Keywords
by
ResumeEdge.com
- The Net's Premier Resume Writing and Editing Service
As discussed in step four of the
résumé writing process, using the right keywords for your particular experience
and education is critical to the success of your résumé if it is ever scanned
or e-mailed into an electronic résumé database. Without the right keywords,
your résumé will float in cyberspace forever waiting for a hiring manager to
find it. If your résumé contains all of the right keywords, then you will be
among the first candidates whose résumés are reviewed. If you lack only one of
the keywords, then your résumé will be next in line after résumés that have
them all, and so on.
Remember, your keywords are the
experience and skills that come from the specific terminology used in your job.
For instance, operating room and ICU immediately classify the experience of a
nurse, but pediatric ICU narrows it down even further. Don't try to limit your
résumé by using fewer words. Recall, however, that you only need to use a word
one time for it to be considered a "hit" in a keyword search. Try to use
synonyms wherever possible to broaden your chances of being selected.
You should also understand the
difference between a simple keyword search and a "concept" search. When a
recruiter opens an electronic résumé file in MS Word and sends the computer on
a search for a single word like marketing—which you can do in any word
processing program with a few clicks of a mouse or function key—he or she is
performing a keyword search. You are also performing a keyword search when you
type a word or combination of words into the command line of a search engine
like Yahoo or Excite.
A concept search, on the other
hand, can bridge the gap between words by reading entire phrases and then using
sophisticated artificial intelligence to interpret what is being said,
translating the phrase into a single word, like network, or a combination of
words, like project management.
The software that allows scanners
to read your paper résumé and turn it into an electronic résumé is able to do
just that. Resumix, one of the most widely used applicant tracking systems,
reads the grammar of noun, verb, and adjective combinations and extracts the
information for placement on the form that will become your entry in a résumé
database. Its expert system extraction engine uses a knowledge base of more
than 120,000 rules and over ten million résumé terms. It even knows the
difference between Harvard Graphics (a computer software program) and Harvard
(the university) by its placement on the page and its relationship to the
header that precedes it (Computer Skills or Education). Aren't computers
amazing?
Because of this complicated
logic, and because companies and hiring managers have the ability to
personalize the search criteria for each job opening, it is impossible to give
you a concrete list of the thousands of possible keywords that could be used to
search for any one job. For instance, in one high-tech company I interviewed, a
keyword search included the following criteria from two different hiring
managers for the same job title:
Financial Analyst / Senior
Accountant
REQUIRED
-
BS in finance or accounting with
4 years of experience or
-
MBA in related field with 2
years of relevant experience
-
certified public accountant
-
forecasting
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REQUIRED
-
BS in finance or accounting with
4 years of experience or
-
MBA in related field with 2
years of relevant experience
-
accounting
-
financial reporting
-
financial statement
-
Excel
|
DESIRED
-
accounting
-
financial
-
trend analysis
-
financial statement
-
results analysis
-
trends
-
strategic planning
-
develop trends
-
financial modeling
-
personal computer
-
microcomputers
-
DCF
-
presentation skills
-
team player
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DESIRED
-
ability
-
customer
-
new business
-
financial analysis
-
financial
-
forecasting
-
process improvement
-
policy development
-
business policies
-
PowerPoint
-
Microsoft Word
-
analytical ability
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You can see why it is so
difficult to give definitive lists of keywords and concepts. However, it is
possible to give you samples of actual keyword searches used by recruiters I
have interviewed to give you some ideas. Let me emphasize again that you should
list only experience you actually have gained. Do not include these keywords in
your résumé just because they are listed here.
Business Manager (Central Archive
Management)
REQUIRED
-
BS in engineering or computer
science
-
10 years of related engineering
and/or manufacturing experience
-
strategic planning
-
network
-
product management
-
program management
|
DESIRED
-
business plan
-
line management
-
pricing
-
team player
-
CAM
-
marketing
-
product strategy
-
vendor
-
general management
-
OEM
-
profit and loss
|
Business Operations Specialist
REQUIRED
-
bachelor's degree
-
4 years of related experience
-
production schedule
-
project planning
|
DESIRED
-
ability to implement
-
CList
-
data analysis
-
off-shift
-
team player
-
automation
-
ability to plan
-
customer interaction
-
VM, CMS, JCL
-
REXX, UNIX
-
MVS
-
analytical ability
-
customer interface
-
network
-
skills analysis
-
automatic tools
|
Senior Software Engineer
REQUIRED
-
BS/MS in engineering, computer
science or closely related field
-
8 to 9 years of experience
|
DESIRED
-
C++
-
customer
-
hiring/firing
-
prototype
-
structured design
-
code development
-
DASD
-
methodology
-
real time
-
supervision
-
communication skills
-
experiment design
-
problem solving
-
software design
-
testing
|
Secretary III
REQUIRED
-
high school education or
equivalent
-
5 years of experience
-
typing skill of 55–60 wpm
-
interpersonal skills
-
oral communication
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DESIRED
-
administrative assistance
-
clerical
-
data analysis
-
file maintenance
-
material repair
-
PowerPoint
-
project planning
-
reports
-
screen calls
-
troubleshoot
-
answer phones
-
communication skills
-
document distribution
-
mail sorting
-
Microsoft Word
-
presentation
-
publication
-
schedule calendar
-
secretarial
-
appointments
-
confidential
-
edit
-
material
-
policies and procedures
-
problem solving
-
records management
-
schedule conference
-
telephone interview
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From
Designing the Perfect Resume,by Pat Criscito.
Copyright 2000. Reprinted by arrangement with Barron's Educational
Series, Inc.
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