6 Great Executive Resume Writing Tips

This post was written by admin3 on February 5, 2010
Posted Under: Career

It’s easier said than done to create a great resume when you’re under pressure to get it done. This is especially the case if you’ve had a long and complex career, and you’re unsure where your resume’s focus should be.

But, of course, ultimately there’s no excuse for having a subpar executive resume. If you’re stuck, take a look at a few of these tips to help improve your executive resume writing skills.

 

Define a Clear Target

One of the first things you want to do when organizing your executive resume is to define a clear target. It’s always vital to look at a company’s goals, mission, and history in order to develop a personalized approach. Doing some minor research helps you speak to the exact points that the employer’s looking at in order to prove that you’re perfect for the job.

 

Make Sure to Brand Yourself

At this point, you should be known for contributing something to your field. Your name and accomplishments should precede you, regardless of your field of expertise. Your executive resume should focus a bit on branding yourself, and showing why you’re a different and better choice than the other applicants. You especially want to highlight attributes that show your ability to lead and attributes that make you unique and critical to an organization.

 

Include a Success Story or Two

Again, at your level, you should be known for having accomplished a lot. You want an impressive resume that highlights your successes. It’s also helpful to show challenges you’d faced in order to achieve those successes.

 

Leave Room for White Space

When writing an executive resume, it’s often difficult to find a balance between including the right amount of information and leaving enough white space so that BlackBerry email cruisers won’t be overwhelmed with information. Avoiding longer sentences and focusing on your word choice can result in a better balance for mobile devices, and will make an executive resume sound stronger if the statements are on topic and contain valuable information. Each sentence will be easy to read and valuable for employers.

 

Edit and Re-edit

There is absolutely no excuse for having misspelled words or grammatical errors in your resume at the executive level. If you’re not the best speller or grammar buff, you most definitely should have everyone you can think of edit your resume to avoid the embarrassment of being overlooked for something so elementary.

 

Avoid Too Many Pages

You may have a lot of information you’d like to include in your resume due to your extensive experience; however, as you know, managers are busy people with little time to read pages of accomplishments. Don’t write five pages of extensive detail; instead, cut your resume down to a few pages with essential branding and information that markets your abilities and successes as a strong investment.

Hopefully these tips (and your short breather) have helped to give you some focus as you write your executive resume. Now it’s time to write the best resume you’ve ever laid eyes on.

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