Your résumé markets you to potential employers and collaborators. It should articulate your unique value and problem-solving abilities so convincingly that the reader cannot help but invite you for an interview. Your résumé is your most important piece of promotional material, and yet most people bury their skills and value so deep inside that it requires an archaeologist to sift through it to discover why and how you would serve the inquiring organization. And the last thing you want to do is make potential employers toil to determine why they should hire you.
By itself, a résumé can’t get you the job, but if it is properly alluringly organized, it can draw readers into learning more about you, to finding out if your personality will match and enhance their organization.
Unlike a curriculum vitae (CV), which thoroughly archives all your scholarly output, a résumé gives readers a “targeted taste” of what you can do. It spotlights your successes and packages your specific skills in a way that encourages the reader to want to learn more.
It is, in other words, very much like dating: You want to look your best when you are meeting potential mates at a mixer, catch someone’s attention, encourage him or her to engage you in conversation, and give a sense of your sparkling personality. In your job hunt—and more broadly in your career planning—your résumé should likewise seduce the reader to want to learn more about you.
Seduction by résumé is a lot easier than you might think. One key is to make your résumé simple and straightforward. Another is to customize your résumé to reflect each decision-maker’s top interests. In fact, your résumé should mirror the job announcement as much as possible. In that way, you will highlight certain skills, change the order of subsections, and add or subtract information to make yourself relevant for each opportunity.
There are many features of the résumé that aid in the wooing process. Please—seduce me with your . . .
. . . Handsome headline. First, ditch the objective. I don’t care that you “seek a challenging work environment where you can utilize your critical thinking and analysis skills.” This is all about me, and how you can make my life easier. Wow me by specifying—right at the top of the résumé—your major areas of expertise. Doing so telegraphs to the reader what kind of job(s) you are seeking. For example, if you seek an opening in embedded systems and autonomic computing, put that right at the top under your name and contact information. If you excel in public speaking, technical writing, or fundraising, list that first. Dispense with the objective and you're left with a concrete headline that encapsulates your value and captures my attention.
. . . Strong skills. I need to know what makes you better than the competition and whether you have the skills to solve my problems. Don’t hide your skills in your experience section. Put a specific subheading above the fold on the first page of your résumé that delineates your relevant skills and abilities. Think in terms of:
. . . Relevant experience. Under one subheading, describe your related jobs, projects, and even leadership experiences together with the accomplishments you achieved for each. Every bullet point should aim to clearly tell me, the decision-maker:
About Alaina G. Levine
Alaina G. Levine is an award-winning entrepreneur, STEM career consultant, science journalist, professional speaker, and corporate comedian. Her first book, Networking for Nerds (Wiley, 2015), beat out Einstein for the honor of being named one of the Top 5 Books of 2015 by Physics Today Magazine. As President of Quantum Success Solutions, she is a prolific speaker and writer on career development and professional advancement for engineers and scientists. She has delivered over 700 speeches for clients in the US, Europe, Mexico, Canada, and Africa, and has written over 350 articles in international publications such as Nature, Nature Astronomy, NatureJobs, Science, Scientific American, National Geographic News Watch, and IEEE Spectrum. Levine is also currently authoring two online courses for Oxford University Press on career development and entrepreneurship/commercialization and is a consultant, speaker, and writer for the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings. Learn more about Levine.