What is a Resume?:

Resumes are what people use to get jobs, right? 

Wrong!

A resume is a one or two page summary of your education, skills, accomplishments, and experience. Your resume's purpose is to get your foot in the door. A resume does its job successfully if it does not exclude you from consideration.

To prepare a successful resume, you need to know how to review, summarize, and present your experiences and achievements on one page. Unless you have considerable experience, you don't need two pages. Outline your achievements briefly and concisely.

Your resume is your ticket to an interview where you can sell yourself!

Writing the cover letter:

Each panelist confirmed that cover letters (even handwritten, if a must) were essential. Letters are expected for all positions. Of particular note during the cover letter conversation was reference to salary requirements. What do HR executives think when salary requirements are requested in an advertisement but are not provided in the cover letter. Unanimously, the panelist agreed that if the candidate appeared qualified for the position, they would offer the opportunity for an interview, despite the fact that salary requirements were not included. This is a critical point. Often it is difficult to determine what a specific position will pay. Although you may be interested, you are concerned that your recent salary may be too high or too low for consideration for the advertised position. We now know that it is either acceptable to either (1) not include the salary requirement, or (2) state the salary requirements are negotiable.