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General Advice
- Priority - Assess the unique qualities that you want to promote
- Skills - Focus on
skills you have developed during your previous experiences
rather than simply listing the tasks that you completed.
- Ability - Emphasise
achievements, not duties.
- Vanity - Beware of
using a personal profile that describes the writer
as a paragon of executive virtue. If you feel that
you need to use one, perhaps to bring together skills
and information that is scattered over a variety
of jobs, make sure that the factual content is high,
that the achievements are quantifiable and that
it is free from hype.
- Economy - Heighten
impact and aid brevity by making every single word
work for its keep, leaving out anything that does
not help the CV to achieve its objectives. children's names should never be mentioned.
- Honesty - Never lie or make unjustifiable claims.
Style
- Brevity - Keep the
CV as succinct as possible.
- Clarity - Avoid all jargon and abbreviations that
may be unfamiliar to the reader.
Layout
- Typography - Use a
single, business-like typeface such as Times New
Roman. Multiple typefaces look messy. To add emphasis
and variety, use capitalisation, emboldening and,
discerningly, vary the size of type.
- Accuracy - Use your
spellchecker, but proof-read carefully too. A single
error can spoil the impact of the whole CV.
- Chronology - Start
with your most recent experiences/ qualifications
first. i.e Reverse chronological.
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