RESUMES That Impress a Campus Recruiter
Black Collegian, Oct 2006 by Bruce, Calvin
Imagine that you are a corporate recruiter interviewing on campus for several entry-level positions with your company, a leading Fortune 500 corporation. The campus career services office has scheduled brief afternoon interviews with a dozen seniors interested in your company. By request, you have obtained their resumes to look over during lunch.
What exactly do you expect to see prior to speaking one-on-one with the aspiring job seekers?
General Appearance
For starters, the general appearance of the resumes always gets your attention. You notice dial several resumes belonging to females are printed on pastel-colored paper with a typeface dial's more appropriate for a wedding invitation. Not a good sign. Don't these young women realize how important it is to convey a sense of professional decorum when setting forth their qualifications in print?
Three other resumes stand out in an unfavorable way. One is printed in brown ink on yellow paper. Another one shows verbiage in a font so large that it makes the entire resume look gaudy. A third resume is printed on light green stock with an African kente motif border all the way around. Although colorful, it's more suited for bulletin board announcements at Afro House than for presentation to corporate America.
Glancing at some of the other resumes leaves you equally disenchanted with the prospect of interviewing the students offering them. One of them has glaring spelling and syntax errors. Another one has a strange layout. Although the student majored in Fine Arts, the "cutesy" layout does not earn her any points as a desirable candidate for a major employer. Several other resumes evidence an appealing layout - with no apparent errors - but show some smudges and very faint ink, as though the printers that produced them were low on toner. Minor things like that certainly stand out to the discerning eye.
To your pleasant surprise, the three remaining resumes are quite impressive. They are printed on quality white paper, with an appealing layout and attractive font. Reading them quickly, you don't detect any errors. It's obvious these students took the time to produce a quality literary product that represents them well as prospective candidates. You set aside these documents for further attention.
Academic Preparation
Obviously, your firm is going to hire people, not pieces of paper. So, with a forgiving spirit, you look more closely at the content of the resumes to detect what the students really have to offer in terms of academic preparation.
Half of the resumes don't indicate any GPA at all. The other half note GPAs of 3.0 or better. Four of the resumes in the latter category, in fact, indicate GPAs of 3.6, 3.7, 3.8 and 3.9, with student memberships in leading academic honorary societies. Certainly these are notable achievements that indicate significant "brain power," something that all companies look for when hiring junior-level employees.
Ironically, two of the resumes high-lighting the top grade point averages were not included among those in the most impressive category in terms of general appearance. One was the brown-on-yellow document; the other was the kente-motif resume. Gee, that complicates things a bit. You certainly can't nix these students as viable candidates based upon initial visual impressions of their resumes.
The remaining two academically superior students presented resumes that fit the standard style. As neat, easy-to-read documents, they landed in the "most favorable" pile from the outset.
Another important consideration is the level of difficulty associated with the student's course of study. Earning a 3.2 GPA in a rigorous, academically challenging major is more impressive than getting higher grades in a course of study filled with "easy" electives.
Demonstrated Leadership
Corporate recruiters seek graduates who have demonstrated leadership in college. They know that they are likely to become employees who show initiative, work well in a team environment, and generally excel in their areas of contribution to the organization.
Putting aside how the resumes look, you glance over each one to see what evidence there is of notable leadership qualities. With highlighter in hand, you mark the things that catch your eye in terms of exceptional leadership. Among them are these claims on various resumes:
* Captain of the wrestling team and co-captain of the varsity football team
* President of high school student council and college student governance committee
* Assistant editor of college newspaper and editor-in-chief of the college yearbook
* Student coordinator of the statewide campaign of a national Presidential candidate
* Organizer of campus-and-community relief effort following Hurricane Katrina
* Eagle Scout leader of an inner-city Boy Scout troop
* Recruitment chair for a Big Sister program involving girls from migrant communities
Work Experience
Corporate recruiters turn a critical eye toward work experience discussed on a resume. Admittedly, recruiters don't expect to see the same level of work experience as they would when perusing the resumes of seasoned professionals. Nevertheless, they do look for indications of personal industriousness in the employment arena.
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