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Old 04-11-2011, 08:27 AM   #1
buigfess8848
 
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Default Microsoft Office 2010 Home And Student blog the-de

And speaking of resumes … Heather wrote a good post last night around the death with the one web page resume. Here’s what I had to say in Heather’s comments section: Use as many pages as you need to document your experience WHILE still staying concise. I review all resumes online so I can't see web page breaks anyway. I think the best resumes are ~2-3 pages because that gives you enough space to provide ample detail without getting long winded. As Heather says, don't worry about documenting ALL your experience, but provide enough detail so I can understand what your accomplishments, skills,Office Pro 2007 Key, etc are. A while back, I wrote a post called A good one-page resume for a technical candidate, and I still stand behind that format when you are applying for a purely technical role. If you look closely at the example I included in that post, the sample resume is actually two pages long, not 1. That’s the idea I’m talking about. It's clean; it's simple; it's concise ... but it's also super,microsoft Office 2010 Serial, super informative. gretchen P.S. When I originally posted that sample resume, a lot of people came back with comments like, “But I heard education should go last” and “I was told to put technical skills first.” You know what? It really doesn’t matter. This format is a guide,Cheap Office 2007, and if your resume is concise (aha,Office 2007 Enterprise Key!),Microsoft Office 2010 Home And Student, then you can put your sections in whatever order you please. ;-)
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