Archive for the ‘Education and Training’ Category


Resume Tips???

I just read this from a yahoo.com ad and the title was: 10 Words and Terms That Ruin a Resume

I had to display this because I just had a class that stated most of this to be true.  My question is instead of Salary expecting, maybe that employers should state what they are willing to pay with a small range so that we can decide if we should even apply.  Then as for References that is not always a great thing to put on a resume because of 2 reasons; 1 is because if a person has had many jobs then most likely the references are not there anymore. 2 If you are applying to lots of jobs and you keep listing references, those people are not wanting to keep giving references to people they don’t know.

1. “Salary negotiable”

Yes, they know. If you’re wasting a precious line of your resume on this term, it looks as though you’re padding — that you’ve run out of things to talk about. If your salary is not negotiable, that would be somewhat unusual. (Still, don’t put that on your resume either.)

2. “References available by request”

See the preceding comment about unnecessary terms.

3. “Responsible for ______”

Reading this term, the recruiter can almost picture the C-average, uninspired employee mechanically fulfilling his job requirements — no more, no less. Having been responsible for something isn’t something you did — it’s something that happened to you. Turn phrases like “responsible for” into “managed,” “led” or other decisive, strong verbs.

4. “Experience working in ______”

Again, experience is something that happens to you — not something you achieve. Describe your background in terms of achievements.

5. “Problem-solving skills”

You know who else has problem-solving skills? Monkeys. Dogs. On your resume, stick to skills that require a human.

6. “Detail-oriented”

So, you pay attention to details. Well, so does everyone else. Don’t you have something unique to tell the hiring manager? Plus, putting this on your resume will make that accidental typo in your cover letter or resume all the more comical.

7. “Hardworking”

Have you ever heard the term “show — don’t tell”? This is where that might apply. Anyone can call himself a hard worker. It’s a lot more convincing if you describe situations in concrete detail in which your hard work benefited an employer.

8. “Team player”

See the preceding comment about showing instead of telling. There are very few jobs that don’t involve working with someone else. If you have relevant success stories about collaboration, put them on your resume. Talk about the kinds of teams you worked on, and how you succeeded.

9. “Proactive”

This is a completely deflated buzzword. Again, show rather than tell.

10. “Objective”

This term isn’t always verboten, but you should use it carefully. If your objective is to get the job you’ve applied for, there’s no need to spell that out on your resume with its own heading. A resume objective is usually better replaced by a career summary describing your background, achievements and what you have to offer an employer. An exception might be if you haven’t applied for a specific job and don’t have a lot of experience that speaks to the position you’d like to achieve.

THIS WAS FROM MONSTER.COM

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Last Updated on Thursday, 22 December 2011 08:52

This is a great day because I had just a lot of things happen all in a positive way.  I’m going back to school at the LA Film school in Hollywood.  Going to continue my engineering and become a Sound Engineer.   For those of you not sure what that is well lets just say I will be able to work the sound boards at concerts, edit music for movies and create sound tracks for all type of things.  I look forward to this and my new career.

I seem to have misled everyone on one of my last post so I want to clear this up.  When I stated that I was like a lot of people today and having a hard time I meant that I have lost my investment homes and I was laid off of my last job but I still have several projects working.  I do have a roof over my head, very caring friends and nothing but positive situations  to look forward to.   I understand the economy is very bad all around the world and especially for us in Calif. but at the same time there is always something to get involved in.  Just keep it clean and don’t give up because this is a place of so many opportunities.

Hang in, get help and let your close friends be there for you because maybe you have been there for them at some point.

Hope you have a wonderful week because I’m going to enjoy every day above ground.

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Last Updated on Tuesday, 18 October 2011 10:19

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