10 Great Entry-Level Jobs With Flexibility For New College Grads
Sunday, April 12, 2020
2016 Resume Trends The New, The Now What You Must Know - Work It Daily
2016 Resume Trends â" The New, The Now What You Must Know - Work It Daily An interesting study was published by Microsoft in May of this year about how our attention spans have changed over the past several years. In 2000 we had a 12-second attention span, and in 2013 a mere eight-second attention span. We now, as a whole, have a one-second-shorter attention span than a goldfish. Isnât that interesting? Ok, shocking is probably more like itâ"and also not very comforting to know when youâre job searching and trying your hardest to get a hiring manager/employer/recruiterâ¦someoneâ¦to pay attention to resume trends. Related:Top 7 Resume Trends For 2015 So what exactly does this shortened attention span mean for your job searchâ"and more specifically, your resume? It means trends and times are changing and so should your resume. Here is my top-ten list of resume trends for 2016, which, as youâll notice, will be largely impacted on this yearâs findings. 2016 Resume Trend #1: Get In, Tell Your Story, And Get Out Make every word count when youâre writing. In an article like this one Iâve chosen to use bold subtitles for those who like to scan or skim an article to get the main points but donât want to dig in deeper for the details. Iâve also provided my opinion and the extra details for those who like context and an explanation to go with the points in bold. Consider doing the same with your resume. Use short, tweet-sized sentences to communicate key accomplishments, your branding statements, facts you donât want the employer to miss. Ideally, you want critical information CALLED OUT on the resume. 2016 Resume Trend #2: Be A Ruthless Editor Create a master resume and then go back and edit it until you have a leaner draft. Then go back and cut even more out. When you write your resume ask yourself, âIs this critical to my story or what Iâm trying to convey to the employer?â If it isnât, cut it out. Save the discarded content in a master file so you have it if you decide later you really do need it. However, consider yourself a ruthless editor, evaluate every word, every sentence for how you can make it shorter and more conciseâ"then slash and trash what you donât need. 2016 Resume Trend #3: Write For Scanners/Skimmers Write for scanners and skimmers. You know the people who go through and only read the headlines of articles and newspapers or scroll through articles and only read the bolded bullet points to get the general gist of what itâs saying? This reason is exactly why newspapers and news articles start with a great headline, give the most critical facts/details first, and then gradually fill in the not-so-critical details further down in the story. They know you want the important information first and donât want to wait for it. Do the same in your resume. Start with your branding statement and make it answer the decision makerâs questions: âWhy should I care?â or âWhatâs in it for me?â When time is of the essence, answering these questions first gives readers exactly what they need to know up front; then they can choose to keep on reading for any details. I think the strategy of using a profile summary or career summary is now history. Instead, I think it should include a personal-brand snapshot. Give the reader newsworthy information in short, effective statements so they can get the facts and move on. 2016 Resume Trend #4: Use A Formula To Help Flesh Out Your Story In resume writing we call them CAR or SAR statements. Iâve also seen the acronym PARI. Essentially, youâre sharing a challenge/situation/problem, the action you took to address it, and what the result was. Ideally you want to frame the result by sharing how it positively impacted your employer or client. These are the kinds of statements that make impact and tell a story but also give the reader context. Remember to keep it short; mercilessly edit it down to the least common denominator. In resume writing itâs also a wise practice to lead with the result/impact to the client or employer because this is usually quantifiable. Here is a quick example of what I mean by a S.A.R. statement: Situation/Challenge/Problem: Company operated at a loss of $960,000 in 2014. Action: Personally vetted by CEO for company turnaround. Cut costs by 30%, revamped hiring practices to reduce turnover, overhauled budget and spending practices. Result/Impact: Delivered $650,000 profit in 2015. Now you can take the content from the answers to these three questions and put together a great bullet point for your resume. Fill in each with your own experiences and expertise. 2016 Resume Trend #5: Neuroscience Says Pictures Win Ninety percent of information transmitted to the brain is visual, and visuals are processed 60,000X faster in the brain than text. (Sources: 3M Corporation and Zabisco) and 40% of people will respond better to visual information than plain text. (Source: Zabisco). Use graphs, charts, and visual presentations whenever possible to share content with your audience. If itâs quantifiable you can almost always create a visual to communicate it. On social media platforms, images or photos are shared or liked more than text. In this article they share research that states photos on Facebook are shared 75% more than articles, links or text. Although this isnât research on resumes in particular, it does speak to how much our brains and eyes are drawn to visual stimuli. I wrote an article this autumn on what employers see when you apply on LinkedIn. The content was revelatory for many job seekers and received great praise for its insightfulness. Be that as it may, when I created an infographic of the same content within the article and posted it on LinkedIn it was shared significantly more than the article itself. The article was published by LinkedIn on several of its channels, but was shared only four times and viewed 700. The infographic was never published on any of LinkedInâs channels, yet it was shared 53+ times and has been viewed 2,000+ times. Evidence that visual content gets more attention. 