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Respectful resume writing - reverse the process

We give resumes far too much power in the employment counselling business.

They are essential, but not important.

As well as giving them too much power we usually fail to take advantage of their creation or renovation to truly connect with their owner.

Here's the summary of the conventional approach to creating or renovating a resume:

Start at the top, name, address, form filling personal information

Begin changing formatting at the same time as modifying content - like painting walls that are still being built

First creative writing task is 'Highlights'

Highlights come from activities involved in past work, but we haven't got there yet, so we throw in the generic crap about 'multi-tasking team player with great communication skills'

Or we add generic job description language from the NOC or somewhere, so a baker 'uses machinery and equipment to mix flour, yeast and water' - wow, shocker

We then run through past jobs from most recent backwards, our lives are lived forwards but we run through them backwards,  encouraging even more of a focus on the past

The most recent job often has the most baggage, pain or sensitivity associated with it, so we sensitively start with that

When we get close to the foot of the page we stop adding information on previous work purely for reasons of space

We then say something weak such as 'put a couple of hobbies in here' showing little interest in these as the ghastly task is almost done

Then we add 'References available on request'

Often we'll have a final mess with the format to show we are skilled with computers

The Respectful Journey


Here's how this event can be handled, and it is an event, not an activity or a process, as events happen and then are done.

Start at the end, the foot, with 'Hobbies and Interests' and be interested in them, and what they say about the person.

Then help make a decision about the 'oldest' job to start with toward the foot of the page - conventional 'wisdom' says don't go back further than 10 years but this can often mean leaving out relevant and satisfying past work

Then move forwards, job by job, asking what was entailed what was enjoyable, what was learnt and discovered during that work. What talents were revealed, what skills employed, what self-knowledge was gained?

Or more practically and less 'employment-counsellery' what did the money earned allow you to do during that time?

It's fine to note what someone didn't like about their past work too - we don't need to be afraid of identifying both the best parts and the worst parts in each previous job

Then the most recent job is reached, and we need to be especially gentle. Since it was the most previous work, its loss, for whatever reason, led to the unemployed state of the person in front of us. This was the cause of the present state, and as such is a powerful pivotal point in the journey.

'I thought is was a good fit but...' 'It seemed secure and then 80 of us were laid off', 'The new boss just didn't like me...' 'It was time to move on and I thought I'd get something right away...'

These phrases offer an opportunity to open a dialogue about the loss.

Then the list of previous work is complete and the focus turns to the future, which is where the 'Highlights' come into play and are best stimulated by a seemingly simple question

'What parts of you and your talents and your personality would you like to use in your next job.'

This question gets to the core of ambition, desire and, essentially, expression of one's self. Contrary to the usual list of qualities we believe an unknown, imagined employer might find attractive in us, this group of qualities begin to separate us from others.

If the resume's owner likes to work by themselves, prefers to be quietly left alone to do their work, and is a solid introvert, for goodness sake don't add 'multi-tasking team player with great communication skills' because guess what, they will be hired with the assumption that they are a 'multi-tasking team player with great communication skills' but they are not, and they will suffer hugely if expected to behave like one..

It is extremely disrespectful, and morally dubious, to throw in talents, aptitudes and preferences purely to satisfy an imagined employers imagined 'wishlist'. As we identified earlier, at worst in can result in being hired for attributes you don't have, don't like or don't want to make use of.

As always it's a little like dating; we may say we like reading, long nature walks meditating and yoga to seem attractive, but if the truth is bars, beer and barbiturates, it's really not going to work is it?

Break the buzzword tyranny, select fresh adjectives; you are telling someone what you want them to know about you, not what you guess they might wish to hear.

Still stuck at that awful bulleted list of highlights? Pick a favourite musician or actor - what would you like them to know about you? Keep it sort of clean...!

Stephen

Career Development Conference 2009 - Working Local ~ Shaping Global, March 3rd and 4th, 2009

Greetings if you have arrived here fresh from the CDC conference presentation this morning.

