News12 mins ago
Perfect CV?
Just wondering if nyone can help?
Im thinking of changing/updating my cv, currently its over 4 pages - with school, college, work experience and work history! The college section does go in to abit of detal as does the work? Im just wanting to know how many pages would be best - I couldnt squish it on to one - that would be silly! Also should I have hobbies on there and shold my work history be recent to last or last to recent? What do employers look for?
Thanx x
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by ange1_face. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.how many jobs in the work history? sometimes too many shows that u are dont stick around long at any place and might not with future employees. Just have a few important ones and drop the short term and irrelavent ones then fudge the dates to cover the gaps a little.
Also with education, just have the places u attended and the years u attended with the best grades u achieved, again, i tend to drop one or two of my most dodgy grades cos very few employers care if u got a f in home economics whereas they do notice if u got A's in english or maths or something.
oh and most recent should be at the top of employment and education lists, as they will care more about what u did lately that what u did umpteen years ago in a fast food place. As for hobbies, well maybe a 3 to 5 lines brief account of what interests u have got but dont go too much for "i like films and tv and music and partying with my friends" Try to go for things u do like instead of gym, say u like doing aerobics and fitness training. The more original and different (without going overboard and lying) the hobbies are the more likely they may take an interest and ask u something on it. Seeing some say they enjoy entering competitions/crosswords instantly has the interviewer ask u if u have won very much and how many do u enter a week? whereas films music and parties says "boring" lets skip that section!!!
- Tailor your CV for each application
- Never lie on your CV - it's a sackable offence (in the UK anyway)
- Two pages ABSOLUTE MAX!
- Personal details at the top
- Then education
- Then employment
- Then hobbies
Extra-curricular activities - well it depends how old you are. CV content changes over time. At 22 I still include extra-curricular stuff from school and Uni as I don't have any employment history apart from part time work. As I get older that will get dropped.
- As twiglet said - EVERYTHING should be most recent first.
Perhaps tell us roughly how old you are and we can give better advice.
If you're not from the UK our advice might be rubbish cos I have no idea what US/continental European employers look for - only what British HR depts like.
:-)
Thanks both for your advice! I'm 21 and I do live in the UK....
I'm going to start the process of 'slimming' it down - could be difficult tho as for my work experience which i done when i was at school and college I've done quite alot - Worked & Studdied In spain, Represented my school in being one of the crew on a tall ship, and also worked with children with disabilities - I'd like to keep all that on it as i'm extremely proud of myself - he he!!!
much as u are proud of your different works, and so uu should be, they might not be that important to someone like a bank manager employing u. the tall ships would be good in the hobbies as it shows teamwork. the disabled kids can be a job u have done but dont overly highlight it unless it is a job tht involves this kind of work.
U need to sell yourself to your future employer by making it obvious the skils and experience u have that can help u in this new job better than other applicants. Some people may see that u have a lot of worldly experience and are a great person, but have missed out all the strong points that u might need in the job they are offering and might think u are better suited to other lines of work.
Tailor it to the job, but inside, be very proud of what u have done, and maybe tell them at an interview all your achievements as that will impress them. A CV finds out who is good enough and who isnt so make it simple and straight to the point how good enough u are to what they need u for