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The Career-Switch Résumé: Writing Your Way into a New Profession


So, you’ve come to a crucial turning point in your career. After some serious soul-searching, you’ve decided to that you’re ready to break out of your professional rut and move on in a new direction. Now what?
Believe it or not, what you’ve already accomplished is likely to be the most difficult part of the process. It takes courage and confidence to make a bold career move, so kudos to you for your chutzpah. Once your mental commitment to making a career change is in place, the rest is just details.

You’ve Made the Leap, Now Get Your Résumé Ready

You’ve decided that you’re looking for a professional change, and now it’s time to convince the rest of the world. The first thing you’ve got to do is update your résumé to reflect your new career goals.
If you’re worried about what you should list under the “Experience” heading on your career-change résumé, don’t despair. Although we’ve been trained to look at résumés as mere laundry lists of our professional experiences and accomplishments, they’re actually much more flexible than that.
According to Karen Hofferber, Microsoft’s in-house résumé expert, you can slant your core qualifications to sell yourself in many different ways, depending on the industry you’re looking to break into. The trick lies in developing a persuasive narrative in which you show how your skills match up with those most in demand in your new industry. Use these guidelines to help write yourself right into a brand-new profession.

§         Start from scratch.

It can be tempting to create your career-switch résumé by simply cutting and pasting from your current résumé, but you’ll be far better off if you can manage to avoid this urge and just force yourself to get a fresh start. You need to ensure that every word and every formatting decision you make is focused on persuading hiring managers that you’re a risk worth taking, and the only way you can be certain of that is to create an entirely new document.

§         Show off your industry knowledge.

Chances are, your interest in this field didn’t just spring into existence overnight. If you’re like most job seekers, you’ve been dabbling in your new field for years on the side and in your spare time. Make use of the knowledge you’ve gained in your résumé, demonstrating your familiarity with the field by adding in a few well-placed facts and lingo.

§         Use a format that highlights your transferable skills.

The traditional experience-centered résumé isn’t going to do you any favors in the career-change process. Instead, opt for a skills-based or “functional” format. Make a separate heading for each skill, such as “Customer Service” or “Personnel Management,” and then list your relevant experience in each category. That way, you can showcase your skills without drawing too much attention to where you earned them.

§         Broaden your definition of “experience.”

Paid positions are only one way to gain experience. Volunteering, internships, college coursework, workshops, lectures, conferences, and industry events are all great ways to break into a new field. Be sure to list relevant activities such as these on your career-change résumé. Many recent grads use this strategy to help snag their first entry-level positions right out of college, with little or no “real” experience to speak of.

§         Don’t sell yourself short.

Experts say that job seekers looking to make a career change often have low levels of confidence – and that can translate into a timid, lackluster résumé. You have to be bold and sell your transferable skills if you want to convince prospective employers to take a gamble on you. Remember, you have something positive to offer, even if the bulk of your experience was earned in a different field. Make sure your career-change résumé exudes self-assurance, even if you’re secretly feeling a bit nervous about your prospects.

If you’re looking to change careers, you’ve first got to radically remake your résumé to reflect your new ambitions. With a rewritten version of your career history in hand, you’ll be well on your way to forging a new professional path.

Source : http://www.hcareers.com/us/resourcecenter/tabid/306/articleid/464/default.aspx

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A guide to writing a CV if you are changing career


If you're changing your career, you'll need to give your CV a facelift, too. Clare Whitmell explores how you can tailor the content to land an interview

One of the biggest challenges career changers face is demonstrating how their career history is relevant. The key is to downplay a lack of direct experience, while highlighting the skills and accomplishments which apply.
Standard advice for career changers is generally to adopt a functional or skills-based CV: a detailed skills section followed by a briefer experience section. The reasoning behind this is that your reader will be wowed by your 'transferable' skills, skipping over the who, what and how of your work history. But employers often want – and expect – the detail found in a standard chronological CV, and not providing it puts you at a disadvantage. One solution is to develop a 'hybrid' CV with an expanded profile and skills section, and a chronological employment history.

View your career history through an employer's eyes

A successful career-change CV clearly shows how your career path to date is a consistent, natural progression of your talents and interests, leading you to the point where you've amassed the necessary skills and experience for your next move. You can avoid giving the impression that you're a directionless job-hopper or that you're floundering around for a career change by finding an underlying career theme and writing your career history around this. For example, if you're going for a marketing role, select and highlight any marketing elements from previous roles, downplaying all other, less relevant aspects.

