6 Reasons Your Résumé Goes Straight to My Trash
When I review résumés, a surprising percentage of them go straight into the reject pile because of mistakes that could have been avoided. Here are the top reasons why:
1. Your cover letter is clearly a form letter that you're mass-mailing—and it doesn't even relate to the job. The most extreme version of this is when an applicant leaves another company's name in the letter by mistake. But plenty of times, the letter is simply utterly generic and displays no sign that the candidate bothered to read my job posting.
2. Your E-mail displays your name as "Sexy Mama" or similar ilk. I'm not exaggerating—I received a résumé from "Sexy Mama" last week. This sort of nickname or E-mail address is so unprofessional that it trumps all else. If you like to traverse the Web as "Sexy Mama" or "Hot Chica" or whatever, go for it—but unless you're applying for jobs in the adult entertainment industry, get an E-mail account with a professional name for job searching. They're free. (And if anyone out there does this and can explain what you are thinking, please E-mail me and explain, because I am baffled by it. I almost wrote back to "Sexy Mama" to ask her.)
3. Your résumé and/or cover letter have spelling errors or typos. Yes, these things matter. I'm assuming that you're on your best behavior when job searching, and if your communications aren't polished now, they definitely won't be once you're on the job.
4. Your résumé lists an objective totally unrelated to the position I have open. If you're applying for, say, a communications position, your objective shouldn't say you're seeking a finance position in the healthcare field. Really, just get rid of the objective altogether. It rarely helps, often hurts, and always takes up valuable real estate that could be better used to showcase your accomplishments. If you want to talk about your career objective and how this position fits it, use the cover letter for that.
5. The job requires a particular type of experience and you have none, and you didn't acknowledge that or try to overcome it in your cover letter.
6. You're wildly overqualified and didn't address that in your cover letter, so I'm left to assume you don't understand the nature of the position.
In short, here's the formula: Be meticulous and professional, customize your résumé and cover letter for the job you're applying for, and answer the obvious questions a hiring manager is likely to have about your application. You still may not get the interview, but you'll at least get serious consideration.
Alison Green is chief of staff for a medium-size nonprofit where she oversees day-to-day management of the staff as well as hiring, firing, and staff development. She is working with the Management Center to coauthor a book on nonprofit management. Her writings have been published in the Washington Post, the New York Times, Maxim, and dozens of other publications. She blogs at Ask a Manager.
***
If you'd like to get smart, savvy career advice every weekday, sign up for the "On Careers" RSS feed here.
Tags: careers
Tools:
Share
|
| Comments (13) | Print
Reader Comments
Out of the trash?
As I read all of the advice given and am absolutely certain that I do not do any of the things listed, I still have to ask; how do I getting in the “call for an interview” pile? Its very discouraging to customize a resume and cover letter for every job applied for, literally spending hours researching companies, translating my past experience and education to specifically fit the needs of the job posting, double and triple checking for errors, having at least two people proof read everything I send out and then not even getting a phone call. So for all of those that decide who gets that phone call any thoughts how I can increase my chances of getting at least noticed?
Also my email address, ringtone, voicemail are all professional!
sexy mama
haha what a dumb whore lol she should get a better e-mail
Additional Reasons to Trash Resume
I work at a staffing agency where we place technical professional people. Whenever we receive job postings from clients, we normally e-mail them out to our candidates in our database, as well as posting them on our web site and craigslist.com (without the client info). If the ad says that the firm needs specific information included when submitting the resume, for God's sake, follow the damned instructions. It is a bigger pain for us, especially since we work with a reduced staff, to sift through resumes of people who apparently slept through the reading comprehension portion of their grade school reading classes. Also, sending reply messages that state that, "Oh geez, you'll probably just ship the job off to India or Mexico anyway" or calling and whining about how every employer in the county of {fill in the blank} is trying to screw you over, will definitely earn you my permanent disrespect and an even more permanent purging of your resume out of our database. Take your chip on your shoulder to your county mental health services office. With being unemployed, I'm sure they'll be more than willing to give you free counseling. (Trust me, you'll need it.)
advertisement

