Part 3 - THE EVIDENCE SECTION - HOW TO PRESENT YOUR WORK HISTORY, EDUCATION, ETC.
Most
resumes are not much more than a collection of "evidence," various
facts about your past. By evidence, we mean all the mandatory information you
must include on your resume: work history with descriptions, dates, education,
affiliations, list of software mastered, etc. If you put this toward the top of
your resume, anyone reading it will feel like they are reading an income tax
form. Let's face it, this stuff is boring no matter how extraordinary you are.
All this evidence is best placed in the second half of the resume. Put the hot
stuff in the beginning, and all this less exciting information afterward.
We
divided the resume into a "hot" assertions section, and a more staid
"evidence" section for the sake of communicating that a great resume
is not information but advertising. A great resume is all one big assertions
section. In other words, every single word, even the basic facts about your
history, are crafted to have the desired effect, to get them to pick up the
phone and call you. The decisions you make on what information to emphasize and
what to de-emphasize should be based on considering every word of your resume
to be an important part of the assertions section. The evidence includes some
or all of the following:
EXPERIENCE
List
jobs in reverse chronological order. Don't go into detail on the jobs early in
your career; focus on the most recent and/or relevant jobs. (Summarize a number
of the earliest jobs in one line or very short paragraph, or list only the bare
facts with no position description.) Decide which is, overall, more impressive
- your job titles or the names of the firms you worked for - then consistently
begin with the more impressive of the two, perhaps using boldface type.
You may
want to describe the firm in a phrase in parentheses if this will impress the
reader. Put dates in italics at the end of the job, to de-emphasize them; don't
include months, unless the job was held less than a year. Include military
service, internships, and major volunteer roles if desired; because the section
is labeled "Experience." It does not mean that you were paid.
Other
headings: "Professional History," "Professional Experience"--not
"Employment" or "Work History," both of which sound more
lower-level.
EDUCATION
List
education in reverse chronological order, degrees or licenses first, followed
by certificates and advanced training. Set degrees apart so they are easily
seen. Put in boldface whatever will be most impressive. Don't include any
details about college except your major and distinctions or awards you have
won, unless you are still in college or just recently graduated. Include
grade-point average only if over 3.4. List selected course work if this will
help convince the reader of your qualifications for the targeted job.
Do
include advanced training, but be selective with the information, summarizing
the information and including only what will be impressive for the reader.
No
degree received yet? If you are working on an uncompleted degree, include the
degree and afterwards, in parentheses, the expected date of completion: B.S.
(expected 200_).
If you
didn't finish college, start with a phrase describing the field studied, then
the school, then the dates (the fact that there was no degree may be missed).
Other
headings might be "Education and Training," "Education and
Licenses," "Legal Education / Undergraduate Education" (for
attorneys).
AWARDS
If the
only awards received were in school, put these under the Education section.
Mention what the award was for if you can (or just "for outstanding
accomplishment" or "outstanding performance"). This section is
almost a must, if you have received awards. If you have received commendations
or praise from some very senior source, you could call this section,
"Awards and Commendations." In that case, go ahead and quote the
source.

PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS
Include
only those that are current, relevant and impressive. Include leadership roles
if appropriate. This is a good section for communicating your status as a
member of a minority targeted for special consideration by employers, or for
showing your membership in an association that would enhance your appeal as a
prospective employee. This section can be combined with "Civic / Community
Leadership" as "Professional and Community Memberships."
CIVIC / COMMUNITY LEADERSHIP
This is
good to include if the leadership roles or accomplishments are related to the
job target and can show skills acquired, for example, a loan officer hoping to
become a financial investment counselor who was Financial Manager of a
community organization charged with investing its funds. Any Board of Directors
membership or "chairmanship" would be good to include. Be careful
with political affiliations, as they could be a plus or minus with an employer
or company.
PUBLICATIONS
Include
only if published. Summarize if there are many.
COMMENTS FROM SUPERVISORS
Include
only if very exceptional. Heavily edit for key phrases.
PERSONAL INTERESTS
Advantages: Personal
interests can indicate a skill or area or knowledge that is related to the
goal, such as photography for someone in public relations, or carpentry and
wood-working for someone in construction management. This section can show
well-roundedness, good physical health, or knowledge of a subject related to
the goal. It can also create common ground or spark conversation in an
interview.
Disadvantages: Personal
interests are usually irrelevant to the job goal and purpose of the resume, and
they may be meaningless or an interview turn-off ("TV and Reading,"
"Fund raising for the Hell's Angels").
You
probably should not include a personal interests section. Your reason for
including it is most likely that you want to tell them about you. But, as you
know, this is an ad. If this section would powerfully move the employer to
understand why you would be the best candidate, include it; otherwise, forget
about it.
May
also be called "Interests and Hobbies," or just
"Interests."
REFERENCES
You may
put "References available upon request" at the end of your resume, if
you wish. This is a standard close (centered at bottom in italics), but is not
necessary: It is usually assumed. Do not include actual names of references.
You can bring a separate sheet of references to the interview, to be given to
the employer upon request.
More in next part.....
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