Corporate Meetings
February 12, 2025
Mintzberg and Quin (1991) proposed 4 broad situational factors which can influence the extent to which an organization can change. These factors are organizational age and size, the technical systems of the organization, organizational environment and the nature of control exerted from various sources. Organizational Age and Size: This is one of the most important […]
The developing countries of the world are concentrated in the regions of Asia, Africa and Latin America. The developing nations are characterized by an economy which is transitioning from agrarian to industrial. You may recall Fred Riggs and his famous Prismatic Model from the earlier article, according to Riggs, the developing nations are the prismatic […]
The Emotionally Intelligent Manager The emotionally intelligent manager is one who has an inner rudder, defers gratification, and is empathic towards his or her coworkers. An emotionally intelligent manager creates a working environment that is as much driven by performance as it is by greater cooperation and greater sensitiveness towards each other. In other words, […]
The purpose of reinsurance companies is to share risks with insurance companies. This risk-sharing can happen to different degrees. For instance, an insurance company may decide to cede its entire risk to a reinsurance company. On the other hand, the same insurance company could also decide to cede no part of its risk to the […]
A loss distribution approach is a common approach followed by risk management practitioners in order to identify and evaluate the possible risks that they are likely to face in the due course of business. The loss distribution approach has actually been designed by the actuarial practitioners who work in the insurance industry. It is for […]
While writing about resume, the first thing that came to my mind is the unique comparison of a Resume with that of a movie trailer. As the movie trailer is short, crisp and precise, similarly a resume is a trailer of the movie “YOU”. The way audience has 3 hours to judge a movie; a recruiter also has limited time to judge a person through his resume. So, basically, a resume is a professional description about you, your experience, educational background and some amount of your personal details. Let’s see some of the pointers here:
A resume, is a professional document often used for job search, interview or for applying for a specific position to a company. Ideally, a resume has sections like an objective statement, summary of skills or experience, core competencies, employment details, educational background/training/certification and personal data.
In today’s competitive market, resume has become a tool to get a job or at least to showcase your skills to a potential recruiter. A perfect resume is usually one or two pages document depending upon the length and breadth of experience.
During the start of this article, we have provided a meaningful comparison between the resume and a movie trailer and it seems quite interesting. Generally, we watch the teaser or trailer and decide/judge whether we would like to spend our time and money to watch the movie or not. The same goes with a resume.
Seeing a resume a recruiter decides whether he would like to call up the person for face to face interview or not. Now, when it all comes to a piece of paper, you need to ensure that your resume is a perfect answer to what the recruiter is looking for.
A resume is a marketing tool which advertises about your unique skills, qualification and work experience in a professional manner. It captures the essence of your career objectives, what are your strengths and potential abilities, your interests and equally provides insights to the recruiters on the possible avenues where your skills and abilities may be channelized on being appointed after an interview.
As the resume is a kind of advertisement of your skills, it should talk about you as a professional. By going through a resume, a recruiter should clearly understand one fact, and that is, “what will be company’s advantage if they hire you?” If your resume answers this question perfectly, half of the battle is won.
Remember the core purpose of the resume is to grab a job and even before a job, to secure an interview which should later convert into a decent job. One thing you need to keep in mind is that your resume should have relevant keywords. For example, if you are managing sales, marketing, customer relationship, make sure your resume has these keywords. And not just keywords, you have to also ensure that those keywords are getting substantiated with facts.
Make every effort to keep your resume unique because a recruiter will be looking for something distinctive in a heap of many resumes. Achievements are something which sets your resume apart from others. Make sure you enlist your accomplishments and give it importance/weightage.
Now the question arises why do you need a resume? There are various good reasons why you need a professionally written resume:
A well-written resume can leave a lasting impact on recruiter’s mind. A well-written resume should be an answer to recruiter’s question that why they should hire you? So, if you want to make the very first impression work for you, you surely have to put in some extra effort to build your resume and keep it up to date.
Now that we know what a resume is and why do you need one, let’s get started.
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