The résumé is a professional marketing tool. It sells a potential employee and makes a first impression. Assume your résumé will be given 90 seconds of attention. A good résumé is the front line of attack in the job hunt. It can land a candidate the interview, structure the interview, remind the interviewer about him or her, and justify the hiring decision for others.
A résumé’s style, organization, and content can make or break the job search. Generally, the guidelines for preparing résumés call for a conservative and professional approach. Refer to books on résumé preparations (The Résumé Kit, by Richard Beatty, is one) for more detail. It is best to avoid unusual résumé styles and to stick with a reverse-chronological format. Don't split your job history and accomplishments into separate sections. Many employers don’t like functional résumés, which group skills or accomplishments under headings such as “management experience ” then list all the positions and employers at the bottom.
Essential components of a professional résumé are:
A number of mistakes lead to rejected résumés. These “bad” résumés most commonly do one or more of the following: