Ten Ways Your Resume Can Scare Employers Away

Ten Ways Your Resume Can Scare Employers Away - Academic MedicineIt would be awful if your job search were being hindered by something in your resume — something that might scare employers away.

It is hard to read your own resume with a critical eye. You know yourself too well. It’s hard to get perspective on your own background.

Pick an honest and forthright friend to review your resume for you, and ask them to tell you what they think of it.

Your resume might be scaring employers away. If you are applying for lots of job openings but you aren’t hearing anything back, this could be your problem. How would you know?

They never tell you “Here’s the problem we ran into when we reviewed your resume.” They just go silent, and you keep using the same resume over and over.

Here are ten ways your resume may be scaring employers away:

10. Lots of short-term jobs in a row (with no explanation)

9. Non-traditional, zigzag career path, unexplained

8. Precipitous drops in altitude (e.g., a switch from an executive-level job to a nearly entry-level job)

7. Your formal education doesn’t match your career history

6. Long-term or multiple employment gaps (periods of unemployment)

5. No obvious intersection between your resume and the job specification

4. Lots of typos and misspellings in your resume

3. Industry jargon from a different industry

2. You’re a non-local job candidate (and you don’t explain why)

1. You’ve been a manager in the same function as the non-management job you’re applying for now (screeners will wonder “Why does this applicant want to take a step down?”)

People who review and forward resumes are not typically senior. They may feel that they can’t put forward a candidate who has even one resume “blemish.”

They may feel that they could get in trouble, lose brownie points or even lose their jobs if they recommend an unsuitable candidate for hire.

That’s one reason resume screeners are often so timid. They seem to care much more about a job candidate’s match to the job spec (that is, a clerical match) than to the candidate’s actual story, their history or their accomplishments.

By: Liz Ryan, Contributor 
Source: Forbes
Photo Credit: Shutterstock

Leave a Reply