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CV
Generator
Use
our quick and easy CV Workshop to improve your CV, or download
our Word master CV to use as a template in producing your own (The
CV displays our preferred layout and contains "dummy" data which you
should over-type.)
The purpose of a CV is to provide an up to date summary of your work
experience. It should enable a prospective employer or recruitment
consultant to see quickly whether you have the skills or characteristics
that he is looking for so that he can invite you to attend an interview.
Everybody has different ideas about what constitutes the perfect CV
format but here are the main pointers that most recruiters agree with.
1. Keep it short. The main body of the CV should be no more
than 3 pages. More than this will probably not be read. But make sure
it contains sufficient detail for the reader to understand clearly
what it is you have been doing.
2. Start with your personal details including contact details
(address and telephone number). Details about your education
should be limited to the most advanced qualifications obtained. e.g.
your degree or number of A levels/ GCSEs etc. You will not need to
list the schools you attended or each individual GCSE with its grade.
3. Details about your family, pets, pastimes should appear
at the end of the CV. These are generally used as discussion points
in an interview.
4. You may like to summarise the sort of work animal you are
at the top of the CV as in "A Multi-media design artist with particular
expertise in Photoshop and Web Authoring" but do not make this more
than 3 lines and avoid telling everyone how wonderful you are: it
is the recruiter's job to assess your ability, not yours.
5. Detail your work experience in "reverse chronological order".
This means putting your most recent experience first. We are interested
mainly in what you can do for an employer now, not what you were doing
10 years ago. You should reduce the amount of detail you provide about
previous jobs as you work back through your employment history time.
6. For each position provide (in bold ) a job title, the name
of the employer, and the dates you were (are) employed there. You
should then provide details of the daily tasks you performed, and
any major successes or achievements which you want to draw to the
reader's attention. This is often best done using a succession of
bullet points.
7. Avoid making your CV too complicated in layout and design.
Many agencies and employers feed CV information into a database using
scanners and Optical Character Recognition programs which may fail
to interpret complicated formatting and small fonts.
8. Do not put everything in capitals. It is difficult to read
and can be very annoying. Always use mixed case headings and text.
9. When sending a CV, include a covering note which explains
the geographical areas you are prepared to work in , the distance
you can commute, details of your present salary and the sort of work
you are looking for. If you are looking for a particular type of work
then you should also explain what this is. You should also include
a day-time 'phone number where you can be contacted if possible. Recruitment
consultants are trained to contact candidates with a maximum of discretion.
10. It is a good idea to attach a "skills summary" to the end
of your CV or else include a section on the first page (as long as
this is not too long). This should detail any technical accreditations
you have obtained, key technology strengths, and the various packages
and hardware you are familiar with. Do not waste your time (and ours)
by including the names of packages you know nothing about. Show the
degree of proficiency you have acquired or the amount of experience
you have of each item.
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