Originally posted by lightng
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CV formatting
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If your company is the best place to work in, for a mere £500 p/d, you can advertise here. -
Originally posted by pmeswani View PostIt's been delivered twice. Once through silence and the other is self dealt. HTH.Comment
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Seriously though, I don't think a CV should be over 2 pages.
If the CV won't fit on a dartboard, it will generally be binned.Comment
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Originally posted by lightng View PostSeriously though, I don't think a CV should be over 2 pages.
If the CV won't fit on a dartboard, it will generally be binned.If your company is the best place to work in, for a mere £500 p/d, you can advertise here.Comment
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Mine is 3 pages but the first one really only holds my details and a few buzzword for the spuds at the agencies.
Even if it is a 2 pager the agent, usually, will put his own cover sheet on it so it goes through as a 3 pager.
To be honest I have often seen my CV after it goes through the agency (using the previous method or just a 2 page version) and they have put it through a formatting mangle.
You have invested your time getting the skills, you have tried to put them down on paper in a way your experience stands out and the agents set some daft wee girl on it sticking the agency logo all over it
Anything more than 2 pages plus a short cover page is madness.
During my bench time I am going to revamp the bad boy and experiment with a 1 pager with cover sheet, see how it looksComment
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Originally posted by pmeswani View PostDisagree. I admit page 1 is the most important page of the CV and that most decisions are made based on the first 10 or 15 seconds of looking at the CV, but it is unrealistic to expect a CV to be no more than 2 pages in length, especially if all the roles that are listed are relevant to the position that one is applying for.Comment
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Originally posted by minestrone View PostDuring my bench time I am going to revamp the bad boy and experiment with a 1 pager with cover sheet, see how it looks
I first discovered the benefits of a short CV whilst applying for a permie job. It was a 1 pager. I was on a short-list of over 200 candidates and was one of three to get an interview. The interviewer said they liked the fact that I was the only person with a one page CV that told them enough to know that they NEEDED to at least speak to me. I got the job in the end too.
When you write your CV, you write for the audience and not for yourself. Its a very basic rule but surpisingly few people consider it.Last edited by lightng; 22 January 2009, 16:42.Comment
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Well as pointed out earlier mine is 8 pages and I've just got off of a phone interview with a guy who was going through it (I could hear him turning the pages) and asking me about the old projects as they are very relevant to what this one was about and it helped a lot. Meet the client next week, although the project starts in March, he's going to try and get me in early (not an agency though, more a software house/consultancy.)“Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.”Comment
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Darmstadt that's extremely rare, most hiring managers and HR people will really only look at page 1, if that holds their attention then pages 2 and 3 will be read. They have to be incredibly interested and have time on their hands to get past a 3rd page.
When I've hired people I've always done a skim read page 1's and created 2 piles, 1 to read the second to bin unless pile 1 turns out to be useless on closer inspection, CV's that ramble on for 4+ pages typically make pile 2 automatically.
Contractor CV's are sales documents that need to make a clear statement of filling the requirements on page 1 to merit reading in any depth.Comment
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Well page 1 just has my personal details on it so I don't think that would help Its very difficult to cut my CV down and believe me I have tried. For example in my last project I worked with the following:
- 9 different operating systems
- 4 different types of hardware
- 10 major applications which rely on another 42 versions of software
- 3 programming languages
Then you have to describe what you did with all of the above, admittedly some were just touched on but with the majority I had to have detailed knowledge and work with them at a very high level which they want to know about.
At the same time I was also working for another company and providing consiúltancy for 2 others which also has to be described.
What I have found is that companies, not agents as it tends to go above their heads, read the CV, see that I have the relevant experience and when it comes to the phone or face to face interview it tends to be pretty short as they already know my knowledge and the questions asked tend to be just those to clarify some points. Never had a problem with it and 9 out of 10 projects have been obtained with that CV.“Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.”Comment
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