Your Resume Is Boring - And How to Increase Your Career Opportunities
Your Resume Is Boring - And How to Increase Your Career Opportunities


If you are wondering why you aren't called in to interview for great job opportunities, it's undoubtedly because your resume is not "powerful," and significantly undersells your abilities and experience. Having worked with major corporations on the design of their hiring and resume screening processes, I can attest that nearly all applicants fail to adequately highlight themselves in a way that increases their chances of being selected for further evaluation. While you may actually be a very good fit for the roles and the organizations to which you have applied, chances are that your boring resume doesn't instill that perception in the 15-20 seconds that those charged with screening resumes typically spend per applicant.

Even if you are not currently seeking a new role, failing to adequately highlight your achievements is a weakness that can impact you throughout your career. When it comes to performance appraisal, promotion consideration, and even day-to-day work assignment, learning how to influence the perception of you as a performer is key to ensuring that your career reaches the heights you desire. Over a decade ago, Fast Company magazine dubbed me the "Michael Jordan of Hiring," so if you want to have a resume as powerful and effective as Michael Jordan's actually is, consider each of the checklist items that follow.

Bolster the Content of Your Resume
While an unusual format may garner a few seconds more of attention, it may also prevent your resume from making it through electronic sorting and filtering tools used by larger corporations, so it is best to focus on what your resume says about you, versus the font, layout, and embellishment used. (This is true for online profiles as well; spending hours adjusting the color pallet and background and only minutes on the content doesn't facilitate stronger networking.) To maximize your appeal, focus on powerful "selling" points that cover your results, your impact on the organization, your skills and your ability to manage and lead.

For each of the items on the checklist, mentally review your working life, as well as other outside work responsibilities, for experiences/activities that relate to the item. For example, if you are seeking a role that calls for leadership skills, ask yourself how many times you were a leader of a project, a subproject, a team, or even a meeting/event. It does not matter if you were never formally appointed a leader or given a leadership title; if you have successfully led others, you should reference leadership as one of your attributes. Feature leadership terms throughout the content that comprises your resume, including sections covering your experience, education, and extracurricular activities.

Continue through the checklist until each of the factors appears at least once in your resume. When you have reached the end of the checklist, step back and admire all that you have done and accomplished, and can do again in your next job, and then raise your career goals and expectations!

Thirty "Power Factors" to Bolster the Content of Your Resume
  1. Result or accomplishment
    Everyone wants employees who produce results, so you need to find a way to list every significant result, output, or accomplishment. Your resume should include dozens of performance-related references.

    Example: Achieved 100% of ___ rollout project milestones while being first to implement ___ within the division.

  2. Quantify results in dollars
    The language of businesses is dollars, so characterizing the dollar impact of your accomplishments on the organization can be a key differentiator. It's OK to use estimates if you can explain your logic.

    Example: Implemented changes to the ___ process that resulted in a 32% increase output with no noticeable impact on quality.

  3. Skills used
    Listing the work you did but omitting the array of skills that you need to accomplish that work is a major omission in most resumes. You should never mention a task or accomplishment without highlighting both the technical and people skills required to accomplish it. Start with a list of all the skills that you can find in job descriptions of interest and try to mention each one.

    Example: Used root cause analysis to track an emerging issue back to a change that had been overlooked many times and used strong Internet research skills to gather supporting information and build a business case to successfully convince a skeptical manager to address the issue.

  4. Demonstrate the quality of the work
    You need to clearly demonstrate that you do high-quality work and that you understand and deliver quality consistently. Whenever you mention the volume of your work, also mention indications of its quality.

    Example: Consistently ranked top producer within the division while maintaining the lowest error rate and a 98% customer satisfaction rate.

  5. Awards and honors
    Mention all recognitions received for outstanding work. Don't forget shared and team awards, or informal awards created by local managers. Include awards received both in school and on the job.

    Example: Awarded employee of the month six times.

  6. Leadership
    Employees who can lead are always in demand. Mention cases where you led a team or project, even if informally. Highlight challenges addressed and leadership methods used.

    Example: Assembled and led a team responsible for developing a plan to expand scope of services provided, overcoming resource limitations, personality conflicts, and communication breakdowns to successfully present the case to the executive committee.

  7. Management tools used
    Even if you were not a manager by title, show that you did use common management tools and processes during your assignments.

    Example: Tools to highlight: team work, quality control, conflict resolution, CRM, time management, process reengineering.

  8. Technology tools
    Few things are more important these days than the ability to use and understand technology. Look for work examples that demonstrate your ability to learn and leverage emerging technology.

    Example: Used online groupware to create a project management office providing a common document repository, shared calendar, alerts, and staff assignments for key projects within our division.

  9. Worked with key people
    Individuals who have the opportunity to work with key people and executives are assumed to be among the best. If you worked for or with a famous individual, highlight them. Also include enough information so that the reader will know their importance.

    Example: Was selected by my divisional vice president to serve on a committee led by our CEO to evaluate key customer satisfaction.

  10. Level of innovation
    In a rapidly changing world, few things are more important than innovation. List new ideas or innovations you developed, even if the innovation was not implemented. Show that you are an outside-the-box thinker and often among the first to try new things.

    Example: Suggested adoption of three new technologies to improve internal productivity, two of which were immediately adopted, yielding a 73% increase in workforce efficiency.

  11. Buzzwords
    Business people love functional/general business buzzwords, and merely using them reveals that you are current. Buzzwords should be included in descriptions of both your experience and education.

