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Did you know that September is International Update Your Résumé Month? Having an up-to-date résumé is very important, but even more important than updating it once each year is to update it whenever something changes, whether you are looking for a job or not. There are many situations that call for updating. • Your role changes (e.g.,
through promotion).
• Your duties change (e.g.,
through addition of new equipment, changes in patient
population).
• You earn another degree,
certification, or qualification.
• You add a new publication,
presentation, etc., to your list.
• You are given a work-related
award.
• Your contact details
change.
• You begin to feel dissatisfied
your work or some other circumstance is causing you
to consider quitting.
• You are considering changing
careers.
• There are rumors of downsizing,
unit closures, hospital mergers, or something else
that could mean that your position will be eliminated
or will be changed in a way that you do not want.
• You hear about a position
of interest soon to be opening up. Why update your résumé regularly? • In the event that downsizing
does happen, or the rumor about an interesting new
position opening up is true, you can be ahead of
the competition with your well-crafted, current résumé.
• As time goes by, if you
don't update your résumé regularly,
you may forget things such as the date on which your
role changed, or your work focus changed. You never
know when that type of detail is important, e.g.,
for positions that require a certain number of years
of charge/supervisory experience, for employers that
require detailed month/date information concerning
all of your jobs, etc.
• If you don't do it regularly,
you may forget to do it when you actually
apply for a job. Yes, this really happens! We would
often receive out-of-date résumés when
I worked in recruitment. For example, one applicant
wanted to apply for a job that required a degree
– the résumé showed that the
person didn't have one. The person called to ask
about the status of his application and was told
the position required a degree, and therefore he
couldn't be considered. Turns out the he had a degree,
but hadn't updated his résumé. Another
example is of a person in a clinical area who sent
in a résumé that made it look as if
she had been out of work for more than five years,
which meant she could not be considered for the job,
since it required current clinical experience. But
it turns out that she was working, and that her résumé
hadn't been updated since she left her last job more
than five years ago. Also, for those who use objectives,
as your objectives change, make sure the objective
on your résumé changes as well. I remember
seeing a résumé with an objective stating
that the person wanted a staff nurse role, but when
contacted to discuss these jobs, the person was only
interested in more senior positions. In summary: An out-of-date résumé can cost you a job. A recruiter can't read your mind and know that you in fact have that experience or qualification that is missing from your résumé. And the out-of-date résumé puts you in a poor light with the recruiter, because it makes you look as if you lack attention to detail and/or are not really interested in the job, because you didn't take the time to send in a good résumé. • And finally, in these
days of job boards posting jobs from around the world,
and expanded social networking, who knows when you
will see your dream job or when someone will say,
"I've just heard about the perfect job for you! Do
you have a current résumé?" If you're
interested, and you don't have a current résumé,
you'll have to update your résumé quickly
to submit it as soon as possible. And with speed
comes a greater risk for inadvertent omissions and
factual, grammatical, and typographical errors. More
importantly, you risk creating a résumé
that doesn't accurately show why your work experience,
achievements, and education make you the perfect
person for that perfect job.
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