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The Canadian Resume Tip Sheet

RajeevPillai

Star Member
Jan 15, 2013
80
4
Toronto
Category........
Visa Office......
London
NOC Code......
1121
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
05-01-2009
LANDED..........
15-04-2011
A resume is a summary of your skills, experience, and achievements. Your resume is often your first contact with a potential employer, and its goal is to get you a job interview. For it to do this effectively, it needs to be properly formatted, well-written, and targeted towards the specific job you are applying for.

What Employers Look for in a Resume

Did you know that employers spend an average of only 10 to 20 seconds reading a resume for the first time? Or that 85% of employers will stop reading a resume with spelling or grammatical errors? With such a small margin for error, taking the time to create a resume that employers want to read is definitely worth the effort.

Employers’ quick tips
Here is some of the most common advice from employers in our recent Employer Resume and Cover Letter Survey (available in the Career Resource Library):
•"Target your resume to the job – don’t send me a generic resume!"
•"Be concise and clear"
•"Be honest"
•"Keep the format clean and simple with bulleted points – don’t be flashy!"
•"Include results in your descriptions of your experiences"
•"Spell-check and proofread!"


What Should My Resume Look Like?
Everyone has a different opinion of what a resume should look like — there is no one right format. Some employers prefer the chronological format because it is clear and easy to follow. However, the most important thing is to choose the right style for you depending on how your experience matches up to the position requirements. Below are the three basic types, followed by two variations:

Chronological
This works best when you have a clear career progression and recent career-related experience. Information is presented in reverse chronological order, with the focus on work experiences.

Functional or skills-based
This works best when you have little direct experience and want to emphasize transferable skills and abilities. This style takes the attention away from your employment dates and job titles by presenting your experiences under skill-based headings. This style of resume is popular with career-changers and those with major gaps in their employment history – otherwise it is not generally recommended.

Modified chronological or combination
This works well when work experience is in several areas or there are minor gaps in your employment history. As the name implies, this combines the best of both the above types – generally starting with a skills-focused section and followed by education and relevant experience. This style is very popular with current students and recent graduates.

One-page resume
Certain industries in Canada (particularly the finance industry), as well as most employers in the United States look for a one-page resume. This will require being even more focused and concise than in a usual two-page resume.


What Goes in a Resume?

While there are wide variety of ways you can present your information in a resume, there are standard sections that should always be included. Contact information and objective generally appear first, but after that the order may vary depending on the position to which you are applying — you will want to put the most relevant information first when possible.


What Employers Say

"The skill-based resume is effective when work experience is limited."

Yes 80%
No 20%



Contact information
Make sure the employer has a clear way of contacting you or leaving a message. Include your name, address, phone number, e-mail address, and fax number (if available).

Objective (optional)
Your objective statement should be brief, specific, short-term, and honest. It should relate to a specific career area or position.

Education
In reverse chronological order — most recent first — list all your degrees and diplomas, with dates of completion or expected dates of completion, program or area of study, and educational institutions. You may want to include selected courses, G.P.A. (include scale), awards, academic achievements, thesis or research topic if relevant to the position to which you are applying.

Experience
This can include work experience, volunteer experience, extracurricular, or even course projects if highly relevant. Experiences are listed in reverse chronological order within each section (date, position, organization, city).

Think about highlighting career-related experiences by grouping them into relevant and additional categories, or into areas of expertise such as teaching, public relations, administrative, field work, laboratory, or programming.

Include volunteer and extracurricular experiences that demonstrate leadership, communication, organizational, and other skills. In a chronological resume, they are often listed in their own sections. Extracurricular activities can include clubs, associations, and hobbies or sports.

For skills-based resumes, group your experiences into relevant categories like communication, analytical, and computer. Include a brief work chronology toward the end of the resume.


Looking for More Powerful Descriptions?

When describing your experiences be direct, assertive, honest, but not modest. Use point-form statements, beginning with positive action words to describe your responsibilities and accomplishments — include results if relevant. Accomplishment-based words include terms like: achieved, attained, established, improved, motivated, refined, and spearheaded. For help generating descriptions with more punch, read Your Skills and Your Accomplishments.
 

PalNP

Hero Member
Mar 7, 2011
613
108
Category........
Visa Office......
NDVO
NOC Code......
0213
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
June 10
Passport Req..
August 13
VISA ISSUED...
September 13
RajeevPillai said:
A resume is a summary of your skills, experience, and achievements. Your resume is often your first contact with a potential employer, and its goal is to get you a job interview. For it to do this effectively, it needs to be properly formatted, well-written, and targeted towards the specific job you are applying for.
Good one. Thanx for sharing.
Pal
 

KRP

Hero Member
Jan 13, 2012
847
191
Category........
FSW
LANDED..........
01/02/2011
Sab bakwas hai Rajeev. Tuje ab bahut kuch sikna baki hai . Bilkul bachhe ho.

Yeh sab Access mein sikka hoga .

We all know this bull shit. ;D ;D
 

kiala

Star Member
Feb 7, 2012
121
48
KRP said:
Sab bakwas hai Rajeev. Tuje ab bahut kuch sikna baki hai . Bilkul bachhe ho.

Yeh sab Access mein sikka hoga .