Sell your strengths

Show confidence in your abilities. You may be at a disadvantage compared to others with more extensive, relevant experience, so showcase everything that positions you for the role. Quantifiable achievements; community, voluntary, part-time or temporary work; specific skills or added qualifications all count. Be selective: only include information that supports your new goals, otherwise you'll blur the focus of your CV.
However, don't be tempted to leave out work history. Gaps can raise questions, so either account for the dates with a brief summary, or find something relevant to highlight. If you've been pursuing two different careers (perhaps in preparation for a career move) you can choose which roles to include and which to delete. Or you can keep in concurrent roles if you've gained relevant skills or experience from both.

Be flexible with layout

Prioritise key details such as qualifications, blue-chip company experience, or even a glowing testimonial. These can go near the beginning of your CV. Consider splitting your professional history into two or more sections, with anything relevant (including voluntary or part-time roles) positioned more prominently.
There is no single way to format a CV. The job description can help you decide what needs to be most prominent. One possibility is to use your skills as broad headings, giving supporting details under each skill, then following with a reverse chronological work history section. So if you were applying for an office administration role, organisational or communication skills could be broad headings, with experience and achievements listed under each, then your employment history. If your new career is not too different from your previous one, you could even use a standard chronological format, angling the details to match the requirements of the new role (without stretching the truth).
Adding a profile can help you outline broad strengths such as management or leadership experience. You can follow this with a key results section to illustrate those strengths, or leave your achievements in your work history section. You can label CV sections as you find appropriate or even include new ones. For example, adding relevant civic or community service, ongoing education or leadership sections can help you stand out.

Pay attention to language

Don't use industry-specific jargon that might not be understood in a different sector. Consider including an explanatory sentence next to job titles.


Include a cover letter

This is the ideal opportunity to explain your career change and highlight what you bring to the role or company.
Suggested layout for a career-change CV
Name/contact details (plus LinkedIn url)
The role you're applying for as the title of your CV
Profile (summarising your strengths and value)
(Optional) extras such as community or voluntary work, professional qualifications, testimonials, and so on.
Skills/areas of expertise followed by work history
Educational history
 Source : http://careers.guardian.co.uk/writing-a-cv-changing-career

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Resume Cover Letter For Back To Work

*************************************************

To Whom It May Concern,

I have been very fortunate to have had the opportunity to take time out from the workplace to raise a family. I am now enthusiastic to once again make a contribution as a medical secretary in a professional clinical environment. I am confident that my outgoing personality, ability to handle heavy phone volume, in addition to my knowledge of medical terminology, would be a great asset to your practice. I have over 8 years of excellent experience working as a Medical Administrative Assistant in both a hospital clinic and private practices.

Please find attached a copy of my resume, which will further provide you with a summary of all the skills that I can offer your practice. In addition, I am trustworthy, dependable and enjoy challenging myself by continuously learning new skills.

I will call your office later this week to confirm that you received this correspondence and answer any questions you may have. I welcome and look forward to the opportunity to meet with you in person, to discuss the position and further answer any questions you might have regarding my qualifications and how I can contribute positively as a member of your staff.

Thank you for your time and consideration.

Sincerely,


source : http://www.by-the-letter.com/resume-cover-letter-for-back-to-work.html
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I’m back. With Resume and Cover Letter Tips.


