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Casual Articles - CV Writing - Write a Perfect CV
Questions To Ask At An Interview rk Experience’ and
include all placements, paid and unpaid work. If you have been in fulltime
employment for the last two jobs this should be under the heading of ‘Career
History’. Do not use both headings in the CV. Whichever heading you use you
must include dates, name and location of company and a brief description of what
your job entailed including all the positive contributions you made to the
company.An interview provides an applicant the opportunity to leave a positive impression in more ways than one. We understand that it is advisable for the applicant to have an idea of what questions will be asked during the interview, so that they can mentally prepare their answers and cohesively relate it to the person conducting the interview. What we sometimes forget, is that it is also advisable to prepare your own questions to ask at the interview.There’s no way of knowing exactly what to expect on your way for an interview. There is no common format. It varies depending on the personality of the interviewer, and the requirements of the hiring company. Some interviewers are very professional and might appear cold, and distant; while ot Education should be described in terms of selling yourself to the employer. Include all relevant courses, dates passed and name of school or college. But, leave out poor grades and failures. These will not help you get invited for interview. If you have a university degree you can leave out all of your lower qualifications. Mature applicants may want to leave out ‘Education’ altogether, as your career history and skills are probably more important. Skills can be described under three headings: Technical Skills, Professional Courses and Additional Skills. Technical How to Start a Gift Basket Business Your CV is a gateway to getting an interview for that ideal job. It is your
opportunity to provide a good first impression but you only have two sides of A4
paper in which to do it. It is not surprising then that most people have trouble
getting started.The gifting market is a $253 billion market, meaning that almost 1% of the money spent on retail is to buy a gift. This is great news for the gift professionals everywhere. With several major gifting holidays, and many other gifting occasions throughout the year, opportunity is knocking at your door.But how do you get started?Here are some basics needed to start a gift basket business:First, you need to do your research:-who is your competition? -who is your target market? -who are your potential customers?Write a business plan: this will help you put your goals and ideas into a clear format, and serve as a place to go back and check how you are doing.Write a marketing plan: Firstly, you need to know what the employer is thinking. The employer suddenly has a vacancy. Filling the vacancy is going to take up valuable time that he would rather spend doing his normal job. He would love to find the perfect person immediately rather than plough through hundreds of CV’s. It is often a dull, thankless task. The employer has a job description in front of him. It includes experience or qualifications that are essential for the job and some attributes that are desirable but not absolutely necessary. He starts going through the pile of CV’s on his desk. He scans each one for about 30 seconds and makes a judgement. He simply hasn’t got time to read the CV that is more than two pages and all the relevant information is hidden in long paragraphs. - He files it in the bin. Fancy formatting, coloured text or multiple fonts do not impress him. Is this person trying to hide their lack of experience for the job behind an artistic CV? – He files it in the bin. He notices spelling mistakes and poor punctuation. This person is just sloppy! – He files the CV in the bin. He breaths a sigh of relief, the pile on his desk is smaller already. He makes another coffee and then starts reading……………………….
This should tell you a few things about writing your CV.
Keep it concise and to the point. The employer needs to see your work experience, skills and achievements in the first 30 seconds of scanning your CV. He knows what he is looking for. You have what he is looking for. Don’t distract him from your relevant skills by adding in lots of unnecessary information. Keep it simple. Plain formatting, simply laid out under headings. The employer wants to see exactly when, where and what you have done. Fancy formatting makes your CV difficult to read. It may make your CV stand out from the rest but for the wrong reasons. Keep checking your english. Good spelling, punctuation and grammar are essential. It is the first step in your personal presentation to an employer. It says a lot about you. Also, poor english distracts the employer from reading the content of your CV.
Now the content:
Contact details should be displayed on the first page. When he decides to invite you to interview you want him to see immediately how to contact you before he changes his mind!
