I'd like to thank everyone who commented below with suggestions that I've added. Along with jeffreyf for pming me his suggestions.
Remove these ads by
Signing UpStep 1: What you'll need
Depending on what your resume is for, you'll want some of these sections:
Objective
Education
Experience
Computer Skills
Extra Activities
Internships
Honors and Awards
Other Qualifications
References
DOB (If you feel it's needed)*
Once you know which sections apply to your resume, you can continue.
*Your ability to get some jobs may depend on your age, so for a job like that, include it. If you don't think that your age is important, you can leave it out.









































Visit Our Store »
Go Pro Today »




It wil be useful. Now, have you some tips to enter in any oil companies?
Hahaha
Thank you
Yes, people in the corp world freak out about age stuff. It's a big No No. They will say " I can't know your age, therefore have any preformed notions about a job candidate."
And B&H does hire predominantly from the Hasidim demographic. In fact, they bus in employees from their neighborhood in Williamsburg.
My 2cents.
Here are a few tips (at least for business-area jobs):
DO NOT USE MULTIPLE FONTS...in fact...
USE ONLY ONE "BORING" FONT
DO NOT USE FLASHY PAPER (USE STANDARD IVORY OR WHITE LINEN)
USE TABS TO LINE UP DATES, LOCATIONS, TITLES, ETC
CENTER NAME, ADDRESS and CONTACT INFO
Also:
No date of birth is needed.
Years of education and work should be included.
In certain cases an "Objective" can be eliminated instead using a "skills" list.
A GREAT resource I have found is this site:
http://www.lifeclever.com/give-your-resume-a-face-lift/
GOOD LUCK!
And for those moving into a new field... without said 10 year of experience - age may help (again, depends where you're going to work). If it works against you -- well, I personally wouldn't want to work there :p While age discrimination is illegal, it happens. So for those who haven't even hit their 30's -- it's probably better not to include your age as statistically, the older person (with limits) wins :/
Now again, use your own judgment. Your employer likely went through the same thing -- so s/he is very likely to know what you're trying to do. If you feel your too young/old that you should try to hide (or just don't say anything at all) -- well then your employer might think the same thing (you're too young/old for the job).
Of course... its a rather big debate including or not including your DOB on your resume... One school of thought is it might hurt you if you include it - don't risk it while another is it might hurt you not to include it -- don't risk it. Not only are you looking for a job, but you're also probing to see if that's the job you want ;)
Again, my expertise is for "business" type resumes. Artistic jobs certainly may call for resumes that are more "artistic" which inevitably will have different type fonts, spacing, etc.
Resumes will (should) vary somewhat depending on where you are submitting them. When sending your resume to a large company, your resume will probably first get "evaluated" by moderately clueless drones in a Human Resources Department, using moderately clueless search software. That means your resume has to contain all the appropriate key phrases. Then it will get forwarded on to a hiring manager, at which point it probably needs to have content that is NOT just a list of keywords, and needs to give insight into what you can actually DO (and what you HAVE done.)
Be specific about what you did, especially if your job title was ambiguous and/or you have one of those "starter" jobs (like "computer operator") where what you did could vary from "I sat there and watched for the computer to catch fire" to much more impressive things.
I suppose that with employers doing web searches on applicants, you should include search terms for finding web content that you're particularly proud of: "wrote tutorials for EAGLE PCB cad software at http://www.instructables.com under the username "westfw"" (but there should be enough in your description to sound good even if no one follows up...)