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What should I be aware of when I am writing my resume? Is it enough to list the activities that I am involved in? Watch this video to learn more!

A resume is a very important tool for all of us – whether we are students who dream of using this document as a college application resume or professionals looking to enter our dream job. Think of the resume as a snapshot – not only of your professional accomplishments but academic, personal, and community. It’s an opportunity to showcase how strong a fit you are for the school or company. So how do you maximize the impact the resume can make? Here are my top 5 tips for writing a college application resume and professional resume:

1. Relevance. First and foremost make sure you tailor the resume to where you are applying. Highlight your relevant strengths. Additionally, make sure that you do your homework on the specific requirements the company or college may ask for. For example a an MBA application resume generally needs to be 1 page long, where as an employment resume can be longer.

2. Action Verbs. Describe each of your accomplishments with strong verbs that clearly demonstrate both the breadth and depth of experience. Additionally, avoid using the same action verb multiple times. For example, instead of writing:

  • Handled business development for…. • Handled campaigns for…
  • Responsible for handling…. Replace with alternatives like • Spearheaded business development for • Led campaigns for…. • Managed….

3. Quantify. Provide numbers where possible. Instead of general statements include numbers that provide specifics including time, money or amount. Read the two bullets below and decide what leaves a larger impact on you:

• Headed a project to streamline business …

• Led at team of 6 to streamline a $15,000 infrastructure project…

4. Be specific. Avoid generic statements. In addition to explaining to the reader what you did, include why and how you did it. What was the outcome. Since you have included it in your resume, the reader should be able to understand the role you played and why this activity is significant. For example – instead of writing “Led the payment process initiative” or “Established the technical operation guidelines” explain what prompted you to do this (e.g. identified gaps in…) or how you did it (e.g. analyzed past data….) and was it successful (e.g. reduced time spent…).

5. Avoid Silly mistakes. I know this seems obvious but with stress levels high or deadlines around the corner this happens too often. Silly mistakes come in many forms including spelling mistakes, grammatical errors or inputting the wrong word by accident. Can you spot what’s wrong in the statements below:

• Discussed growth opportunities with senior Management.

• Took a career break in 2003 to renovate my horse

• Bachelor in Science

• I’m attacking my resume for your review

• Managed the daily operations You cannot proofread your resume too many times. The very best of us continue to make errors like these every day. If you feel like you’ve read your resume over 50 times and there are no more mistakes – take a break and come back to it later. You will definitely see something else. Send it to close friends or family. Every eye gravitates toward and catches something different. Hope my tips help in writing your college application, resume or your professional resume!

ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Grishma Nanavaty graduated with an MBA from Carnegie Mellon University and a Bachelor of Science from The University of Warwick after completing her GCSE’s and A-Levels in Hong Kong.

Grishma’s rich professional experiences span futures trading, investment banking, treasury management and diamond wholesaling with previous roles at American Express, Poten & Partners and The Dow Chemical Company in the US and Hong Kong. She brings her global perspective on education and careers to ReachIvy and is eager to share her experiences and assist students with their educational endeavors.

ABOUT THE COMPANY

ReachIvy is a premium education and career advisory that helps aspiring students get accepted into top tier educational institutions globally. We have successful admits at MIT, Columbia, Harvard, University of Pennsylvania, London School of Economics, University of Michigan, Oxford, University of Chicago amongst others.

Vibha Kagzi, Founder and CEO, ReachIvy, holds an MBA from Harvard Business School, and a Bachelor of Science from Carnegie Mellon University. She has also pursued courses at the University of California, Berkeley, the London School of Economics and the Indian School of Business.

Our global team of counsellors have also acquired their degrees from premier institutes and are passionate about sharing their experiences with students worldwide.

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