When older workers hit the job market, they tend to take two common -- and ill-advised -- strategies for resume preparation.
Many
40-plus job seekers adopt an "I am what I am" approach. Believing
there's no sense in repackaging the defining moments of their careers,
they simply update the top of their traditional chronological resume
with a brief description of recent projects, while subtracting a few
lines from the bottom to abbreviate (not eliminate) mention of a job at
a company they left a quarter of a century ago.
The opposite
tack, often taken out of fear of age bias and professional
obsolescence, is the "I am whatever they want me to be" approach.
Swayed by well-meaning friends or strident self-help books, these older
job seekers start from scratch, selectively creating a chronology-free
professional identity from their past that precisely matches the needs
of the hiring company du jour. The resulting functional resume is so artful that it could be mistaken for fiction.
Career
experts recommend a superior alternative: The middle path. Workers
should highlight their latest and greatest accomplishments in terms
that will appeal to youthful recruiters and hiring managers,
customizing each resume to directly address the needs of prospective
employers without pandering to each job posting down to the bullet
point. Here's how to get started.
The Age-Old Question: Which Resume Format?
Choosing
a resume format can seem like such a critical decision that it
paralyzes some 40-plus job seekers. A common-sense approach may help
you address this issue.
"There's no reason to disguise the
dates in a work history; just don't use your entire history," says
Sarah Hightower Hill, CEO of Chandler Hill Partners, a career search
strategies firm.
Many experts suggest setting a time limit on
work history. "Experience more than 10 years old is irrelevant, because
work has changed so much," says Carleen MacKay, a practice leader at
staffing firm Spherion.
And when it comes to your education,
some degrees may be perceived as having an expiration date. One
solution: Include dates on a time-limited work history but omit them
from your resume's education section.
Emphasize Accomplishments, Not Years of Experience
Too
many dates going too far back isn't the only factor that ages a resume.
Another common mistake is to brag about depth of experience as a virtue
unto itself. By contrast, recent accomplishments that are relevant to the job opening automatically make a candidate appear more youthful.
As
you draft your resume, "compare yourself to younger workers, who are
engaged with the job market and know what employers want," says Karen
Riggs, a professor of telecommunications at Ohio University and author
of Granny@Work: Aging and New Technology on the Job in America.
Claims of experience that may span the lifetime of an industry also raise another risk commonly faced by older candidates: Being seen as overqualified. Avoid that dubious distinction by deemphasizing prestigious assignments not immediately relevant to the current opening.
Address the Technology Issue Head-On
Whether
you're a programmer analyst or a sales executive, your resume must
confront any reservations the prospective employer may have regarding
your technical aptitude.
One
concern employers have about hiring older workers is that they haven't
kept up with technology. So you should flaunt what you've got in this
area, whether it's an impressive list of certifications or a simple
mention of office-productivity software training you've undertaken.
You also can't ignore the fact that many employers, especially large ones, winnow the thousands of resumes they receive by analyzing the keywords
they contain, especially for technical positions. With the help of a
knowledgeable friend or coworker, audit your resume to make sure it
speaks your target industry's current language.
for more info please visit :- http://career-advice.monster.com/resumes-cover-letters/resume-writing-tips/get-your-50-plus-resume-right/article.aspx