Spec me a CV bitches
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Spec me a CV bitches
I know this is subjective, but I've not applied for a job in 9 years and even then I got my only other job because I was a graduate who'd work for minimum wage. So I've no experience of CVs. I'm hoping that a couple of our professional 5punkers will have experience of reading and writing them, and if so, do you have any advice? I could go googling stuff, but the internet is full of advice, mostly bad, and with no experience of what to look for I can't seperate the good information from the bad.
I've an inkling of what I should be doing - tailor each CV to the employer/job, keep it below two pages, stick to relevent experience and qualifications. Problem is, I don't really know where to start.
I've an inkling of what I should be doing - tailor each CV to the employer/job, keep it below two pages, stick to relevent experience and qualifications. Problem is, I don't really know where to start.
Doggers!
I'm by no means saying my CV is awesome, but It has got me a few interviews and a few jobs over the past 6 years. I'll happily send it over for you to have a look at along with various tailored covering letters if you want. As you said, keep your CV punchy and concise, but memorable.
Your covering letter is the key to an interview. Get the job description/person specification and compose the covering letter with ACTUAL examples of times where you've performed that action. For example:
Person specification says
"The ideal candidate should have team leadership skills"
A paragraph in your covering letter would be
"In University, I was appointed as team leader. Our task, as a team, was to program a piece of interactive learning software. As team leader I composed a project management chart detailing significant milestones in the project BLAH BLAH BLAH"
Litter it with actual examples. Too many people will just be generic "I was a team pleader in uni" when asked for an example where they led a team. Give the cunts details, they love 'em.
Also be ridiculously positive, like it's the best job you've ever fucking SEEN! People don't want negativity nowadays.
Apologies if any of this seems at all patronising, I'm just explaining how I would go about it.
I'm by no means saying my CV is awesome, but It has got me a few interviews and a few jobs over the past 6 years. I'll happily send it over for you to have a look at along with various tailored covering letters if you want. As you said, keep your CV punchy and concise, but memorable.
Your covering letter is the key to an interview. Get the job description/person specification and compose the covering letter with ACTUAL examples of times where you've performed that action. For example:
Person specification says
"The ideal candidate should have team leadership skills"
A paragraph in your covering letter would be
"In University, I was appointed as team leader. Our task, as a team, was to program a piece of interactive learning software. As team leader I composed a project management chart detailing significant milestones in the project BLAH BLAH BLAH"
Litter it with actual examples. Too many people will just be generic "I was a team pleader in uni" when asked for an example where they led a team. Give the cunts details, they love 'em.
Also be ridiculously positive, like it's the best job you've ever fucking SEEN! People don't want negativity nowadays.
Apologies if any of this seems at all patronising, I'm just explaining how I would go about it.
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HereComesPete
- Throbbing Cupcake

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Pretty much what those gents
said.
I've gone for jobs where I haven't had the qualifications stated but I've offered reasons why I could do the job regardless and been given the interview.
Like tandino said, their job always the best thing since sliced bread whilst getting sucked off by a hooker. And examples of situations where you've lead/been lead/targets/deadlines met etc are good. Even if they can't see anything you've worked on, tell them you did and that it was fucking mint because you/your team made/fixed it.
A well tailored cover letter for a job where there's a lot of candidates is a far heavier hitter than the cv itself in the initial stages. Get it good enough to make the initial cut and you're halfway to the face to face bit.
Trends on cv's regarding personalisation tend to flit about, some jobs you're recommended to stack the tech data and leave the hobbies well alone, some to inject quite a bit of inter-personal crap.
If you get a no, ask why it was no. Even if they say they don't do that, if you've got them on the phone they're unlikely to just hang up if you push the issue.
Above all, keep faith in yourself and your abilities.
I've gone for jobs where I haven't had the qualifications stated but I've offered reasons why I could do the job regardless and been given the interview.
Like tandino said, their job always the best thing since sliced bread whilst getting sucked off by a hooker. And examples of situations where you've lead/been lead/targets/deadlines met etc are good. Even if they can't see anything you've worked on, tell them you did and that it was fucking mint because you/your team made/fixed it.
A well tailored cover letter for a job where there's a lot of candidates is a far heavier hitter than the cv itself in the initial stages. Get it good enough to make the initial cut and you're halfway to the face to face bit.
Trends on cv's regarding personalisation tend to flit about, some jobs you're recommended to stack the tech data and leave the hobbies well alone, some to inject quite a bit of inter-personal crap.
If you get a no, ask why it was no. Even if they say they don't do that, if you've got them on the phone they're unlikely to just hang up if you push the issue.
Above all, keep faith in yourself and your abilities.
I'm hoping for the former. I struggle with the hobbies and interests part, it's usually got just movies and gaming on it, which don't look great.HereComesPete wrote:Trends on cv's regarding personalisation tend to flit about, some jobs you're recommended to stack the tech data and leave the hobbies well alone, some to inject quite a bit of inter-personal crap.
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HereComesPete
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ProfHawking
- Zombie

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Grimmie
- Master of Soviet Propaganda

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You mean competitive on-line gaming within a community that you help moderate.Dog Pants wrote:I'm hoping for the former. I struggle with the hobbies and interests part, it's usually got just movies and gaming on it, which don't look great.
And that you organise and lead events within the group, contributing with your excellent writing and storytelling skills.
Or something.
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FatherJack
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I need to get around to updating my CV now I need a new job at the end of the year.
My last one is rather out of date, given I wrote it in 1995, it did work for me though. It was printed out in dark green using Wingdings computer symbols as bullet points - would seem terribly cheesy now, but got it noticed by the (all female) interview team.
My last one is rather out of date, given I wrote it in 1995, it did work for me though. It was printed out in dark green using Wingdings computer symbols as bullet points - would seem terribly cheesy now, but got it noticed by the (all female) interview team.

