|
Categories
|
|
|
|
|
Age-Proof Your Resume
By
Virginia Bola, PsyD
|
|
Older job hunters fear
interviews where their age cannot be concealed and where
an initial response of dismay on an interviewer's face,
quickly hidden, confirms their anticipation of
discrimination. The mature job seeker often prefers the
anonymity of mailed resumes, e-mailed inquiries, internet
applications, and telephone contacts.
Interviews, however, are the goal of everyone who wants to
work. There is so much pre-selection and screening before
an interview is granted that simply getting that far in
the process provides at least some expectation of an offer
being made. It is when interviews are not forthcoming that
real concern is needed. Ask yourself if you may be
inadvertently triggering screening filters by the
documentation you submit.
Review the following three "red flags" and
identify if your own presentation could be outdated and
needlessly sabotaging your employment campaign.
1. Old Educational Data.
You may have obtained a degree or completed a vocational
course many years ago. While you obviously cannot change
the year of your graduation, you can concentrate on
detailing other training received more recently. Any
classes, workshops, or seminars attended over the past
couple of years, even something in progress, stamps you as
an individual who is continuing to learn and grow, someone
aware of recent developments and open to new ideas and
up-to-date approaches.
2. Job Titles.
The title of a job is designed to explain, in brief, your
typical duties. Over the years, such titles change even
when tasks and responsibilities remain similar. Review the
titles on your resume that may reflect what your position
was called at the time but no longer meshes with the
current business environment. "Secretary," for
example, is now rare. Similar job duties, flexed for
innovations in technology, are now referred to as
"Administrative Assistant," "Office
Manager," "Office Analyst," or
"Personal Assistant." Review your local
classifieds and concentrate on the titles that seem to
involve job tasks you have performed in the past. Then
review your resume and applications and update job titles
accordingly.
3. Jargon.
You probably have a resume which lists the duties and
responsibilities of each of your prior positions. Re-read
those descriptions, concentrating on the actual words you
have used, especially the verbs (actions). Do those
descriptions date you? Some obvious phrases are the old
"variety duties" which is now generally called
"multi-tasking," and "assisted with"
now translates as "customer service."
"Typing speed," so ubiquitous thirty years ago
is now invariably "keyboarding skills." There
are many other less obvious areas. A way to address them
is to go to the newspaper or internet and review a number
of job descriptions in your field. Any words or phrases
that are unfamiliar to you need to be researched as they
may describe a task you have previously performed under a
different description. If you cannot find the information
you seek, check with a library, an employment agency, or
someone in the field. If the new phrase fits you,
substitute it in your resume and all future applications.
If it is important enough to be included in a job
description, it deserves your attention and neglecting the
required investigation may doom your job search efforts.
Your goal is to have a potential employer read your resume
and be familiar with the terms you use. It is your
responsibility to be adaptive, flexible, and avoid being
screened out due to inappropriate vocabulary. Don't expect
an employer to take the time to figure out whether you
really have the skills being sought. Remember that resumes
are used to screen OUT - to reduce the "possible
interview" pile to a manageable size.
When your resume and written applications have been
meticulously age-proofed, practice the same terminology
verbally, with a friend, to be ready for a thoroughly
up-to-date self-presentation when that inevitably
soon-to-be-scheduled interview arrives.
|
About
The Author
Virginia
Bola operated a rehabilitation company for
20 years, developing innovative job search
techniques for disabled workers, while
serving as a respected Vocational Expert
in Administrative, Civil and Workers'
Compensation Courts. Author of an
interactive and emotionally supportive
workbook, The Wolf at the Door: An
Unemployment Survival Manual, and a
monthly ezine, The Worker's Edge, she can
be reached at http://www.virginiabola.com |
|
|
|
<< Back to the Article Index
©
Copyright 2004, ArticleJunction.com
|
|
|