Resumes & Letters Engineering Career Services

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 15 Employment Communication
Advertisements

Student Job Centre 2012 Resume Writing. Student Job Centre Rules of Resume Writing 1.Relevance - make your resume relevant Read the job posting.
Resume Workshop.
Review CTAE-FS-10 Managing your academic career plans and employee relations.
ECS Engineering Career Services ECS Orientation Meeting John Archambault and Kathy Prem M1002 ECB ,
 Catch the attention of an employer  Get an interview.
Resumes. A Résumé Defined Marketing tool that communicates to an employer your skills and experiences Comprised of several key components: Objective Education.
1 Resumes Cover Letters Preparing for an Interview.
Kevin Allan, MS, LPC, NCC Director of Career Services University of Mary.
RESUME WRITING. Objectives Understand the purpose of a resume Discuss stages of resume writing: Preparation, Format, Content, and Evaluation Identify.
Human Services Practicum
What it is and what it is used for?.  It is a type of writing by an author who is trying to get something. As a result, it is an extremely persuasive.
Overview There are many aspects of applying for jobs. We will focus today on: –Resumes –Cover Letters –Interviews.
Résumés: Your Road to the Future. Average Time Spent Reading Resumes 20 seconds Resumes are scanned, not read.
Resumes That ROCK! Touch the Future Career Fair Why a Resume that ROCKS ? Catch the attention of an employer Get an interview.
Types of Resumes Chronological – Snapshot of what you did and when you did it Skills or Functional – Describes what you can do for an employer Combination.
Train-the-Trainer Workshop.  INTRODUCTION  WARM-UP ACTIVITY  OBJECTIVES  WORKSHOP STRUCTURE  ROLES OF FACILITATORS  EXPECTATIONS FROM PARTICIPANTS.
Another Look At Your Resume Prepared by: Ralph Bell.
Career and Financial Management Cover Letter Writing.
How Do I Get There? 4.00 – Understand job search techniques – Understand how to apply, interview, and make a plan for employment.
Purdue OWL staff Brought to you in cooperation with the Purdue Online Writing Lab Résumés.
BC2: Job Hunting— Resumes. BC2: Creating a Resume  How Employer’s Use Resumes: To decide who to interview. To skim/scan for key words. To use as an example.
Creating Your Resumé Dan Solarek Myrna Rudder. What is a Resumé? Critical tool in your co-op, part-time or full-time job search A summary of your qualifications.
Resumes and Cover Letters Cynthia Favre Career Center.
Building Your Resume By Student WorkForce Readiness Project PHRMA/SWHRMA.
What do you want to become? Career Development & Experiential Learning Copyright © 2007, Department of Career Development & Experiential.
RESUME WRITING SEMINAR FOSHAY TECH ACADEMY October, 2011.
How to create a Resume And other stuff you should care about even though you may not yet.
Resumes Class Workbook. What is a Resume? o Resumes are job search tools that show potential employers who are you. o They summarize your knowledge, skills.
©2007 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 2/e PPTPPT.
1 RESUME WRITING The Key to a Successful Future!.
R E S U M E S. What is a Resume? It’s a brief history of your accomplishments and experience that you prepare for future potential employers.
Resume Writing Workshop. What is a Resume? A resume is a one or two page summary of your education, skills, accomplishments, and experience. Your resume's.
Career Readiness - 10 Resumes. M. Anderson – Career Readiness 10 Types of resumes Functional Chronological Scannable Online.
Résumés: Your Road to the Future. Average Time Spent Reading Resumes 20 seconds Resumes are scanned, not read.
Get the Job You Want Your Résumé: Your First Contact Employers use résumés to choose a short list of applicants to invite to a job interview. What Makes.
 Getting Experience  Searching for Positions  Writing a Resume and Cover Letter Preparing For Your Future.
STUDENT & RECENT GRAD RESUME WRITING & INTERVIEW TIPS.
Developing a Winning Resume Career Services Moody Hall 134 For appointments call: (512)
Communicating your Career on Paper Teresa Evans, PhD, Director of the Office of Career Development & Brigitta Glick, SPHR, Founder and CEO, Provenir.
Employment Documents Unit 5 Objectives:
Resume : Tips on How to Get Noticed Zara Zeitountsian Director of Communications Office of Communications, Alumni Relations and Career Development American.
How Do I Get There? 4.00 – Understand job search techniques – Understand how to apply, interview, and make a plan for employment.
Basic Components. Contact Information Objective Summary Education Honors/Awards Experience Activities Other Skills.
Language Studies and Academics Résumés Definition, Types, Formatting Employability Module.
OPINIONS… BY LEIGH ESKIN Employer Resumes. Employers– Giving Feedback! 111 Employers completed the survey  46% were HR representatives  54% were other.
Building a Resume That Gets Attention. Resume Quiz How long does an employer look at a resume? 30 seconds 2 minutes 5 minutes 30 minutes.
Resumes. Agenda  Review the Basics 1. Purpose of a Resume 2. General Tips 3. Formatting  Outline 1. Heading 2. Objective 3. Education 4. Experience.
 What can you tell me about the person who’s resume we just looked at?  What is their name?  Have they ever worked with kids before?  What kind.
Warren Jackson 234 Park Place Wheaton, MD (301) OBJECTIVE: An Office Assistant position which uses my computer skills.
Resume Overview Preparing for your Job Shadow. What is a Resume? It is your first impression Guide for an interviewer or resume evaluator Summary of qualifications.
Resume Writing An Introduction to Planning and Writing a Winning Resume.
Junior Resume Seminar.  Rank in order of importance what you think colleges listed as their criteria for rendering admissions decisions: 1 – 10  ____Class.
1 You’re Hired: How to Find Your Ideal Job March 31, 2009.
United International College English Language Centre How to Write a Resume & CV.
JOB DOCUMENTS Career Exploration Unit 4. Job Documents  Terms  Resume  Job Application  Reference  Cover Letter  Qualifications  Pre-employment.
Cover Letters Davis High School Financial Literacy Course Let’s Get That Interview!
How Do I Get There? 4.00 – Understand job search techniques – Understand how to apply, interview, and make a plan for employment.
Hanson Career Workshop Session 1: Finding Your Career Fit Session 2: Writing Resumes Session 3: Writing Cover Letters/Work Search Strategies Session 4:
How Do I Get There? 4.00 – Understand job search techniques.
How Do I Get There? 4.00 – Understand job search techniques.
A presentation brought to you be Dominican University Peer Advisors
A presentation brought to you be Dominican University Peer Advisors
Layout, Content and Design
Resume Writing.
How Do I Get There? 4.00 – Understand job search techniques.
How Do I Get There? 4.00 – Understand job search techniques.
How Do I Get There? 4.00 – Understand job search techniques.
RESUMES & COVER LETTERS
How Do I Get There? 4.00 – Understand job search techniques.
Presentation transcript:

