What can you learn from these dreadful gaffes?
by Maria Hanson, LiveCareer
Your resume should
be perfect--with nary an error in sight. But all too often, say employers, resumes
are riddled with mistakes.
"Making errors on your resume just screams, 'I'm careless, I don't care to double-check
my work or have a friend look it over, and that's exactly the same sloppy, lazy
effort I'll give you as my
employer,'" says Tony Katsulos, who keeps a file of the worst resume bloopers
he's received as head of Jetstream Public Relations.
Here's a look at some cringe-worthy real-life resume gaffes:
1. Careless Mistakes
"Speak, read, and wright English/Spanish."--seen by Angie Beauchamp, Charm Factory
manager.
A candidate
actually misspelled her own first name, writing "Barbara" as "Barabara."--Mark Gollihur,
who managed a video store when he received that application.
A resume objective stated the candidate wanted a job as a
nurse. The job she was applying for? Security manager.--Philip Farina, author
of "Antiterrorism Careers."
"They write, 'I've researched your company and would be a perfect fit.' And then
they call your company by a competitor's name."--Tony Katsulos, who has weeded out
this cut-and-paste gaffe many times.
This one says it all: "I'm very detale oriented."--reported by Sharon Armstrong,
the author of "The Essential HR Handbook."
Instead of "biological organisms," a
university job candidate wrote "biological orgasms."--from Berit Brogaard,
associate professor of philosophy and psychology at the University of Missouri,
Saint Louis.
"Psychology professor" became "psycho. professor," and "analytic philosophy" became
"anal. philosophy."--"Asso. professor" Brogaard has seen these and other abbreviations
lead to resume trouble.
Lesson:
Be vigilant about spelling, proofread each resume a few times, get someone else
to look at your resume for errors, and be wary of abbreviations. (Read more articles
with tips on crafting the perfect resume.)
2. TMI (Too Much Information)
"GPA: 2.0"--seen by Kristen Barrett, Spark Design.
A man appeared to be the perfect candidate for an
accounting position. "But at the bottom he mentioned he would not be able
to interview immediately as he was serving time for embezzlement."--seen by Jodi
R. R. Smith, of Mannersmith Etiquette Consulting.
"I was fired."--Robin Ryan, the author of "Winning Resumes," says this is one of
the most common blunders she comes across.
A few clients have actually put their social security numbers on their resumes.--Mike
Ballard, Turning Points Research.
A recent graduate sent a resume that came through with tracked changes and comments
from a variety of people. Adding to the blunder: "Some of the changes were not for
the better."--Debbie Mitchell, president, Mullen Public Relations.
Lesson:
What you exclude from your resume is almost as important as what you include. Don't
include any information that doesn't contribute--or worse, detracts--from your overall
selling message. Keep in mind that your resume is just your ticket to interview-land.
You will have plenty of opportunities to provide employers with a complete picture
once you've landed an
interview.
3. Bad Moves
A candidate included photos of himself at the gym and a glamour photo with his resume
for an administrative position with a
financial services provider.--from Philip Farina, who also runs Manta Security
Management Recruiters.
Email address: Bostoncutiee22@example.com.--seen by Stacey Schmidt, a recruiter
at Vistaprint.
A job-seeker used a free return-address sticker from an endangered-wildlife
nonprofit on his resume instead of typing his contact information out.--seen
by Philip Farina.
A person reduced his cover letter and three-page resume onto one page and then faxed
it.--seen by Penny Miller, Venture HRO.
Lesson: Even the littlest details--both in your resume and how
you use your resume--send a message to hiring managers. Be clear about what image
you're trying to get across in your resume, and make sure everything you say and
do is consistent with this image.