5 things you should never do on your resume

Sep 11
09:42

2015

Supriya Nigam

Supriya Nigam

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Remember, if you view your resume as a hurdle, you perhaps do not take it seriously as you should be. You will understand its significance if you value it as a game-changer. Learn 5 mistakes that people generally do while writitng their resume.

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What is your resume? It is a stress you must endure walking in an interview with any hope of getting hired? Or,5 things you should never do on your resume Articles it is a descriptive representation of your professional life – ready to be shared with prospective employers to make career-forging, lasting connections?

These are a few common expressions that most of us think when it comes to writing our resume, isn't?

Remember, if you view your resume as a hurdle, you perhaps do not take it seriously as you should be.  You will understand its significance if you value it as a game-changer. Regrettably, those who are new to the resume world and even experienced job seekers often make errors that can take them out of contention.

Here are 5 mistakes to watch out in your professional resume format

1. Lying

People falsify their resume all the time. It is an urge for every candidate to make their resume stand out. Hence, they articulate their resume in a falsified manner. But, the thing is, it will come back to haunt you. It is a small world, and once you enter the corporate world, it will get smaller with every passing day.

 

  • Do not bend or stretch the truth
  • Do not claim experiences or duties you never had
  • Do not change the employment dates to justify gaps in your timeline

 

2. Adding accomplishments that are not

We get it. You were voted as prom queen or king by your peers and most likely succeed in business by your peers in high school. But, are those real accomplishments? The last thing, you want to do is puff-up your resume with those awards and achievements that have no relevance to the career you are rushing after.

Mention following, if applicable:

  • Academic Achievements
  • Awards received for community services, etc.

3. Stating an unattainable goal

The topmost heading in almost every resume is "career objective" that needs 2-4 sentences in its description. However, it says a lot about you and your future career plan. Setting an unattainable goal and mentioning it in your resume's career objective just piles on bad. Scratch that section and you have more room to say relevant things – achievements, experience and skills.

4. Omitting personal information

The hiring manager likes to know more about their candidates in personal front. But they are least interested in – you have 2.5 kids, you coach your child's soccer team, or you have a minivan, etc. All these information will be wash out once you start your career in business or IT world.

5. Citing previous salaries

Mentioning former wages on your resume! Who does that? If you are in a habit of doing so or intended to do then STOP right here.

There are so many reasons for not doing this? It gives your employer a springboard for deciding your new salary. Your goal should be to make more. Do not provide any means to your prospective interviewer to denigrate your true worth.

If you are interested in reading more about professional resume format dos and don’ts for senior level job, then Read Here!