follow me on youtube
해외취업 길잡이

5 Tips to Make Your CV Visually Appealing

 

BY 

 

What’s the main purpose of a CV? The main purpose is to get you an invite to interview and an opportunity to meet and impress the hiring manager. So the first page of your CV is the most important. Your CV is most probably going to be read first by either a specialist in-house recruiter or an agency consultant, not necessarily the hiring managers (the decision maker). Sometimes your CV could be read by a computer – okay it’s a very sophisticated vacancy and candidate management system but it’s not yet get any common sense or discretion!

 

7702457814_485f1e844d

A recruiter will only glance over the information, most probably skim read in just a few seconds and definitely won’t be reading your CV word for word in the first sift. A recruiter working on the agency side will probably face screening 100 to 500 CVs for one advertised vacancy and they’ll be looking for any reason to screen your CV out. If you make a spelling mistake or two, the layout looks poorly presented or you’ve waffled on and on for big chucks of text then your CV is going in the rejected pile.

Taking the time to put together a presentable CV is time well spent and there are lots of tips, techniques and templates you can use to help you communicate your experiences in the most effective way.

1. First Page Impressions Count

The first page of your CV is likely to be the most important – have I said this before? It’s this page that will determine if the recruiter reads on to find out more about your background. It’s this page that makes the most impact. Your CV has to make a big impact in the shortest amount of time and it’s all about that first page impression.

The layout of information needs to look and feel professional and be real easy to read. The first page needs to explain your main achievements relevant to the role (don’t leave the most relevant stuff until the bottom of the last page or hidden in loads of text!) and within those achievements you need to demonstrate some commercial awareness (saved time, reduced costs, generated additional revenue, identified future opportunities, automated processes and so on).

Ideally find out who will be reviewing the CV and write to match the audience. I know this isn’t always possible to keep tailoring your CV for every single vacancy – certainly not when you are being represented by an agency. It may also sound time consuming to keep changing your CV but it is worth spending a little more time at the beginning of the process to secure an interview sooner.

2. Fancy Fonts or Not

If you are applying to jobs in the corporate sector then stick to traditional fonts and use the same one throughout the CV. I must have read tens of thousands of CVs over my career and I’ve seen CVs with 5 different types of fonts, several different types of bullet points and different sized margins all on one CV. This looks messy and unprofessional. Unless you are planning to work in the design sector or art industry then this is not the time to use fancy fonts – you’ll stand out for all the wrong reasons. Some handwriting fonts are particularly difficult to read – that’s definitely not an advantage to you if the recruiter cannot read your CV!!

Related: 5 Great Tips for Writing a Successful CV

Keep it simple and easy to read. Make it particularly easy to spot your knowledge, skills and achievements and they absolutely must be relevant to the job you are applying or at the very least show some transferrable relevance. You need to use a reasonable size font too – not too small or again it’s difficult for everyone to read the fine print.

3. Maximise the space

Avoid big white spaces on the page. This is a complete waste of space and should be used to maximum effect. I’m not a big fan of telling candidates to keep to one page but I know a lot of recruiters will disagree with me on this point. If you have relevant history then it’s appropriate to include a little more detail – however, don’t overdo this generous view as you don’t want to send the recruiter to sleep!!

If you do use two pages but have masses of white space then this is not good use of the pages. However, don’t be tempted to squeeze all the information on fewer pages by reducing the font size. You are being assessed on how you can write clearly and more importantly concisely. Don’t indent too far onto the page either – again you could be unnecessarily reducing your space to write a decent sentence.

4. Bullet points

Keeping in mind that you want the reader (the recruiter or the hiring manager) to be able to scan quickly across your CV and match your skills, experiences, and knowledge to the vacancy you’ve applied – so you’ll need to ensure the presentation of that information is clear. The last thing you want to achieve is making it very difficult to find information or use unnecessary jargon to make it difficult to understand what you actually did or your responsibilities.

RelatedHow to Write a Winning CV

You don’t want the reader to have to work really hard to find the right information – so the use of bullet points is still a big plus in the way you present your key skills, experiences and knowledge in the most clear and concise way.

