6 Key Areas Recruiters Pay the Most Attention to on Your Resume

Posted by in Career Advice


Ever wondered to yourself what the most critical areas are on your resume when a recruiter is giving it the initial review? As a former hiring manager, I will tell you exactly where I’m looking when I review your resume. However, don’t just take my word for it; a recent study on recruiter behavior conducted by The Ladders confirms exactly what I’m about to tell you … recruiters spend the most time reviewing the following areas:

 

1.      Your contact information. Believe it or not, this is critical in a recruiter’s search. Mostly because they want to ensure you’re located near the position for which they’re recruiting so that you can easily make it to interviews—and also not have a ridiculously long commute to work.

 

 2.     Your most recent job title. I believe this is why it’s so important to put a job target/job title at the top of your resume. It makes vital information easily accessible to recruiters so that they don’t have to spend too much time searching for it. That being said, they will scan down your resume and look at the most logical place your previous employment would be listed. What they are looking for here is relevancy to your most recent positions. Have you previously been in this position?

 

 3.      Dates of employment. When I was a recruiter I was trained to not call anyone with fewer than nine months of job longevity at previous employers. Fewer than nine months indicates that you may be a job hopper—which makes you a potential risk to that recruiter.

 

 4.     Primary Job Accomplishments/Responsibilities. You can say a lot about what your previous duties were just by simply writing accomplishment-based statements on your resume. Attach numbers or metrics to everything when possible. Don’t just tell them you improved sales; tell them by how much. Don’t just say you can retain customers; show them you can by providing your retention rates.

 

 5.      Keywords/Core Strengths. Most recruiters will scan a bulleted keyword section at the top of your resume to find matching keywords from the position they are trying to fill. Make sure your resume includes the most relevant keywords, and put this section at the top of your resume. Don’t make the recruiter go searching for it.

 

 6.     Education. You can almost guarantee the recruiter is going to be looking at the bottom of your resume to find out if you have the credentials the position requires. If you don’t hold the minimal level of education or certifications for the position, considered yourself weeded out.

 

 These are the top six areas a recruiter will be reviewing in his or her initial resume scan to determine whether you are a match for the opening the company is trying to fill.  And this illustrates why it’s so critical that you customize your resume for each and every submission!

 

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  • Elizabeth I
    Elizabeth I
    Thank you for the important memo.
  • John K
    John K
    Looks like I have some work to do.Thank you for the useful information.
  • Jean C
    Jean C
    I agree with the 6 key points in this article. A resume should be easy to under-stand, and answer all the main questions.
  • Valentina M
    Valentina M
    Very helpful infomation.
  • Dana T
    Dana T
    The article sums it up about perfect.  Having worked contracts for years I basically used the same keypoints.  I might add to keep the descriptions short, excluding the most recent.  Under 2 pages, but show major accomplishments
  • Stephen L
    Stephen L
    Very helpful. Concise and credible.
  • Candace M
    Candace M
    For *free* help with your resume, check the Unemployment Website in your state. I live in California and there are several state offices that offer this kind of help for free.
  • Laurie F
    Laurie F
    Do you think dates of employment should be included on your resume if you are older than 60? I'm knowing is a huge deterrent. Would it suffice to say in the context of the resume, i.e. (for 12 years) as a parenthetical addition or in some other way?
  • Tebrue J
    Tebrue J
    Very useful information! Thank you very much
  • Antoine L
    Antoine L
    Thank you ma'am! I have all of these categories in place, but never moved them around for each different job. I was always just making sure that I had everything listed. I am a combat veteran U.S. Navy Hospital Corpsman. With 14 years in the medical field, I refuse to shorten my resume. And I always seem to get this "I over qualified" excuse. But I see that I have been hurting myself by not arranging the skills in the right order to stand out. Thanks, again! Stay Motivated!
  • Janet S. F
    Janet S. F
    I shared this with my facebook friends because a group of us over 40 are facing changes in our careers, some expected some not expected. This helped me to recognize the normality of fear and what to do about it. Thank you!
  • Linda G
    Linda G
    I agree with your comments regarding the resume; however, I have a question.  What do you do when you are almost 60 and have been "operationally" terminated from a position?
  • Maureen A
    Maureen A
    This very good, however, I wish that someone could help me with my resume that did not cost a fortune.
  • Patrick y
    Patrick y
    Your information has given me much confidence in my resume
  •  Anthony C
    Anthony C
    Very Useful- thank you.
  •  Rose Eio
    Rose Eio
    This is helpful information
  •  Rose E
    Rose E
    Very helpful informationThanks
  • Arthur C
    Arthur C
    I have had recruiters tell me that my age is the deciding factor of employment as well as hiring managers. They never say you are to old it is always we have decided to go another direction as they hire that 20 or 30 something person.
  • George W
    George W
    Working for a family owned business none of these key areas played a major role - now it's starting for scatch to make sure these areas are covered in my next job interview.
  • Duane C.
    Duane C.
    The whole world is messed up when it comes to getting a job. I worked 25 years on one job 20 years on the floor and the last 5 years as Plant Manager. (precision sheet metal) Than 10 years as a Facilities Supervisor for the city. Do to a restructure in the work force my position was eliminated. First job the company was sold and a new owner came in and cut 5 senior employees including mine and brought in his own management. The city created 4 higher management positions and hired younger and less experienced employees. So I say it's all about age discrimination. I've been unemployed for 15 months and I apply for at least 3 or 4 jobs weekly and I have only had 6 interviews. If was a younger than 60 years of age I know it would be a different story. I'm ready to say screw it and live each day to the fullest and tomorrow will be tomorrow. Bottom line if you want loyalty than get a dog. It's hard to have high hopes of your children being successful in the future when you see college graduates working for such low pay. I'm not sure how I will be able to help my child with college and really what for when we have college graduates working for a very small wage. Experience is priceless and a college education should mean something. Maybe we should allow more immigrants from other countries to North America and than the Americans can sit back and watch them work. When the unemployment rate is bad we need to save our country by employing our people first. What will it be like in 5 or 10 years? I know you will have to bid and pay for a job.
  • PHILIP O
    PHILIP O
    In the real word the only think that should matter is can you do the job and do you have experience.  How long you work for a certain employer or your job title should not matter in getting a job.
  • Cuthbert B
    Cuthbert B
    I strongly agreed, those are some critical points. I'll make the best of them.
  • Senneca M
    Senneca M
    I will apply these methods and get back to you. Only if I notice significant change
  • Jessie D
    Jessie D
    This is so helpful post more of these.
  • Pat D
    Pat D
    sample resume is nicely structured. haven't seen that format before.  quick reading/understanding. professional looking, too.

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