Hi again, readers! I took an unscheduled break from blogging while there, but I’m back and ready to dish some more.  Especially since I’m on “vacation” this week and yet I can’t go outside because of the weather.  Blecch.  Hope you’re all staying cool, wherever you are this week.
During my blogging break, I finished a draft of my syllabus for my fall freshman seminar, knitted up a storm, and read two new huge books by two of my favorite authors, George R.R. Martin (A Dance With Dragons)  and Anne Easter Smith (Queen By Right).  No spoilers, though, I promise.
Let’s get back to job hunting.  If you haven’t already, take a look at Mr. Library Dude’s excellent post on Library Schools and Library Jobs.  Fun fact: Mr. Library Dude and I have never actually met, but he had my current job before me.  If he hadn’t decided to move to another job, I wouldn’t have mine.  And he gets major props for passing on all of his very-well-organized files.
Resumes and Cover Letters are, in a way, one of the trickier things to write about. There’s no shortage of advice out there on how to put either document together, and a lot of it, while it may not be explicitly contradictory, does vary depending on the person giving it and what industry they’re in.  Therefore, I’m simply going to make a list of points that worked for me.  Make of it what you will.
- You need a cover letter.  You may have heard that people don’t read them anymore.  This is true in some fields.  It is emphatically not the case librarianship.  Most of us, even those who work primarily in technical or IT services, have some contact with the public.  Even those who don’t have to be able to communicate with colleagues.  Communication is a big part of our field, and your cover letter is the first clue to the hiring committee whether your can do it clearly or not.
- Your cover letter needs to be unique for each position you apply to.  Period. This is your chance to show the employer how your skill set matches up with their needs.  Don’t rehash your accomplishments  at past positions.  That’s what your resume is for.   Show how the skills you used to reach these accomplishments will serve this new employer.
- Regarding your resume, keep those past accomplishments that you list relevant to the new position you are applying for.  Unless my library is also a fast food restaurant, I don’t really care that you can bun more hot dogs per minute than any of your  coworkers.  For non-library experiences and accomplishments, make sure you make the skill connections explicit.  It’s fine to mention secretarial work you did, for example, as such work often requires good writing and communication skills, and you’ll need those in the library – but make it clear that that’s the reason you’re including it – as proof you have such skills.  Here’s a more relevant library example.  Are you familiar with a Course Management System such as Moodle or Blackboard?  Don’t simply list this in your computer skills section.  Explain how you have or could use that as a librarian.  Have you been an embedded librarian in a class?  How do you use these tools in library instruction?
- Most people will advise that you need an individual resume for each application, as well.  While it’s a lot of work to keep writing all of this stuff, I managed it by having three “master” documents – a CV and a resume for academic library jobs (some will ask for a CV, some for a resume, so you need to have both prepared), and a resume for public library jobs, and then I tweaked/moved around items based on the requirements of the particular job I was applying for.
- Cover letter length will vary based on position type.  In the academic world, people tend to write longer (up to 2 full pages) cover letters, while in other fields, this is seen as less acceptable.  I tried to keep my academic library letters to about 1 1/4 to 1 1/2 pages and my public library letters to one page.  No matter what the type of job, remember that, given the state of the library job market, there are likely to be upwards of 50 or even 100 applicants for every position.  Depending on how much time the committee has, your letter may only be skimmed on the first pass through.  Don’t make them search for important information.
- Format your resume.  The “wall of text” approach will get you thrown in the garbage fast.  Remember, however, to stick with conventional formatting schemes and bullet styles that can be read by many email and word processing programs.  Proofread and edit.  And then do it again.
- Don’t waste space on your resume with “references available upon request” (everyone already knows this), or an “objective.”  It’s not 1995, and hiring committees don’t want to read your vague statement of buzzwords.  A well-written cover letter will accomplish the task in much clearer fashion.
- Don’t waste your time (or the committee’s time) applying for jobs that you are not qualified for.  If a job listing says “MLS or equivalent plus 3-5 years library experience” and you’re a recent library school grad, you aren’t qualified for this position.  (The exception might be if you’re an older student and had worked in a library prior to your MLS education).  Don’t piss off the committee by sending them an extra application to read (they’ve got enough work to do already).  Of course, sometimes ads aren’t so clear cut.  It’s nice when they divide their qualifications into “required” and “desired,” but this doesn’t always happen.  Use your best judgment, and you may even reach out to them and ask for clarification, but don’t find yourself on someone’s blacklist down the road because you sent them a pointless application now.
- Apply only for jobs that you’re truly interested in and would consider taking if offered.  Once again, there’s a bit of gray area here, because it’s certainly possible to be interested in a job, and then go on an interview and not like the work environment or find the attitudes of potential colleagues off-putting. But if you’re not willing to move to a certain country/state/city/town, don’t apply.  It’s a waste of your time and theirs.  Put your energy into doing a better job on applications for places you’re actually interested in working.
- Follow the instructions in the ad.  You would not believe how many people eliminate themselves from job searches just by “demonstrating” that they can’t follow simple instructions.  If it says “no phone calls,” don’t harass the contact person with calls.  If it says you need to fill out an online application form with their HR department, along with sending in a cover letter and resume, then do it.  Yes, a lot of these forms are appallingly redundant.  No, there’s nothing you can really do about it.  When you fill out said forms, spelling and grammar count, just like they do on your cover letter and resume.  If you’re asked to include a writing sample, a website sample, your references, transcripts, or any other documentation, you need to include them.
- More and more places are asking for references up front.  If they’re specified on the job ad, make sure you include them.  If you’re asked for “three professional references,” professors don’t count.  Ideally, all three professionals are library professionals, but at the very least, at least one should be a person who has supervised you in a professional work environment.  Pick people who really know you well and can give an honest appraisal of your work.  Be aware that in today’s lawsuit-happy environment, some companies prohibit their employees from giving references beyond the dates you worked there.  Check with your references and find out what they’re able and willing to share before you include them.
- This should go without saying, but if you’re going to use someone as a reference, get their permission to include them first!  Not only is it courteous, but it gives you a chance to screen for possible disasters.  If someone seems unsure about giving you a reference, ask them about their hesitation.  Better to find out and correct a negative behavior before you find out that your reference is giving you less than stellar reviews.
- Send in your materials on or before the deadline date.  If one isn’t listed, get the materials in as soon as possible.  Show that you can be prompt and on time.  If you find an ad for a dream job, and the deadline date is past, you might consider contacting them and asking if they would consider accepting an application late.  Explain that you’re really interested in the job and just saw the ad, and would like to apply if they’re still willing to take your application.   Whatever you do, don’t get in the habit of sending late applications out – it makes you look disorganized.
- Don’t be surprised if you never hear from most of the places you send applications to.  It’s sad, in someways, that as applicants, we’re expected to be on our best behavior and be as courteous as possible, but said courtesy is often not returned by employers.  Very few will contact you to let you know your application has been received and/or is complete.  It’s great when they do, but don’t expect it to happen.  Some employers will never contact you.  Some will contact you to let you know you didn’t get the job, but only after a candidate has been hired, which can be several months after you initially sent in an application.  Some will contact you once they’ve selected candidates to interview, and let you know that you’re no longer under consideration.  And, of course, some will contact you asking to set up an interview.
source : http://noisylibrarian.wordpress.com/2011/07/21/im-back-with-resume-and-cover-letter-tips/
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Frequently changing jobs

