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Give Your Skills a Facelift
Thinking about switching careers? Start
by Repackaging Your
Resume
With job opportunities
running scarce these days, employees are
finding themselves having to be quite
creative, essentially creating suitable
positions for their skills. This could
be something fairly simple, like
teaching courses related to your work at
a training center or writing articles
for professional publications. Or you
may find you need to make a major leap -
from sales to purchasing, for example.
Remodel your
experiences and changing the way you
present it according to the opportunity
at hand.
To go with this new job
you just created, you need to "remodel"
your experiences, and give your resume a
facelift. Of course, your experience
will not change, but the way you present
it should change according to the
opportunity at hand. Depending on the
type of job you are applying for, you
may need to highlight particular skills
or achievements above others. To do this
you may well need to change the layout
and structure of the resume accordingly.
Let's look at an extreme case: you're a
sales executive who finds yourself
applying for a purchasing job. You need
to position yourself as a likely
candidate for the opportunity at hand,
without lying or exaggerating your
skills and experiences. How do you
present yourself - someone whose job has
always been to sell - as the perfect
person to do the buying? Not an easy
task, but doable nonetheless.
No More
Timeline
To start with, you need
to rewrite your chronological resume,
the one that shows your progression
through the sales ranks from sales
assistant to junior sales executive all
the way to sales team leader. The best
way to do this is to look at all the
accomplishments you have accumulated,
and divide them into skill sets.
Typically, any successful salesperson
would have several skills: Negotiation,
communication, problem solving and
creativity are the most common. Now,
look at this list, and think of the
purchasing opportunity you, the
experienced salesperson, are
contemplating: You can see a strong
match. After all, someone who is in
charge of purchasing in a company would
need these same skills to effectively do
the job. It may also be an added
advantage that a purchasing specialist
has a sales background, in order to
better deal with the suppliers and their
salesmen. Having been on the sales side,
you will have an insider's edge, so to
speak.
Going back to the resume,
how do you take the skills you have just
identified and put them together to
formulate a resume? The resume you are
trying to put together here is a
functional one; one that focuses on your
achievements within certain skill sets,
while downplaying the chronological
sequence of the your career. It is the
ideal format when you are trying to
relate certain experiences,
accomplishments and skills from one job
to another, when, on the surface, the
experience may not seem relevant.
Placing emphasis on the
more important skills
It is not enough,
however, to simply rearrange your
accomplishments under skill headings.
Placing emphasis on the more important
skills is also essential. For example,
in the sales-to-purchasing example, it
is more important to highlight
negotiation skills than the ability to
achieve a preset sales target. It is
also more important to stress
problem-solving skills and effective
communication, than it is to highlight
generating new leads. The latter is
important in order to form an overall
picture of your abilities, but the
former has a more direct impact on the
purchasing job you're applying for.
Now that you've highlighted your
salesperson skills and your
accomplishments within these skills, and
ordered the skills according to their
relevance to the job, you have helped
the purchasing manager see you in the
light of the purchasing job. The context
of your experiences (what job you were
actually doing) has become somewhat
secondary. By the time the potential
employer sees, towards the end of the
resume, that you were a pure salesman
who has never actually done any
purchasing, it won't really matter,
because he has already seen the items
that matter most.
Playing around with
experience - highlighting some points,
downplaying others, rearranging items,
This playing around with
experience - highlighting some points,
downplaying others, rearranging items,
etc. - can be done in many situations
when you have to rework how you present
your experience to decrease the gap
between an opportunity at hand and your
experience. The key is to look at the
skills you've been using in one career
area, then look at those required for
the new one you're interested in and
highlight the common ones.
The way the job market is
looking these days, survival will be for
The most creative
Source:
CareerMideast.com
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