Personal details should be limited to those that are absolutely necessary. Most employers expect to see your nationality and date of birth but you can choose to leave these out if you think they may go against you. Other personal details such as number of dependents, driving license and marital status can be included if it is not going to make your CV too long by including them. These can help employers to get a rounded picture of the person they are going to interview. Do not include names and ages of children or name of spouse. The employer is not interested at this stage. Interests can be included but only in one or two lines. It may provide a starting point at interview for general conversation before getting down to serious questions about your work experience. It also gives a rounded picture of you without taking up too much space on the CV. Profile is positioned prominently in your CV and should be used to sell yourself in one paragraph. It is an opportunity to sum up your skills, experience and general suitability for the job for which you are applying. Career History or Work Experience. The heading you use depends on the length of time you have been in fulltime employment. If you have recently left school or university you should use the heading ‘Work Experience’ and include all placements, paid and unpaid work. If you have been in fulltime employment for the last two jobs this should be under the heading of ‘Career History’. Do not use both headings in the CV. Whichever heading you use you must include dates, name and location of company and a brief description of what your job entailed including all the positive contributions you made to the company. Education should be described in terms of selling yourself to the employer. Include all relevant courses, dates passed and name of school or college. But, leave out poor grades and failures. These will not help you get invited for interview. If you have a university degree you can leave out all of your lower qualifications. Mature applicants may want to leave out ‘Education’ altogether, as your career history and skills are probably more important. Skills can be described under three headings: Technical Skills, Professional Courses and Additional Skills. Technical A New Reason to Read pages and
all the relevant information is hidden in long paragraphs. - He files it in the
bin.Why do we read? Well, we read for any number of reasons. I've read books for pure entertainment, to pass time, out of cohersion (school), or to learn about something I was interested in. Last year, however, I discovered a new reason I like to read. In reading Tim Sanders' Love Is the Killer App, a book about love and how it relates to business, Sanders suggests that we read because it allows us to share the knowledge and insight we learn with others. It makes us a more interesting and relevant person when we can suggest ideas or books that help solve other people's problems.Let me give one example of sharing book knowledge and the impact it had. I was looking for a graphic designer to do some work I needed done. I started to ask a Fancy formatting, coloured text or multiple fonts do not impress him. Is this person trying to hide their lack of experience for the job behind an artistic CV? – He files it in the bin. He notices spelling mistakes and poor punctuation. This person is just sloppy! – He files the CV in the bin. He breaths a sigh of relief, the pile on his desk is smaller already. He makes another coffee and then starts reading……………………….
This should tell you a few things about writing your CV.
Keep it concise and to the point. The employer needs to see your work experience, skills and achievements in the first 30 seconds of scanning your CV. He knows what he is looking for. You have what he is looking for. Don’t distract him from your relevant skills by adding in lots of unnecessary information. Keep it simple. Plain formatting, simply laid out under headings. The employer wants to see exactly when, where and what you have done. Fancy formatting makes your CV difficult to read. It may make your CV stand out from the rest but for the wrong reasons. Keep checking your english. Good spelling, punctuation and grammar are essential. It is the first step in your personal presentation to an employer. It says a lot about you. Also, poor english distracts the employer from reading the content of your CV.
Now the content:
Contact details should be displayed on the first page. When he decides to invite you to interview you want him to see immediately how to contact you before he changes his mind!
Personal details should be limited to those that are absolutely necessary. Most employers expect to see your nationality and date of birth but you can choose to leave these out if you think they may go against you. Other personal details such as number of dependents, driving license and marital status can be included if it is not going to make your CV too long by including them. These can help employers to get a rounded picture of the person they are going to interview. Do not include names and ages of children or name of spouse. The employer is not interested at this stage. Interests can be included but only in one or two lines. It may provide a starting point at interview for general conversation before getting down to serious questions about your work experience. It also gives a rounded picture of you without taking up too much space on the CV. Profile is positioned prominently in your CV and should be used to sell yourself in one paragraph. It is an opportunity to sum up your skills, experience and general suitability for the job for which you are applying. Career History or Work Experience. The heading you use depends on the length of time you have been in fulltime employment. If you have recently left school or university you should use the heading ‘Work Experience’ and include all placements, paid and unpaid work. If you have been in fulltime employment for the last two jobs this should be under the heading of ‘Career History’. Do not use both headings in the CV. Whichever heading you use you must include dates, name and location of company and a brief description of what your job entailed including all the positive contributions you made to the company. Education should be described in terms of selling yourself to the employer. Include all relevant courses, dates passed and name of school or college. But, leave out poor grades and failures. These will not help you get invited for interview. If you have a university degree you can leave out all of your lower qualifications. Mature applicants may want to leave out ‘Education’ altogether, as your career history and skills are probably more important. Skills can be described under three headings: Technical Skills, Professional Courses and Additional Skills. Technical The Art of Negotiating During a Job Offer adings. The
employer wants to see exactly when, where and what you have done. Fancy
formatting makes your CV difficult to read. It may make your CV stand out from
the rest but for the wrong reasons.When someone offers you a job you need to stop telling them why you deserve it and start thinking about how to make the situation work to your advantage. When an offer is presented, for the first time in the interview process, the candidate has the power. Here is an effective protocol for receiving a job offer:Thank the person for the offer. This is the time to appear humble. You’ve spent a significant amount of time telling your counterpart how great you are and now they believe you. Let them know that you are honored and flattered that they value you.Ask for time to think about it. Even if they offer you the most money you ever thought you’d get try to let some time pass. If nothing else, it shows your future em Keep checking your english. Good spelling, punctuation and grammar are essential. It is the first step in your personal presentation to an employer. It says a lot about you. Also, poor english distracts the employer from reading the content of your CV.
Now the content:
Contact details should be displayed on the first page. When he decides to invite you to interview you want him to see immediately how to contact you before he changes his mind!
