Thursday, November 21, 2019
Spooky, Scary, Horrifying Resumes for Halloween
Spooky, Scary, Horrifying Resumes for Halloween Spooky, Scary, Horrifying Resumes for Halloween Resumes can be scary to create, but just as horrifying to read. Recruiters and hiring managers are subjected to comic sans, puke green font, typos, inappropriate headshots, and other terrorsBefore you submit your resume, really contemplate how youre presenting yourself. Go a step further and get a second opinion from a friend or upload it to Jobscan to check for best practices, red flags, and opportunities to improve.Here are three of the spookiest resumes we found for Halloween1. A ghostly resume designvia TwelveSkipThis job seekers resume design is appropriate considering hes looking to get his foot in the door in a role that utilizes his animation, design, and illustration skills. In fact, its expected. For the rest of us, getting too creative with our resume can do more harm than good.If artistic ability isnt parte of the job description, the hiring manager might wonder how serious you are about the job. And for all you know, they might just bedrngnis share the same sensibilities. Even worse, applicant tracking systems(ATS) would immediately bury a resume like this.When you apply through an ATS, recruiters can run searches for specific skills. For example, a recruiter might search for Photoshop. Nigel has the right resume keywords, but he might not come up as a match for a number of reasons. The ATS could have trouble processing this obscure resume font. ATS are also known to struggle with tables and columns, which are used throughout the resume. The information in these fields might not be properly parsed and considered for the search.Jobscan checks for resume keywords as well as other ATS traps like fonts, columns and more.2. Would you invite this monster to an interview?via Business InsiderWhen do you take a chance with an over-the-top resume design? Drawing this kind of attention can workEvery time I sent that resume out I got an interview without fail, Joe K elso told Business Insider. If I really wanted an interview somewhere, thats the one I would use.If youre physically handing out your resumes or emailing them directly to someone as part of your application, your resume is less likely to get hung up in an ATS. You can take more design liberties in these instances, especially if youre in a creative field.But 98% of Fortune 500 companies use ATSand even if you are able to network and deliver your resume directly to someone, you might still need to formally apply through the ATS. Make sure you have an ATS-friendly resume ready to go as a companion to your creative resume.3. The horror of the wrong attachmentvia BuzzfeedThis applicant meant to attach a zip file titled with a bunch of numbers, but instead attached a similarly titled image of actor Nicolas Cage doing his thing. This is a great example of why your resume file name matters Not only will it keep embarrassing mistakes (or hilarious viral content) from happening, its an opport unity to appear professional and organized. The file name will be visible, so take the extra second to rename your file to something like NicolasCageResume.docx or NicolasCageActor.docx.
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