2016 Resume Trend #6: Personal Branding IS Visual TOO In resume writing (and the job search business in general) we tend to get hung up on the idea that our brand is all about the words we useâ"and it is. As career expert Deb Dib calls it, your personal brand is your âwhy buy ROIâ. However, itâs also communicated visuallyâ"not just in words but with word pictures and with images. Certain colors have specific meanings to your personal brand! Check out this video from Personalbranding.tv to find out what your personal branding color is and consider that it may be time to include your color brand in your resume: As a side note thatâs not resume related, your LinkedIn profile is also a good place to incorporate visual branding and your personal brand color. 2016 Resume Trend #7: Bite-Sized Sentences Funny how twitter causes us to communicate our thoughts in 140 characters or fewer. Even Twitter knows our attention spans are waning in the digital age. Our brains have adapted to new ways of absorbing content and interacting with the Internet. Now youâre forced to keep your point short and sweet. For a superfluous person like me who loves the details, I used to get so mad at Twitter for making me convey my thoughts in such short, bite-sized portions, but it really has become the necessity of our society. With ever-decreasing attention spans, writing tweet-sized resume sentences is a sound strategy. And itâs not a trend I see fading away in the coming years either. The next time you write a sentence for your resume, see how many characters are included. And then see if you can get it down to 140 characters or fewer without losing impact. Consider what is essential and what is critical. Ditch the essential and run with the critical. 2016 Resume Trend #8: Money, Money, Money How you made it, generated it, contributed to, saved, or helped someone else in the processâ"itâs all about the almighty dollar. A great example for a direct contributor is how their actions impacted the bottom-line profitability of the company. For an executive assistant it may be how her initiative and foresight allowed her boss to save money or increase billable hours. Whatever you do, find the connection to dollars and share it. If nothing you did in some way affected costs savings or revenue generation, find the bleeding need your target company/audience has and communicate how what youâve done in the past has stopped the bleeding! 2016 Resume Trend #9: Infographic Resumes Infographic resumes are growing in popularity! Donât believe me? Just search them on Pinterest. Does an infographic resume replace a traditional resume? No. Does it work for everyone? No. In some situationsâ"and for many job seekersâ"there is a time and place to use an infographic resume. Iâll let you in on a little secret tooâ"you can make your own! There is a plethora of sites you can use to design your own infographic resume, including Visme, Visually, Venngage, Piktochart, Infogr.am, and easel.ly. Iâm confident you could use these sites to create graphics to incorporate into your resume too. There are some important points you need to consider when youâre evaluating whether an infographic resume is right for you. Theyâre not for every industry or position. However, they can work very well for industries like marketing, sales, technology, social media, graphic design or telecomm. You may find that innovative companies, smaller organizations, or start-ups are even drawn to infographic resumes. I can see infographic resumes being a great tool when tapping into the hidden job market as youâre bypassing traditional HR departments. A January 2015 survey stated 68% of people would look at an infographic resume, 32% said it depends. Interestingly enough, not one person said they wouldnât look at one. 2016 Resume Trend #10: Say Goodbye To ATS The demise of applicant tracking software is upon us. Employers are discovering that computer software systems may be great at scanning keywords on a resume, but theyâre not so great at discerning talent, loyalty, dedication, hard work, and most importantly FIT. While I understand ATS has its usefulness (thereâs no way an HR representative can feasibly read thousands of resumes that pour in every day) their practicality and validity are waning. Resumes, which used to function as your âfirst impressionâ to an employer, are now quickly becoming the second or third thing an employer will see about you. With the rise of social media sites such as LinkedIn, website resumes, portfolios, video resumes, and job-search strategies allowing job seekers to tap into the hidden job market and bypass sending a resume as a first introduction, the human eye is quickly becoming the #1 gatekeeper. Keep these trends in mind when you sit down to write your resume, and youâll be ten steps ahead of your competition. Having a hard time writing your own resume? Letâs chat! Visit my website, call my office at 1.800.991.5187, or connect with me on LinkedIn to discuss how I help busy job seekers create interview-winning resumes, cover letters, and LinkedIn profiles that cut their job search time by 50% or more and secure interviews in two weeks or less. WANT MORE ARTICLES LIKE THIS? Check out: 2016 Cover Letter Trends INFOGRAPHIC: What Employers See When You Apply on LinkedIn Iâd love to know what you think the most important resume trends for 2016 will be! Share your thoughts! In the meantime, letâs network! Feel free to send me an invitation to connect on LinkedIn Related Posts 3 Tools For Creating An Attention-Grabbing Resume Optimizing Your Resume With Keywords How To Get An Employerâs Attention In 20 Seconds About the author Jessica Holbrook Hernandez, CEO of Great Resumes Fast is an expert resume writer, career and personal branding strategist, author, and presenter. Want to work with the best resume writer? If you would like us to personally work on your resume, cover letter, or LinkedIn profileâ"and dramatically improve their response ratesâ"then check out our professional and executive resume writing services at GreatResumesFast.com or contact us for more information if you have any questions. 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.