
If you enjoyed this video,
definitely hit that like button,
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plus right there to get a free copy
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better grades in school.
Also I'm gonna need you
to come in on Sunday.
We've had to let a few people go recently,
and we're gonna have to play catch up,
so if you could be here around,
oh, nine AM, that'd be great.
