career

Why Are College Career Center Resumes So... Standard?

iStock | zimmytws

Spring is on the way, and students face the reality of their impending graduation. College and university career centers are an excellent resource for soon-to-be graduates leaping into the working world.

Many students who seek help with their resumes are surprised when their career center provides a template that is unimaginative and simple. What they don't know is that every career center uses the same unimaginative and simple template – and there's a reason.

The career center resume template is called the Wharton resume format, named after the Wharton Business School at the University of Pennsylvania. Wharton decided to standardize its students' resumes and developed the format. Soon, the format was adopted by other business schools, then by non-business schools, until the Wharton format became the standard resume template for colleges and universities coast to coast. Why?

The Wharton format has the following characteristics:

1.     One page.

2.     Jam-packed with information.

3.     A specific format - Contact Information > Education > Work Experience > Volunteer Work/Special Skills.

The template's design gives students' academic and work history equal representation. Let's say a recruiter asks Wharton for fifty resumes. If everyone's resume is the same simple one-page format, there is an inherent sense of fairness and equity. Wharton can't send a pile of resumes of varying lengths, colors, formats, etc., or they could justifiably be accused of playing favorites. This way, each applicant's resume is indistinguishable from the other.

The form is the function, and the Wharton form functions as a vehicle to deliver job applicants to employers in a standard and predictable manner. Career centers handle resumes in two ways.

1.     Acme, Inc. requests the resumes of marketing graduates from a college or university. The school sends them a bundle of resumes that fit their parameters.

2.     Students upload their resumes to a database accessible to employers.

The Wharton template and the ways employers obtain resumes from school career centers reinforce a uniform format and a uniform process. Sometimes resume databases require entering the content of a resume into online forms, adding yet another layer of uniformity.

 

I Just Gotta Be Me!

Question – how do you stand out as a job applicant in an environment designed for uniformity? A system built to be as blind and fair as possible also makes it difficult to shine. Here are some quick tips to make the Wharton format work overtime for you:

1.     Maximize your space utilization. The Wharton format does not give you much room to maneuver, so strive to fill every centimeter of your one page with the best, most dynamic content you can create. If you can say something with three words instead of five, then do it.

2.     Flaunt your academic and professional achievements. Load your resume with bullet-pointed achievements. No matter what you studied or what jobs or internships you had, you accomplished more than you realized. When you write out your accomplishments, you can truly assess the work you've done. Don't be modest. Be confident and succinct.

3.     Align your content. A one-page resume has little real estate. Each word is precious and should strategically align with your desired job/field. If you're graduating from a business school, then the content of your resume should focus on your business studies, acumen, and outcomes. That may be a big ask for new graduates, but the advantages outweigh the difficulty.

4.     Talk to your career center advisors. The staff of your career center knows what employers want. It's worth listening to what they recommend and optimizing your resume accordingly. Do research as well.

5.     It's all about keywords. You want to load your resume with keywords to maximize the chances Automatic Tracking Systems will advance it to a person for review. Once again, consult your career center advisors for insight into the appropriate keywords in your field of endeavor. You can also mine keywords from the job description, the position's requirements, and preferred skills. Adjust your resume for each job to which you apply.

 

And, a bonus tip for experienced professionals who went back to school:

6.     It can't hurt to have a two-page resume in reserve. If you are mid-career and using your school's career center, chances are you have a new resume in the Wharton format. When you land an in-person interview, you can bring a longer resume into the room with you that gives you a chance to detail your work history.


Philip Roufail contributed to this article.

Scott Singer is the President and Founder of Insider Career Strategies Resume Writing & Career Coaching, a firm dedicated to guiding job seekers and companies through the job search and hiring process. Insider Career Strategies provides resume writing, LinkedIn profile development, career coaching services, and outplacement services. You can email Scott Singer at scott.singer@insidercs.com, or via the website, www.insidercs.com.

Do My Hobbies Belong On My Resume?

iStock | dorian2013

A hobby is "an activity done regularly in one's leisure time for pleasure" or "a small horse or pony." We are working on a valid business reason to do a series of posts about small horses, but meanwhile, let's discuss this whole "activity done… in one's leisure time" situation.

 Should you put your hobbies on your resume? Recruiters and human resources professionals do not universally agree on the answer. Some favor it, and some don't, which doesn't help the job seeker make an informed decision. There is no standard rule for or against including hobbies on your resume, but you may want to consider the following if you want to include them:

  • A resume is a professional tool to get a job. It is not a one-sheet for a dating site. It's great that you love Piña Coladas and getting caught in the rain, but Acme, Inc. is looking for a full-stack engineer. Acme does not care that you knit or if you're a ranking member of your regional off-roading club. They want to know if you can engineer full stacks.

  •  Is your hobby related to your work? Some people ooze their skill sets all over the place, and the wall between their professional activities and their leisure time crumbles like Jericho. If you employ the same talents in your hobby as you do at work, it may be appropriate to include them on your resume. Here are some examples --  an engineer who restores classic cars, a sommelier who cooks, or a doctor who grows flowers.

  • Are you the best at something? Do you have a large trophy with your name on it that says "G.O.A.T."? Even if it is not related to your work, if you're the best at something, flaunt it, baby, flaunt it! For example, let's say you're an architect and your hobby is windsurfing. Maybe leave windsurfing off the resume. But if you're the state windsurfing champion three years running, maybe include it. That shows perseverance, commitment, and a competitive spirit.