    Example: Participated in a 6-Sigma evaluation exercise of our ___ process.

  12. Organization
    Almost every job requires organization, and if you can bring stability from chaos, you are valuable. Share how you took confusing and chaotic tasks and situations and effectively organized them so that they ran smoothly.

    Example: Assumed responsibility for combining project documentation and assignments of seven local offices being consolidated into one regional center of expertise.

  13. Problem identification
    If you can identify problems before they become severe, you are quite valuable. List situations where you identified a problem that no one else saw and show them that you thrive in situations where there are lots of problems.

    Example: Worked with individuals from four departments to uncover unique situations that led to key customer complaints resulting in significant changes to long-standing customer evaluation and support processes.

  14. People management responsibilities
    In addition to leadership skills, general people skills are often a differentiator for technical jobs. It is important to highlight any time you helped with training, hiring, supervision, coaching or employee development, even if done rarely and informally.

    Example: Assumed responsibility for training team of seven new hires during department lead's leave of absence.

  15. Financial responsibilities
    Demonstrating that you were given financial responsibility shows that management trusted you. List any time, even if it was brief, where you managed a budget, were responsible for cash or other major spending decisions.

    Example: Charged with evaluation and selection of $3.2M worth of new equipment for the ____ project.

  16. Selling capabilities
    No matter what your job, the ability to sell ideas and products internally or externally is extremely valuable. Demonstrate that you effectively sold executives, vendors, or owners on new ideas.

    Example: Developed arguments for a maintenance proposal that led our vendor to alter the service level agreement and reduce annual maintenance fees by 27%.

  17. Customer service
    Almost all jobs require some customer service knowledge and skill. Even if you were not in a customer service role, demonstrate that you have relevant customer service skills that apply across many situations.

    Example: Worked with several colleagues following assignment of a new manager with a very abrupt management style to our division to restore positive working atmosphere and resolve assumptions limiting productivity.

  18. Wrote/Presented
    Anyone that can write reports or who can make important presentations is extremely valuable. Include any time that you were asked to write something or to make a presentation. If the audience included important people or was large, say so.

    Example: Selected by my team to develop and present key revisions and changes to product implementation methodologies before 4,000 key customers at our global user conference.

  19. Planning/Forecasting
    Employees who are forward-looking are the most desirable. Highlight situations where you forecasted future events or put together a plan, even if informal.

    Example: Developed an emergency response plan following news that a court judgment on a highly publicized case would be announced in a building adjacent to ours during business hours. The plan was later used as a template for disaster planning across the company.
  20. Goal-setting
    The best employees are goal-oriented. Show that before you start a major project, that you set, communicate, and get agreement on goals.

    Example: Worked with team members to clarify and set feasible project goals on the ___ project that resulted in avoidance of four possible project derailers.

  21. Time management
    You need to demonstrate that you are conscious of time limitations and deadlines. Show that you completed work in a timely manner or even that you were the first to do it.

    Example: Was the first within my division to complete all milestones on time.

  22. Efficiency
    Everyone needs workers who are efficient and conscious of costs. Whenever possible, show that you completed tasks efficiently and under budget.

    Example: Successfully implemented ____ using only a fraction of the support budget allocated, reducing project cost by 9%.

  23. Extensive contacts
    Being well connected and having extensive contacts is an extremely valuable asset for any individual. Demonstrate that you used your contacts to get access, answers, or information.

    Example: Leveraged industry contacts to get unbiased feedback on two service providers being considered for a long-term contract, uncovering a volume of pending complaints and possible litigation against our leading contender.

  24. Any major company names involved
    In addition to mentioning the names of key individuals, you should also mention the names of well-known and innovative firms you have dealt with including notable customers, strategic partners, vendors, or consultants.

    Example: Worked with McKinsey & Co. on the deployment of our group's product with Google, General Mills, and Dow Corning.

  25. Global perspective
    Almost every employee is expected to have a global perspective these days. Even if you don't have formal international responsibilities, show that you have the capability of working with those from other countries.

    Example: Partnered with colleagues in China and India to localize customer evaluation and ranking processes developed there and slated for global rollout.

  26. Benchmarking
    The ability to capture information and answers from industry leading firms is extremely valuable. Highlight situations where you researched benchmark best practices both inside and outside of the organization.

    Example: Compiled summary of best practices in rapid skill development among professional service firms such as Accenture, Deloitte, and EY.

  27. Used metrics
    You can't continually improve anything without metrics. Provide examples that demonstrate you start projects with clearly articulated results metrics in place and that you leverage the metrics to inform decisions.

    Example: Devised customer service satisfaction and service efficiency metrics prior to the rollout of new CRM software that would later be used to optimize service center staffing levels.

  28. Consulted
    If you have had the opportunity to provide technical or functional advice to others, formally or informally, you are viewed as an expert. Highlight where you consulted or advised others internally or externally.

    Example: Consulted with several key clients to transfer knowledge on our approach to learning collaboratively using social media.

  29. Training
    In many companies, access to advanced training means that you are a top employee. Highlight training courses, seminars, workshops and any advanced training on emerging issues that you participated in. If you have taught training classes, even if they were informal, include that also. Under your education, be sure and list any key skills and tools that you learned and "hot topics" covered in your classes.

    Example: Represented my division at industry working groups on ___, and then developed informal internal knowledge sharing summaries for others in my group.

  30. Diversity
    Show that you can work with and understand people from different backgrounds.

    Example: Used my knowledge of Spanish and Italian to assist global customers when translated support materials were not available.

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