Last week, while sitting on my front porch reviewing a pharmaceutical executive’s resume, I jotted down a brief list of tips for writing resumes. Deborah St James edited and expanded the list. Here are our top tips:
DO
- Use active verbs immediately after the bullet points used to describe your job: organized, planned, supervised, coached, completed, etc.
- Be consistent. Find a good template and follow it. Also, use a style guide for correct punctuation, grammar, and spelling.
- Put all necessary information in the heading. Make it easy for the reader to quickly find you.
- Put your job title FIRST, then the company name, and then the dates of employment. If you’ve held multiple positions with a company, list the company name and total dates of service at the top of the heading, and then offer separate listings for each job.
For
Example:
ABC
Company, June 1993-present
Director,
XYZ Product, April 2009-present
- Manage sales and marketing of XYZ Product, a (disease state) medicine…
- Oversee $X budget…
District
Sales Manager, December 2003-April 2009
- Managed X Sales Representatives for X Drug…
- Coached representatives in developing business…
Hospital
Account Manager, October 1996-December 2003
- Managed $X territory with X hospitals…
- Achieved formulary status for XYZ Product in every hospital in territory…
Sales
Representative, June 1993-October 1996
- Detailed ABC Medicine to physicians in (specialty areas)…
- Earned President’s Council recognition…
AVOID
- Using adjectives and adverbs to describe your work as these can detract from your claims. For example, “significantly improved” could mean many different things. Instead, offer specifics such as percentages and rankings.
- Claiming anything you cannot back up in writing or with a reference.
- Using distracting or difficult-to-read type: unusual fonts, type that is less than 11 points, all caps, italics, and too much bold.
- Putting periods at the end of each bullet. These phrases don’t usually warrant a period because often they are not complete sentences.
For more resume writing tips, check out
our book, Listen. Write. Present. The Elements for Communicating Science and Technology.
Please send us questions and blog topic
ideas: Stephanie@ListenWritePresent.com
Cheers,
Steph
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