5. Error Free

It’s so important these days to proof read your CV. Don’t rely on MS Word to point out all the incorrect spellings – as you’ll miss words that are actually spelt right but have a totally different meaning to the context of your sentence. Here are some examples, there, their, they’re, here and hear, right, write, rite.

It’s not a weakness to ask someone else to proof read and for their professional opinion on the layout and content. It’s very difficult proof reading your own writing – because you’ll often read back what you intended to write. You know what you wanted to say and you’ll see these words on the page or miss additional words. The best authors in the world hire a professional proof reader and you can actually take formal qualifications in the skill (or art!) of proof reading. Keep your CV error free. You also need to keep it jargon free unless it is a well recognised industry acronym (For example, CIPD or ACCA).

 

Keep your CV up to date. You may not be thinking of moving on or you are fairly comfortable in your role but these days you never know what opportunities may be presented to you. You may be approached by a previous manager or executive head hunter or sadly put at risk of redundancy and you’ll have to take action very quickly. It’s time well spent keeping your CV current and up to date and a very easy task to maintain rather than starting from scratch.

Good luck in your job search!

photo by: pozland

 

출처: http://www.learnist.org/cv-visually-appealing/

번호 제목 이름 날짜 조회 수
공지 해외취업 지원(고용노동부) 글로벌잡스 관리자 2020.04.19 377
공지 ★★★해외취업정착지원금 신청하기(조기 마감될 수 있음) 글로벌잡스 관리자 2019.12.28 290
공지 해외취업관련 좋은 글 글로벌잡스 관리자 2015.11.27 5109
53 고연봉을 원하면 중국회사에 취업하라 글로벌잡스 관리자 2016.03.25 7468
52 유명 해외취업사이트 소개 글로벌잡스 관리자 2015.12.26 7324
51 싱가포르에서 직장 구하기 글로벌잡스 관리자 2017.02.25 2576
50 [호주 직업] 영주권 취득에 유리한 호주 유망 직업 안내 글로벌잡스 관리자 2016.04.10 2245
49 물리치료사 미국 해외취업 성공 수기 글로벌잡스 관리자 2018.09.30 1599
48 영국 청년교류제도(YMS)(워킹홀리데이 유사) 참가 안내 글로벌잡스 관리자 2018.11.06 1442
47 해외취업, 동남아시아의 다국적기업을 노려라 글로벌잡스 관리자 2016.02.06 1422
46 해외취업 포트폴리오 file 글로벌잡스 관리자 2015.11.27 1412
45 해외취업유망 15대국가 현지 부족직종 현황 글로벌잡스 관리자 2016.04.10 1288
44 해외취업의 거짓과 진실 글로벌잡스 관리자 2017.02.22 1276
43 해외취업을 노리자! 각 나라별로 부족한 직군은 무엇이 있을까? 글로벌잡스 관리자 2016.08.27 1234
42 해외취업 10계명(한국산업인력공단제공) 글로벌잡스 관리자 2015.11.27 1150
41 아무도 가르쳐 주지 않는 글로벌 기업의 채용 비밀 글로벌잡스 관리자 2016.09.11 1002
40 미국에서 소프트웨어 엔지니어로 산다는 것 글로벌잡스 관리자 2016.05.15 700
39 글로벌 기업에 들어가는 ‘5가지 비결’ 글로벌잡스 관리자 2016.08.27 668
38 스웨덴에서 구직을 위한 10가지 팁(출처: Study in Sweden) 글로벌잡스 관리자 2019.06.08 640
37 일본 취업, 한국 청년들의 비상구일까양승득 (전 한국경제매거진 사장 작성) 글로벌잡스 관리자 2017.02.10 627
36 RE:싱가폴/홍콩 학부와 취업 현실 글로벌잡스 관리자 2018.09.30 606
35 외국에서 근무하는 사람이 말해주는 해외취업 후기 글로벌잡스 관리자 2019.05.05 486
TOP