Letter
Design
by
ResumeEdge.com
- The Net's Premier Resume Writing and Editing Service
Letterheads
It is so easy to create a letterhead all your own and to make it match your
résumé. Just copy into a new document the name and address you have already
created for your résumé. It couldn't be simpler! It makes a very sharp
impression when your cover letter and résumé match in every respect from paper
color to font to letterhead.
Paper Colors
Color, like music, creates an atmosphere. Everyone knows that different colors
evoke different feelings. Red can make a person feel warm, whereas blue does
just the opposite.
Of course, you wouldn't want to
use red in a résumé! . . . although an artist could get away with just about
any color. As a general rule, résumé papers should be neutral or light in
color. After 20 years in the résumé business, I have discovered that brilliant
white linen paper is still the most popular, followed closely by a slightly
off-white and then by shades of light gray.
Just make sure that the color of
the paper you choose is representative of your personality and industry and
that it doesn't detract from your message. For instance, a dark paper color
makes your résumé hard to read.
In a scannable résumé, never use
papers with a background (pictures, marble shades, or speckles). A scanner
tries to interpret the patterns and dots as letters. This is a good rule to
follow even for paper résumés that will never be scanned. Often companies will
photocopy résumés for hiring managers, and dark colors or patterns will simply
turn into dark masses that make your résumé difficult to read. If a company has
multiple locations, the original résumé may even get faxed from one site to
another and the same thing happens.
The type of paper (bond, linen,
laid, cover stock, or coated) isn't as important, although it also projects an
image. Uncoated paper (bond, linen, laid) makes a classic statement. It feels
rich and makes people think of corporate stationery and important documents.
Coated stock recalls memories of magazines, brochures, and annual reports.
Heavy cover stock and laid paper can't be successfully folded and don't hold
the ink from a laser printer or copier very well, so they must be handled
gently. All of these factors play a part in your paper choice.
Regardless of the paper you
choose, mail your résumé flat instead of folded. It costs a few extra cents in
postage and a little more for the 9 × 12 envelope, but the impression it makes
is well worth the extra cost. It also helps with the scannability of your
résumé. Thank you letters and other follow-up letters can be folded in standard
No. 10 business envelopes.
Click here for ResumeEdge.com, Give Your Resume an Edge!
From
Designing the Perfect Resume,by Pat Criscito.
Copyright 2000. Reprinted by arrangement with Barron's Educational
Series, Inc.
|
|