Resumes & Letters Engineering Career Services University of Wisconsin-Madison John Archambault, Susan Piacenza, Kathy Prem, Lisa Beneker

Why do you need a resume? To obtain an interview Will need to: It’s an advertisement for you Attach to MyECS profile using MyWeb Space E-mail directly to employers Grab a recruiter’s attention at first glance Hand out at career fairs Must be honest and factual Submit on website – for direct hire Shows you in your best light Need a formatted version and a “scannable” version

Why do you need a resume? To prepare for the interview A well-developed resume helps you to focus on your 3-5 themes of interests and qualification strengths To emphasize and guide the interview What projects/experiences do you want to emphasize Most responses will be 2 – 3 minute responses Be prepared to talk about any item on your resume for 5 - 10 minutes, if asked

What should you include? Name & contact Information Objective statement Education Experience Projects Skills / Awards / Interests / Activities / Publications Anything else you think is important… High school information ok to use as a freshman or sophomore

Where Will Employers Contact you? E-mail Quickest and most direct contact Phone Professionalize your incoming message Don’t answer unknown # if you don’t have the time to talk or are in a loud situation Reply to messages Both a campus and permanent address, particularly for co-op and intern students

Objective Statement Write 2 – 3 phrases outlining the type of position you are seeking and your special interest areas Co-op, intern or professional Engineering major Special interest areas could be particular industries or functional areas Do not use words like “challenging position” Focus on what you can do for the employer; not what the employer can do for you

Objective Statement Samples Bad example: A fulfilling position in mechanical engineering where I can expand my communication and leadership skills. Straightforward, useful information: A geological engineering co-op position in water resources management or remediation for a maximum of three work terms.

