Friday, April 10, 2020
Why Your Past Experience Isnt Going To Get You A Job - Work It Daily
Why Your Past Experience Isnât Going To Get You A Job - Work It Daily Whenever I see an interview question about âpast experience,â Iâm reminded of a classic cartoon that posed the question, âIs there any other kind?â But the point of this article should be crystal clear to all job seekers: Your âexperienceâ is not going to get you a job. Related: The 'Skills Gap' Issue For Job Seekers I know! Thatâs what the majority of resume advice and sample resumes show. You start your resume by entering your name, address, phone number, e-mail â" then start the next section of your resume by increasing the font size, clicking on âbold,â and keying âExperience.â This is then followed by a litany of your jobs, dates, titles, and job duties. I repeat, this is not going to get you a job â" at least not a job with an organization that really wants to employ people who can meet the challenges of the position. It might not matter to organizations that are willing to hire anyone based on poor screening or someone whoâs just able to pass the âmirror testâ just to show youâre breathing. So, Whatâs Wrong With Experiences? The first problem with experience is typically âTMIâ â" too much information. Many job seekers just canât stop when they start listing their different jobs. They list 10, 15, or even 20 job duties thinking, âIâll list everything I did for this company in the last ten years.â Frequently, it reads more like a âto-doâ list or job description. The problem with this (there are actually multiple problems) is that the laundry list is not going to tell me which of these items are the important ones. Are they the first ones listed, or the last, or are the important ones buried in the middle of the 20 items? When I coach people on their resumes, I usually uncover their most important item is rarely highlighted in any way. And for what seems a strange situation, itâs rarely if ever the first or second item listed. Another problem in the âtoo much informationâ category is experiences that are horribly out-of-date. I recently saw a resume of a 50-plus professional that included âexperiencesâ from jobs he held in college. In addition, this resume included the high school he graduated from. There isnât complete agreement on this point, but generally speaking details going back beyond 8-10 years are not particularly relevant. It can be deleted, or in some cases, summarized with just a couple of lines broadly describing multiple different experiences. The second problem is more serious. Laundry lists of experiences almost always lack specificity. I recently reviewed a resume with only short statements for each position, including mostly examples like the following: Performed upgrades to... Installed⦠Performed troubleshooting⦠Assembled⦠Letâs take a more formal look at this âexperienceâ issue, starting with a definition: Experience: Practical contact with and observation of facts or events. Synonyms: Involvement in, participation in, contact with, acquaintance with, exposure to, observation of, awareness of, insight into. No part of this definition indicates anything substantial from a competency standpoint: From a weak âinvolvement inâ to an even weaker âawareness of.â One thing this does illustrate extremely well is the complete weakness of a resume stating âExperience with MS-Office.â What does that mean: Observation? Contact with? Awareness of? See related: Hiring Problem: The Lack Of Specificity In The Hiring Process The Solution Is âAccomplishmentsâ Fortunately, the solution not only provides a better heading or âcategoryâ for a resume, it provides the guidance for significantly improving the content of a resume. Simply: Accomplishments! Letâs take a look at the definition: Accomplishment: a) Something that has been achieved successfully, b) the successful achievement of a task, c) an activity that a person can do well, typically as a result of study or practice. Synonyms: Achievement, exploit, performance, attainment, effort, feat. Although the conceptual difference shown here is very significant, putting it into practice is the important step. And unfortunately itâs a practice that many job seekers struggle with. While itâs probably easier to just list a lot of âexperiences,â and it does require some extra work, itâs relatively easy to follow this three-step formula: 1. Action verbs: What was the achievement? Strong action verbs that create a âvisualâ in the mind of the recruiter are the best way to start every line in the âAccomplishmentâ section of your resume. 2. How? Here is where your âskillsâ come into play. Hereâs where the âspecificityâ of what you actually did with a software program like MS-Office can be included. Hereâs where your âstrengthsâ can be included as contributing to the achievement. 3. Result? What was the objective, measurable result of this accomplishment? And here is where any recognition you received can be included. Receiving an award is neither an âexperienceâ nor an âaccomplishment.â Itâs the recognition for something you achieved â" itâs the âresultâ of an accomplishment. Hereâs one example from a national restaurant manager: Created a drink reminder system, developing a deck of recipes/instructions, which resulted in a 15% increase in drink sales with a 10% reduction in cost. System was implemented nationally for over 200 restaurants. It requires more thought and effort to include âaccomplishmentsâ on resume than to just list âexperiences.â But the accomplishments indicate to a hiring manager what you can do â" not just what experiences youâve âhad.â And if you look at just the one example above, these are the types of statements that, as an interviewer, I want to know more about that accomplishment. It sparks curiosity and follow-up questions. Related Posts 3 Ways To Advance Your Skills 5 Great Tools That Showcase Your Skills To Recruiters 6 Intangible Skills That Can Get You Hired Today About the author Jim Schreier is a management consultant with a focus on management, leadership, including performance-based hiring and interviewing skills. Visit his website at www.farcliffs.com. Disclosure: This post is sponsored by a CAREEREALISM-approved expert. You can learn more about expert posts here. Photo Credit: Shutterstock Have you joined our career growth club?Join Us Today!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.