  •  Does your hobby show creativity? Creativity is a transferable skill that is always in high demand. A creative hobby such as drawing or photography is beneficial to share as creative work elicits an immediate reaction from the viewer or reader and instantly shows a different dimension to your personality. For example, let's say you're a psychologist and your hobby is underwater photography. Nobody earned their Ph.D. in psychology by defending a thesis filled with photos of prawns and coral reefs. However, producing great underwater photography is not easy. The dive alone takes skill and focus. Then you take out your camera and shine a light on to the teeming life that lives in the darkness. Can you think of a better metaphor for a psychologist? I can't. You're hired!

  •  Will your hobby help you do your job? Lots of deals are made on the golf course. If you want a hobby that is both work and leisure, golf may be the quintessential choice. There is a fine line here, but you get the point. Many people have pleasurable hobbies that also happen to be a great way to accelerate their professional goals. If your hobby falls into this category, it may be worth including on your resume.

  • Is it professional? Collecting garden gnomes and displaying them in suggestive poses may be a great hobby, but in the battle between the professional vs. the personal, it’s firmly in the personal camp. If you include a hobby on your resume, it should have a modicum of relevance and it should not damage your professional reputation.

  • Your resume has limited real estate. Every word and space on a resume are precious. You have limited space to make a great case. If you include your hobbies on your resume, it should be the very best version of your resume possible. Remember your goal – get the interview so you can win the job in the room.


Philip Roufail contributed to this article.

Scott Singer is the President and Founder of Insider Career Strategies Resume Writing & Career Coaching, a firm dedicated to guiding job seekers and companies through the job search and hiring process. Insider Career Strategies provides resume writing, LinkedIn profile development, career coaching services, and outplacement services. You can email Scott Singer at scott.singer@insidercs.com, or via the website, www.insidercs.com.

Volunteering – A Great Way To Build New Skills And Enhance Your Resume

A great way to follow your bliss is to volunteer for an organization or cause. There are great non-profits, NGOs, schools, and groups doing important and meaningful work in everything from human rights to the arts. Hospitals, schools, libraries, churches, and charitable foundations are just a few of the places that are always seeking volunteers. 

Interning and volunteering are not the same things. Yes, the salaries are the same – zero – but that is where the similarities end. An internship is a specific career-oriented position to accelerate your professional goals. Volunteering is a choice you make to help others. While most internships are unpaid, they are part of a journey whose goal is money. Volunteering's overall goal is to aid the less fortunate or further a universal cause.  

For example, nobody cares about your Wall Street internship except your parents. It's boring to 99% of the human (and animal) population and says nothing about you except that you most likely sleep at the office. But if you spend your weekends volunteering to register voters, delivering meals to seniors, or teaching underprivileged kids how to code, it says a lot about your true self - the self that isn't readily apparent on a resume.

Here is the great news. There are ancillary advantages to being a good person. While good works are often their own reward, volunteering your time for an objectively noble cause has a halo effect.

Volunteering is an opportunity for self-enrichment. It’s worth exploring whether or not there are volunteer opportunities near you that speak to your passions. Take the example of a museum docent. Perhaps you're an accountant with a passion for art. Unless you do the books for Christie's, chances are there's not a lot of art going on in Accounts Payable. You can connect with that passion by sharing your love and knowledge of art with others. Volunteering adds dimensions to your life and gives you a more balanced perspective. Once you've spent time conducting art therapy for terminally ill children, dealing with your difficult supervisor will seem like a walk in the park.

Volunteering is an opportunity to learn new skills without being graded. Every experience teaches you new skills. Regardless of your proficiency and success in your chosen field, volunteering means collaborating with different personality types than you may be used to, performing new and unfamiliar tasks, and being in an environment with criteria for success that is dramatically different from a professional workplace. You can operate outside your comfort zone with the comfort of knowing there's no performance review. Organizations are always grateful for volunteers. Help out and learn stress-free. 

Volunteering is an opportunity to enhance your resume. For some inexplicable reason, the Volunteer section of a resume is at the bottom. It should be at the top. Volunteer roles give the reader a window into who you are instead of what you've done. More great news. Those new skills you learned are great conversations during a job interview. Let's say you honed your event management and development skills by throwing fundraisers for a local children's charity. That experience and those transferable skills make you a more well-rounded candidate and differentiate you from others.

Bonus tip: Consider your volunteer work on the same level as your "real" work. It's meaningful, and the skills you learn are just as vital. Track your progress just like you (should) do at your job. On your resume, highlight your volunteer accomplishments the same way as your professional ones. Yes, recruiters and hiring managers get excited when they see you increased overall revenue by 25%. Everybody loves money. Helping feed 500 families a month who are food insecure is not too shabby either. Flaunt it.

Ready to change the world? You can start here.


Insider Career Strategies Resume Writing & Career Coaching is a firm dedicated to guiding job seekers and companies through the job search and hiring process. Insider Career Strategies provides resume writing, LinkedIn profile development, career coaching services, and outplacement services. You can email us at scott.singer@insidercs.com, or reach us via the website, www.insidercs.com.