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Free Resume Examples
Help and Reference Page




FREE RESUME EXAMPLES HELP AND REFERENCE PAGE
TYPES OF RESUMES


CHRONOLOGICAL
This is the most common and straight-forward resume. You list information in reverse chronological order with the most recent experience first. This kind of resume offers a clear, concise picture of you and is the easiest to assimilate in a quick reading.

Who Should Use A Chronological Resume?

A chronological resume is useful when:
  • Your entire employment history shows progress with skills related to your objective.
  • You have a steady work record that reflects constant growth and movement.
  • Your most recent employment positions are impressive and work to your advantage.
FUNCTIONAL
This is a less common but effective resume. It emphasizes your qualifications and abilities and provides analyses of particular professional strengths. The employment strengths or skills are the important facts in a functional resume.

Who Should Use A Functional Resume?

A functional resume is useful when:
  • Your entire work history includes additional skills not related to your career objective.
  • You want to highlight only those skills pertinent to your objective.
  • You are a new college graduate, ex-military, seasoned professional or career changer.
  • You have work history gaps or age-issue problems.
COMBINATION (CHRONOLOGICAL-FUNCTIONAL)
This resume is a combination of the chronological and functional approaches. You can list information in a chronological format and also highlight your accomplishments.

Who Should Use A Combination Resume?

A combination resume brings attention to the jobs most directly related to your career objectives. It is useful when:
  • You want to highlight your experiences, accomplishments and skills.
  • Your work history has peaks of great success.
  • You are a new college graduate, ex-military, seasoned professional or career changer.
SCANNABLE
Scannable Resumes utilize Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software, which scans or looks at your resume and/or cover letter to distinguish every character (letter & number) and creates a text file. Artificial intelligence then "reads" the text and extracts important information about you.

A scannable resume has standard fonts and crisp, dark type, so the OCR can recognize every character. Also, your scannable resume contains many facts about you. The more skills you provide, the more opportunities you will have for your skills to match available positions.

A Keyword Section is normally used and placed at the beginning or end of the resume. Keywords make your resume electronically retrievable in resume databases

Who Should Use A Scannable Resume?
A scannable resume is used specifically for people who are applying for jobs either through e-mail applications (you cut and paste your scannable resume into the body of your e-mail), applications on company websites and for posting on jobsites like Hotjobs.com, Monster.com, etc.

Free resume examples help you decide on the type and look of your resume. Look at Free Resume Examples Help - Resume and Cover Letter Examples to review examples of the different types of resumes and cover letters.

FREE RESUME EXAMPLES HELP AND REFERENCE PAGE
TYPES OF RESUMES




FREE RESUME EXAMPLES HELP AND REFERENCE PAGE
PARTS OF A RESUME


OBJECTIVE
Catching the reader's attention by stating how you can benefit the company is the best use for an Objective section. I prefer the use of a Summary, Accomplishments, or Background section myself.

SUMMARY
The point of the Summary is to convey the scope of your experience and background and to indicate to the reader your key strengths and areas of expertise. This section should be brief and value-oriented. This is your opportunity to combine and build on similar aspects of your background that may have been acquired over a period of many years in a number of different positions.

BACKGROUND
The Background section of your resume is provided so you can draw attention to your capabilities, which would otherwise be difficult for the reader to assume by reading your resume. Take advantage of this section to impress the reader with your personal traits and proven professional skills.

ACCOMPLISHMENTS
The Accomplishments section of your resume is an action-oriented description of your work. This is an opportunity to impress the reader with the results and accomplishments of your career. Use the Accomplishments section to let the reader know about your professional and personal traits that may be valuable to your next employer.

EXPERIENCE
The Experience section is the heart of your resume and includes all applicable work experience, paid and unpaid, full-time and part-time.

This is an opportunity to focus the reader on your accomplishments during the course of your work history. Your goal in this section of the resume is to make as much as you can of each position you have had, while keeping the descriptions as brief as possible. It is important to remember that your resume must be honest as well as logical.

EDUCATION
List the title of your degree, diploma, or certificate exactly as it was awarded to you. This information is evidence of formal completion. Include your major field of study if it applies to your career objective. If not, simply list the degree (B.S., M.A., M.B.A., etc).


CAREER DEVELOPMENT
It is generally best to separate education from training. Include this section when you wish to focus on special courses and seminars or other forms of continuing education. Training also includes college courses taken to improve your job performance. List the type of training and the date(s).

LICENSES & CERTIFICATION
This information is essential for nurses, social workers, real estate brokers, stockbrokers, guidance counselors, teachers, and a host of other professionals whose fields are governed by a licenser. List the type of license and the date it was issued.

AFFILIATIONS
The Affiliations section of your resume includes all relevant professional society memberships. List only those memberships that directly relate to your career objective.

SKILLS
The Skills section is set aside for mentioning any special abilities you have that could relate to the job you are seeking. This is the part of the resume where you have the opportunity to demonstrate certain talents and experiences that are not necessarily a part of your educational or work experience.

HONORS & AWARDS
The Honors & Awards section of your resume includes any recognition you received for outstanding performance in an educational or professional setting -- making the Dean's List, being the number one sales representative, or receiving military honors.

FREE RESUME EXAMPLES HELP AND REFERENCE PAGE
PARTS OF A RESUME



FREE RESUME EXAMPLES HELP AND REFERENCE PAGE
OTHER POSSIBLE RESUME SECTIONS

PUBLICATIONS
The Publications section of your resume includes articles or books that you have authored, contributed to or been featured in. List the name of the article/book, publication date(s) and any awards won.

PERSONAL INTERESTS
The Personal Interests section of your resume includes relevant contributions outside the workplace: team sports, volunteer work, service clubs, community involvement, etc.

VOLUNTEER WORK
If you do not have a great deal of job experience, volunteer activities can be a gold mine for a great resume. Whatever your volunteer work has been, you can turn it into valuable experience on your resume. List who it was with and the dates.

TALENT
The Talent section of your resume allows you to present your media skills. If you are in the film, modeling, entertainment, advertising, or media industries, the style and format of the way your experience is listed should be very career-specific.

For professionals in the Arts and Leisure fields, job titles hold more creativity and excitement. Resume information for these types of positions needs to be an artistic statement as well as a statement of professional credentials. Visual excitement can be graphically communicated as well.

KEYWORDS
A Keyword section is normally used in Scannable Resumes and typically placed at the beginning or end of the resume. Keywords make your resume electronically retrievable in resume databases.

Keywords focus mainly on nouns and phrases that employers are likely to use when searching for an applicant with your skills. To maximize the chances of your resume receiving a hit during a search, you will want to use as many keywords in your resume as you can.


Viewing other free resume examples help you gleen as many keywords as you can, so reseach as much as possible as many resumes in your filed in order to build your own keyword list.
Thank you for using the Free Resume Examples Help web page. I hope you found it useful.

FREE RESUME EXAMPLES HELP AND REFERENCE PAGE
OTHER POSSIBLE RESUME SECTIONS


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