Keeping Your Resume Out Of The

이력서 작성

Lesson 59

Keeping Your Resume Out Of The

💎
Lesson 59

KEEPING YOUR RESUME OUT OF THE

By Tag and Catherine Goulet, FabJob.com

Job Preparation 25 min Speaking 75%
3 min

Warm-up

Talk about these questions with your teacher.
선생님과 이야기해 보세요.

  1. If a recruiter only spends 20–30 seconds on each résumé, what do you think catches their eye first?
    채용 담당자가 이력서 한 장에 20~30초밖에 쓰지 않는다면, 어떤 부분이 가장 먼저 눈에 띈다고 생각하나요?
  2. Have you ever had a résumé rejected without getting an interview? What do you think went wrong?
    이력서를 냈는데 면접 기회도 못 받고 탈락한 경험이 있나요? 원인이 뭐였다고 생각하나요?
4 min

Vocabulary

Listen and repeat after your teacher.
선생님을 따라 읽어보세요.

reading /reading/
a key word from this lesson  |  reading
Find and practice this word in today's reading.
read /read/
a key word from this lesson  |  read
Find and practice this word in today's reading.
passage /passage/
a key word from this lesson  |  passage
Find and practice this word in today's reading.
teacher /teacher/
a key word from this lesson  |  teacher
Find and practice this word in today's reading.
catherine /catherine/
a key word from this lesson  |  catherine
Find and practice this word in today's reading.
goulet /goulet/
a key word from this lesson  |  goulet
Find and practice this word in today's reading.
5 min

Reading

Read the passage with your teacher.
선생님과 함께 지문을 읽어보세요.

By Tag and Catherine Goulet, FabJob.com
The last time you applied for a job and didn’t get an interview, was your résumé tossed on the “no” pile after someone skimmed it for only a few seconds, or did the employer read it carefully and you just missed making the cut?
Seventy recruiters met recently at the University of Calgary’s Haskayne School of Business to discuss what can make or break a résumé. The recruiters represented a variety of industries including oil and gas, tourism, technology and financial services, and some of what they revealed may surprise you.
An employer may review 100 or more resumes in an hour, spending only 20-30 seconds on each one. “Recognize that most employers are using the résumé to screen you out rather than to select you in,” says Derek Chapman, Ph.D., professor of industrial organization and psychology at the Haskayne School of Business.
Getting Attention
“If you don’t catch my eye, you’re out,” one recruiter said. That doesn’t mean you should use bright pink paper or multi-colored lettering, but several recruiters said they don’t mind applicants including a photo. Creative photos (such as the shot an applicant included of herself in a snow suit with snowmen on either side and a caption saying “I’m the one in the middle”) might help land the interview.
However, Chapman cautions against including a photo. “A photo can be used to screen you out on the basis of your sex, age, national or ethnic origin, etc. If someone hires you for your good looks, are you sure you want to work for that supervisor?”
Name Dropping
A better way to catch an employer’s eye is to include names of well-known companies you have worked for. As one recruiter explained, if you previously worked for a reputable company, it enhances your application “because they have some standards.” Employers are likely to assume you will be a good employee because you successfully passed that company’s hiring process and were well-trained. If you haven’t been employed by any large companies, consider doing an internship or volunteer work for a well-known organization.
Surprisingly, “name dropping” only works when mentioning companies. The recruiters said they are turned off when an applicant writes in a cover letter that they were referred by someone such as a company executive. The employers said if someone really thinks you are a good applicant that person should deliver the résumé to the recruiter or phone on your behalf.
Résumé Mistakes
While employers want résumés that are error-free, making a mistake such as addressing your cover letter to the wrong company won’t necessarily disqualify you from the job. Of course, it depends on the employer. For some recruiters, that kind of mistake is inexcusable. However, many others will allow one or two mistakes -- even stapling the second page upside down -- as long as you have the right qualifications.
To minimize mistakes, proofread your résumé. Your spell-checker doesn’t know you meant to say “manager” instead of “manger”.
Another surprise is that about one-third of the recruiters at the session said they do not read cover letters. To make sure your important information doesn’t get overlooked, it should be in your résumé.
Making the "Yes" Pile
Here are some additional tips to help you make the “yes” pile:
Have a conventional e-mail address. Your name is fine; kookybear@hotmail.com or partyanimal@msn.com are not.
Tailor your résumé to each job you apply for. Make sure it shows you have the skills the employer is seeking for that particular position.
Use lots of white space and bullet points to help information stand out.
Include interests that are relevant to the job. If you are applying for a job in agriculture, for example, show that you have rural roots.
If you are submitting an electronic résumé use a standard format such as Word to ensure it can be opened.
Don’t disclose irrelevant personal information. (“I don’t want to know you are 5’6,” and weigh 195 pounds” one employer said.)
State your accomplishments rather than just your responsibilities. “For example, simply stating: ‘Managed a budget of $200,000 annually for training and development’ is not nearly as powerful as ‘Reduced training and development costs by 20 percent while maintaining the quality and quantity of training provided to employees’,” Chapman says.
“Placing positive information at the very beginning and again at the very end of the résumé helps keep the employer's attention and capitalizes on the psychological principles of memory to work in your favor,” Chapman says. “Remember, most employers are only skimming your résumé at first to make a preliminary decision. Make sure they can find your information easily.”

3 min

Korean Trap! / 한국인 실수 교정

Common mistakes Korean speakers make.
한국인이 자주 하는 실수를 알아봅시다.

❌ I applied the job posting on the website.
✅ I applied for the job posting on the website.

한국어로는 "지원하다"가 목적어를 바로 취하지만, 영어에서 apply는 반드시 전치사 for와 함께 써야 합니다. "apply the job"이라고 하면 "그 직업을 (어딘가에) 적용하다"라는 전혀 다른 뜻이 되므로, 이력서나 면접에서 이 실수를 하면 어색한 인상을 줄 수 있습니다.

5 min

Discussion

Share your thoughts with your teacher.
선생님과 의견을 나눠보세요.

  1. How would you apply what you learned today?
    오늘 배운 것을 어떻게 활용하시겠어요?
  2. What was the most useful part of this lesson?
    이 수업에서 가장 유용한 부분은 무엇이었나요?
  3. Can you think of a real situation where you would use this?
    이것을 사용할 실제 상황을 생각해 볼 수 있나요?
  4. What would you like to practice more?
    더 연습하고 싶은 것은 무엇인가요?

Lesson Summary / 수업 요약

Today's Topic: KEEPING YOUR RESUME OUT OF THE

Level: Job Preparation (JOB)

Review this lesson before your next class! / 다음 수업 전에 복습하세요!