It is very easy for an employer to look at a CV where someone has had three or four jobs in one year and make the natural assumption that they are perhaps not committed or not capable of focusing on the job in hand.  There may be any number of reasons why you have changed jobs so frequently, including simply that you didn’t enjoy the work, but it is important that you try to emphasise what you learnt during this timeHighlight the diversity of the companies you worked for and, therefore, the variety of skills which you acquired as a result.  Also, make it perfectly clear that you are looking for a permanent role that will utilise your knowledge and experience.
Source : http://www.cvcl.co.uk/job-history-career-future.htm

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Smart Resume Packaging vs Exaggeration


Stick to the Truth
Lying on your resume is truly a bad idea, and not just for ethical reasons, which by themselves ought to stop you, but also because you'll almost certainly get caught eventually. While you may not "get thrown in jail for fraud," you will likely lose your job -- immediately.
But lying or exaggerating on a resume brings up a related issue. Many entry-level job seekers err in the other direction and downplay their skills and accomplishments on their resumes. After all, the point of a resume is to present your skills and abilities to a prospective employer in the best way possible.

That means learning to find the happy medium between unintentional modesty and over-the-top exaggeration and hype. The best way to do that is to take a look at a few examples.

Find 'Just Right'

To paraphrase Goldilocks and the Three Bears, you're looking not for too little or too much, but for just right. Note the differences in these resume entries, one for a waitress position and the other for an IT help-desk job: 

The Classic Undersell

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Resume objective statement-examples

  • Objective statement defined: The “Objective” statement (also known as the “Overview” statement) comes right after your contact information and highlights your unique talents, experience, and goals. Through this paragraph your reader can immediately grasp why you’d be a strong candidate for or even an excellent fit with his opportunity.
  • Objective statement-student example: You’re completing your Ph.D. in economics and want to work for a global economic forecasting company. Based on your online research and conversations with people already working in this field, you understand the perspective of international economic forecasting firms. They’re interested in hiring individuals who have excellent academic credentials and research experience and who also write and speak well. If a job applicant also possesses specialized knowledge or skills, that would be a plus. Yourpurpose is to ensure that your resume reflects that, in fact, you’re a very strong candidate for this type of business. Here’s a good sample CV career Objective statement you might write:
    Smaple student objective
Ph.D. candidate in Economics. Experienced researcher. Knowledgeable about China.Excellent communicator. Seeks to parlay education and work experience at leading global economic forecasting firm.
  • Objective statement-professional example: Let’s say you work for an information technology services company. Your management considers you a high-potential employee. But, because your company will soon merge with a much-larger competitor, you want to leave to join a smaller IT firm. Based on your online research and conversation with this CEO, you understand this executive’s perspective. He’s interested in hiring individuals who can help build his company into the leading IT service provider to middle-market companies. Your purpose is to ensure that your resume reflects that you’re the type of person he’s looking for. By reading your “Overview,” this CEO will confirm what he already suspects—that you’d add significant value to his company. Here’s a good sample resume career Objective statement.

Sample professional objective
Five years of progressive responsibility at leading global information technology company. Results-oriented and client-focused. Strong management and communication skills. Seeks to parlay experience at a midsize information technology firm.

Source: 
Fast Track English : http://www.fasttrackenglish.com/


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