We all know this bull *censored word*. ;D ;D
true...not a big bull shyte what rajiv is telling...

go to tcet or employment ontario and they will tell every thing
 

NN74

Hero Member
Jun 8, 2013
200
17
Category........
Visa Office......
London
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
I really do not understand as 'why these people make new comers fool?'

In Canada, when you land, CIC has assigned many organisations like MicroSkills, they will guide you to make your Canadian CV. In some cases, Micrsoskills give you bus tickets (tokens) to visit their office to improve your CV.

RajeevPillai, as he claims an HR resource, should know that in Canada CVs are scanned thru scanner automatically. So fist page 25% text for key words is only important!


RajeevPillai said:
A resume is a summary of your skills, experience, and achievements. Your resume is often your first contact with a potential employer, and its goal is to get you a job interview. For it to do this effectively, it needs to be properly formatted, well-written, and targeted towards the specific job you are applying for.

What Employers Look for in a Resume

Did you know that employers spend an average of only 10 to 20 seconds reading a resume for the first time? Or that 85% of employers will stop reading a resume with spelling or grammatical errors? With such a small margin for error, taking the time to create a resume that employers want to read is definitely worth the effort.

Employers' quick tips
Here is some of the most common advice from employers in our recent Employer Resume and Cover Letter Survey (available in the Career Resource Library):
•"Target your resume to the job – don't send me a generic resume!"
•"Be concise and clear"
•"Be honest"
•"Keep the format clean and simple with bulleted points – don't be flashy!"
•"Include results in your descriptions of your experiences"
•"Spell-check and proofread!"


What Should My Resume Look Like?
Everyone has a different opinion of what a resume should look like — there is no one right format. Some employers prefer the chronological format because it is clear and easy to follow. However, the most important thing is to choose the right style for you depending on how your experience matches up to the position requirements. Below are the three basic types, followed by two variations:

Chronological
This works best when you have a clear career progression and recent career-related experience. Information is presented in reverse chronological order, with the focus on work experiences.

Functional or skills-based
This works best when you have little direct experience and want to emphasize transferable skills and abilities. This style takes the attention away from your employment dates and job titles by presenting your experiences under skill-based headings. This style of resume is popular with career-changers and those with major gaps in their employment history – otherwise it is not generally recommended.

Modified chronological or combination
This works well when work experience is in several areas or there are minor gaps in your employment history. As the name implies, this combines the best of both the above types – generally starting with a skills-focused section and followed by education and relevant experience. This style is very popular with current students and recent graduates.

One-page resume
Certain industries in Canada (particularly the finance industry), as well as most employers in the United States look for a one-page resume. This will require being even more focused and concise than in a usual two-page resume.


What Goes in a Resume?

While there are wide variety of ways you can present your information in a resume, there are standard sections that should always be included. Contact information and objective generally appear first, but after that the order may vary depending on the position to which you are applying — you will want to put the most relevant information first when possible.


What Employers Say

"The skill-based resume is effective when work experience is limited."

Yes 80%
No 20%



Contact information
Make sure the employer has a clear way of contacting you or leaving a message. Include your name, address, phone number, e-mail address, and fax number (if available).

Objective (optional)
Your objective statement should be brief, specific, short-term, and honest. It should relate to a specific career area or position.

Education
In reverse chronological order — most recent first — list all your degrees and diplomas, with dates of completion or expected dates of completion, program or area of study, and educational institutions. You may want to include selected courses, G.P.A. (include scale), awards, academic achievements, thesis or research topic if relevant to the position to which you are applying.

Experience
This can include work experience, volunteer experience, extracurricular, or even course projects if highly relevant. Experiences are listed in reverse chronological order within each section (date, position, organization, city).

Think about highlighting career-related experiences by grouping them into relevant and additional categories, or into areas of expertise such as teaching, public relations, administrative, field work, laboratory, or programming.

Include volunteer and extracurricular experiences that demonstrate leadership, communication, organizational, and other skills. In a chronological resume, they are often listed in their own sections. Extracurricular activities can include clubs, associations, and hobbies or sports.

For skills-based resumes, group your experiences into relevant categories like communication, analytical, and computer. Include a brief work chronology toward the end of the resume.


Looking for More Powerful Descriptions?

When describing your experiences be direct, assertive, honest, but not modest. Use point-form statements, beginning with positive action words to describe your responsibilities and accomplishments — include results if relevant. Accomplishment-based words include terms like: achieved, attained, established, improved, motivated, refined, and spearheaded. For help generating descriptions with more punch, read Your Skills and Your Accomplishments.
 

Andy007

Full Member
Oct 1, 2013
42
5
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
keep resume as simple as possible and don't show your self over qualified , especially if you have just landed there,

many of my friends who went there highlighted so much experience etc and had to go through tough times
 

RajeevPillai

Star Member
Jan 15, 2013
80
4
Toronto
Category........
Visa Office......
London
NOC Code......
1121
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
05-01-2009
LANDED..........
15-04-2011
A very useful tip while using an Applicant Tracking System (ATS)

The keywords option in an Applicant Tracking System will rank candidates based on how many times the keywords appear in the person's resume as well as how close the keywords are toward the top of the resume, which the system sees as more recent in the candidate's experience