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The significance of learning to write a resume
Of course it is necessary! ! ! How can a person who can't even write a resume convince others that you will understand your work?

Have you ever thought, if you can get a job opportunity with a monthly salary of 6K, and get a 4K offer because of Haitou's resume, which one do you think you will choose?

I believe that most people, if they don't know that they are worth 6K in advance and only get a 4K in the end, it may take a year or two to realize the importance of writing a resume! !

A good resume can help you get better interview opportunities and job opportunities! !

So below, let's talk about how to write a resume!

Generally speaking, a resume must contain three parts: personal information, personal experience and other information. Here, how to write these three parts from two aspects: vision and content.

Reading experience

Is how HR feels when he sees your resume. Don't always think big ideas. Most people don't need those resume templates with special design sense, so here is a simple and generous template, which is like this:

Please ignore the template content.

Collection type

Typesetting is also some details in your resume. I have seen some resumes that look simple, but they are not typeset, with different fonts, unclear paragraphs and misplaced items. Such a resume is not conducive to reading. So when you write your resume, you must pay attention to these details to facilitate HR reading, which is to give your resume one more chance. It will be explained in detail later.

content

After all, content is what determines your value. Content is the main content and reading experience is the supplement. The focus of the resume is still on the content. As mentioned above, it contains personal information, personal experience and other information, which will be introduced in detail below.

personal information

The personal information here contains two pieces, basic information+education information.

I won't say much about the basic information, including your name, date of birth, contact phone number, contact email address, education background, target position, personal photo and other major information. Home address, height and weight are all unnecessary. Of course, if some positions have height requirements, such as front desk administration, you should write down your height.

Pay a little attention to the information when typesetting, so it looks more comfortable. For reference, I revised my resume last time.

Educational information

Briefly explain your education time, college and major, and you don't need to write the courses you have studied. I've seen many courses written on it, but it's not necessary. For example:

XX years x months -XX years x months, XX University, majoring in XX.

If you get good grades, you can put them under educational information, such as GPA3.7/4 (the top 5% of colleges and universities). If your grades are average, but you have some good information about winning prizes at school, you can also write it down. Because not all HR know these awards, you can indicate the number of winners or the level of awards like writing your grades, such as XX outstanding cadres (3 universities) and XX provincial awards.

If there is nothing to write about, you can say something awesome that you have done in school, and write it by star method (if you have no internship experience, write your college experience separately, not in educational materials).

In scheduling, you can write educational information in bold and Microsoft Yahei. The following information is written in fine fonts, and a picture is given for reference:

Personal experience

Generally speaking, what I mainly write here are these pieces, internship experience, campus experience and project experience. Let me talk about the concept of writing content first. Many people write about what the internship did, but not how to do it. For example, "I learned about the work of XX during my internship in XX" and "I worked as an intern in XX and was in charge of XXX", then your resume will be very thin and empty.

You should write what you did+how you did it+the result, for example: "Responsible for XX work in XX unit, get XX results through XXX, and master XX skills."

If there is no internship, you can write about your school experience. For example, you can also write about the work of any organization, such as pictures:

If you don't participate in college organization or internship, you can write about one of your projects, such as your experiment and social practice. Thinking is the same, even practicing part-time jobs can write:

Here are some points worth mentioning about typesetting:

1, write from near to far. If there are two internships, write the nearest one first, and then write the far one;

2. I like to write educational information, with thick fonts in my work unit and fine fonts in my work content;

3, the work content is more, to be segmented, separated by bullets, do not write long paragraphs, it seems that there is no sense of hierarchy.

Here is another picture for your reference:

Other information

Other information is mainly some skills certificates and your self-introduction.

The honorary certificate of the school is suggested to be placed in the educational experience, and it is enough to pick 2-3 valuable ones; Write some relevant skills certificates here. Don't exaggerate I once met a classmate who wrote a CET-4 certificate, and later noted that he was proficient in listening, speaking, reading and writing, and fluent in reading professional English books. I reserve my opinion on this. So don't use the word proficient casually. . .

The same is true of certificates. Write some relevant certificates. If you don't have any certificate, you can write some skills related to the position you are applying for, such as the resume of this classmate, who is going to do the work of new media operation, so I suggest you fill in some skills descriptions related to copywriting and new media here, as shown in the figure below:

self-introduction

Self-introduction is also the hardest hit area, and this part is actually complementary. If you write the above content well, such as the top three graduates of Tsinghua Peking University, then no one will doubt if you introduce yourself and write that you love learning.

However, most people are not so awesome, and their academic achievements are not written. Internship+college experience is also very common, even not so good, and then they write "I love learning". I still have an appointment here

Self-evaluation should be based on facts, not boasting "I love learning" or "I love learning". I was admitted to XX University as the number one in the college entrance examination in XX, with an annual score of 100 ". Which one do you think loves learning?

Speaking with facts, continue to refer to here:

Finally, a brief summary.

Don't use a grandiose resume template (if you are too lazy to find it, just pay attention to a course in the workplace of WeChat official account and reply to "resume" to get it)

Pay attention to some details in the font, and try to use bold and Microsoft elegant black.

In typesetting, we should also pay attention to details, try to be readable and have clear priorities.

Write down your experience in using the STAR method, not only what you did, but also how you did it and the results.

Don't boast.

Forget it. I'll add it when I think about it.