Education Section Degree level, major and date degree is expected University attended GPA – Can be overall, major, last 4 semesters Other Possibilities Coursework – filler category – limit list Academic projects Areas of emphasis Honors, Scholarships

Education example University of Wisconsin-Madison B.S. Engineering Mechanics, expected May 2010 Engineering GPA 3.2/4.0, Cumulative GPA 2.8/4.0 Academic Design Projects Mars Wind Machine: Completed stress and displacement analysis of Giromill airfoils. Determined most effective internal airfoil construction and material. High Voltage Power Line Hybrid Crossarm: Developed an efficient design process. Completed stress/strain analysis for worst case scenario; appropriate materials selection/dimension analysis. Selected Course Work Advanced Strength of Materials, Finite Elements, Material Fatigue, Aerodynamics

Experience Section Potential section titles Engineering Experience Additional Work Experience Industrial Experience Research Experience Format this section the same as you formatted the Education section For descriptions, use phrases, not sentences Use key words and action verbs (pages 18-19 of ECS Job Search Guide)

Experience Section Quantify terms, if possible Managed the operation of a municipal pool service over 1000 customers each day. Supervised a staff of 7 lifeguards. Required strong organizational skills. Saved $3000 for college expenses. List duties and accomplishments Developed low-stress, clear and textured optical quality polycarbonate film products used in display and data storage applications on state-of-the-art extrusion lines using Six Sigma tools. Team leader in commercialization of product with projected revenue of $4.8 million in 2002. Key team member in commercialization of product with projected revenue of $8 million in 2002.

No Experience? Everyone has experience Academic projects Also appropriate in education or own section Volunteer experience Also appropriate in additional information Any work experience

Not just engineering experience All jobs are important Indicate strong work ethic Examples of development of leadership and communication skills Shows use of time management, meeting deadlines, working with others, taking responsibility May also balance a GPA below 3.0 Worked 20 hours/week while full-time student Paid 80% of college expenses through part-time work Silverspring Golf Course, Middlebury, IL Caddie, Summers 2005-2007 Developed strong interpersonal skills in working with variety of customers and management. Enhanced already strong work ethic by working 12 hours/day for 3 months each summer. Saved $3,300 over 4 summers. Promoted to caddy master in 2007. Trained and supervised eight new hires.

What skills do you have? Computer skills Language skills Be inclusive: languages, platforms, programs Language skills Convey the level of proficiency Proficient Fluent Familiar with

What else should you include? Activities Engineering or community organizations Volunteer experience Awards, scholarships, honors What else are you interested in/spend time on? UW Marching Band, intramural sports teams, restoring old cars, and Eagle Scout

Is the format important? Resumes are looked at VERY quickly ½ content, ½ appearance In general, one page for BS students, often 2 pages for MS students White space is necessary between sections Quality printing on white or light paper so it’s easy to read Use bullets, bolding, etc. But not too much!

Is your resume ready? Proofread Have a friend/roommate proofread ECS 24/48 hr drop-off review Appointment after Career Connection

Final Product

Cover Letter is Required The cover letter Introduces resume Demonstrates writing skills Shows match with employer Change for each employer Three paragraphs Introduction - what do you want (internship, etc.) Body - why they should hire you (what makes you a good match) Closing - how you are going to follow-up with them PROOFREAD

How to send E-mail Mail Convenient/fast for employers and you One screen – no scrolling Business format 1-2 paragraphs Scannable resume in body; formatted resume attached Mail Same paper/format as resume One page Signed

Questions? Additional information in ECS Student Handbook Books/Samples available in ECS Office

Career Fair Resume For the Career Connection only, include at the bottom of each resume: Candidate Type (co-op/intern/professional) Student ID Work Authorization (US citizen/Permanent Resident/Visa Holder) Intern 902225558 F1 Visa

Questions?