Personal details should be limited to those that are absolutely necessary. Most employers expect to see your nationality and date of birth but you can choose to leave these out if you think they may go against you. Other personal details such as number of dependents, driving license and marital status can be included if it is not going to make your CV too long by including them. These can help employers to get a rounded picture of the person they are going to interview. Do not include names and ages of children or name of spouse. The employer is not interested at this stage. Interests can be included but only in one or two lines. It may provide a starting point at interview for general conversation before getting down to serious questions about your work experience. It also gives a rounded picture of you without taking up too much space on the CV. Profile is positioned prominently in your CV and should be used to sell yourself in one paragraph. It is an opportunity to sum up your skills, experience and general suitability for the job for which you are applying. Career History or Work Experience. The heading you use depends on the length of time you have been in fulltime employment. If you have recently left school or university you should use the heading ‘Work Experience’ and include all placements, paid and unpaid work. If you have been in fulltime employment for the last two jobs this should be under the heading of ‘Career History’. Do not use both headings in the CV. Whichever heading you use you must include dates, name and location of company and a brief description of what your job entailed including all the positive contributions you made to the company. Education should be described in terms of selling yourself to the employer. Include all relevant courses, dates passed and name of school or college. But, leave out poor grades and failures. These will not help you get invited for interview. If you have a university degree you can leave out all of your lower qualifications. Mature applicants may want to leave out ‘Education’ altogether, as your career history and skills are probably more important. Skills can be described under three headings: Technical Skills, Professional Courses and Additional Skills. Technical Nike / Sears / Kmart can be included if it is not going to make your CV too long by
including them. These can help employers to get a rounded picture of the person
they are going to interview. Do not include names and ages of children or name
of spouse. The employer is not interested at this stage.The Sears-Kmart merger hopes to fabricate some sort of silver lining for both retailers but instead seems to embody the inevitable philosophy of "going down together." Kmart, an already sinking ship, certainly worsens conditions for Sears, and Sears does not have a strong enough current to keep Kmart afloat when there are enterprises like Wal*Mart and Target constantly blasting holes in the stern with brand messages of "smart and classy."On the opposite end of the branding spectrum, Nike sits at the top of the todem and watches the plethora of other brands struggling beneath. Nike is the only brand of shoe for which people are willing to pay two to three times more just to bear the swoosh emblem in the gym. Nike is the only athle Interests can be included but only in one or two lines. It may provide a starting point at interview for general conversation before getting down to serious questions about your work experience. It also gives a rounded picture of you without taking up too much space on the CV. Profile is positioned prominently in your CV and should be used to sell yourself in one paragraph. It is an opportunity to sum up your skills, experience and general suitability for the job for which you are applying. Career History or Work Experience. The heading you use depends on the length of time you have been in fulltime employment. If you have recently left school or university you should use the heading ‘Work Experience’ and include all placements, paid and unpaid work. If you have been in fulltime employment for the last two jobs this should be under the heading of ‘Career History’. Do not use both headings in the CV. Whichever heading you use you must include dates, name and location of company and a brief description of what your job entailed including all the positive contributions you made to the company. Education should be described in terms of selling yourself to the employer. Include all relevant courses, dates passed and name of school or college. But, leave out poor grades and failures. These will not help you get invited for interview. If you have a university degree you can leave out all of your lower qualifications. Mature applicants may want to leave out ‘Education’ altogether, as your career history and skills are probably more important. Skills can be described under three headings: Technical Skills, Professional Courses and Additional Skills. Technical You're Ready To Sell - But is Your Business? rk Experience’ and
include all placements, paid and unpaid work. If you have been in fulltime
employment for the last two jobs this should be under the heading of ‘Career
History’. Do not use both headings in the CV. Whichever heading you use you
must include dates, name and location of company and a brief description of what
your job entailed including all the positive contributions you made to the
company.Proper preparation for the sale of your business is one of the most important things you can do. If you were selling your car, you'd probably vacuum the inside and wash and polish the outside in the hope of selling it faster, or getting a few hundred dollars more-or both. In a competitive business sales environment and a world of ever more savvy buyers, it's more important than ever that you put a little "polish" on your business as well when it's time to sell. Start by putting yourself in the shoes of a potential buyer and ask yourself, "What can I do to make this business more attractive?" You, the seller, are an important part in the overall marketing plan, and your role starts with cleaning up your business-both physically Education should be described in terms of selling yourself to the employer. Include all relevant courses, dates passed and name of school or college. But, leave out poor grades and failures. These will not help you get invited for interview. If you have a university degree you can leave out all of your lower qualifications. Mature applicants may want to leave out ‘Education’ altogether, as your career history and skills are probably more important. Skills can be described under three headings: Technical Skills, Professional Courses and Additional Skills. Technical skills are those related to a technical, mechanical or engineering job. You need to list your skills and how recently you have used them e.g. Java Programming used in the last 3 years. Professional Courses are those that you have attended specifically for a particular job e.g. sales courses, hairdressing. Additional skills are anything else that may be relevant e.g. languages, keyboard skills, health and safety courses. Finally: Make it easy for him! Remember, the employer has very little time. He doesn’t know you yet and is only interested in what you can offer him and his company. Make it easy for him to: Scan your CV, Identify that you have the skills he is looking for. Pick up the phone to invite you in for an interview. E & O E - Copyright 2005 CVwriting.net
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