Thanks for all the input, encouragement and support.

Comments, links and ideas can be posted below using the (duh!) "Comments" section

Should this post be removed from the front page on future visits, use the search function to click on 'Employment Counselling' and you'll find it.

We could use this post a resource for ideas on changing the language of our business - several people asked afterwards how they could help with this - I think its one word and one form, brochure, manual at a time

And also use this post to assemble artists resources.

I provide images and notes with this proviso. Seeing and reading is not the same as attending and experiencing. A little like reading the menu, not eating the meal. So with a requisite pinch of salt.........

For an PDF file of the presentation 'That Shiny Red Bicycle - longing, desire and reward in work' click Shiny and Red.pdf

For an rtf file of notes to accompany the images click shinyrednotes.rtf

The url for the 'I like boxes' awfulness on You Tube is this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DVMi-8KKSpI

Julie Fowlis and her Gaelic version of Blackbird and much more is available here:

http://www.myspace.com/juliefowlis

There might also be an htm version of the presentation coming to open in any browser with notes but bl**dy Microsoft is failing to let you save it in anything but a version so called optimized for so called Internet so called Explorer.....

Check back at the weekend for a document with brief notes on each topic, should the htm version not materialize..........

Thanks again

Stephen

PS Excellent new social activism site is http://www.idealist.org/

scjh
Very comprehensive, very revealing.

DTES Demographic Study Final June 2008.pdf

'Living' on welfare - Policy Alternative Report

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Living on Welfare in BC

Experiences of Longer-Term "Expected to Work" Recipients

Original here:

Excellent work, exposing how people who are 'expected to work' and surviving on welfare.

Reveals welfare rules and rates cause disturbing harm to most vulnerable

April 22, 2008


(Vancouver) A ground-breaking study that for two years followed British Columbians living on welfare paints a disturbing picture of how people are forced to make ends meet under new welfare rules and low rates.

The study was released today by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives and the Raise the Rates Coalition, as part of the Economic Security Project, a joint CCPA-Simon Fraser University initiative.



The report is here:

Living on Welfare in BC: Experiences of Longer-Term "Expected to Work" Recipients - FULL RESEARCH REPORT


Good basic resumes that work

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Resumes

A resume will not get you a job, but it should, must, be good enough to get you an interview.

A resume is just a summary of some thing about you. It never tells a reader everything about you or all the jobs you've ever done before.

'I'm working on my resume' is not a profession. If you are stuck and fed up to the back teeth with your resume....GET SOME HELP. This can be from a friend or relative or from someone at an employment centre - there are many different places to get help.

Ask someone who knows you to look at it. Does it look and sound anything like you? Does it tell any of your story - where you've been, where you might want to go next, a little of who you are?

It should show your journey, in about 15 seconds - the average resume is read for about 15 seconds the first time it's seen - does yours allow a taste of your journey to appear?

Emailing your resume - the secret no one tells you

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Emailing your resume....the secret!

Emailing your resume... is a risky business!

Though it seems as though you are showing how cool, modern and computer savvy you are by emailing an application, it can make the opposite impression.

If you send your resume as an attachment many employers will not open it as it can contain a virus.

If you cut and paste a 'Word' document into the 'body' of the email - where you type the message, the formatting in the 'Word' document can be misread, and throw words left and right, break lines in odd places and altogether make a mess of all that careful work you did you set up your resume.

You have no way of knowing if your message will be read as plain text or rich text.


Cover letters explained in four minutes

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Examples of cover letters that get the job (done.)

This page reminds us what cover letters are meant to do and what they can't do.

Examples are included. The examples are on this page (for copying and pasting) and in document form to get a copy for yourself - download.

Some basic 'mythbusting' about  cover letters

Cover Letters

A cover letter is a gift wrap, a making personal, of your resume.

A cover letter is not difficult to write, does not need fancy wording, and should take no more than maybe 20 minutes to create.

Though the research that makes the cover letter sing may take you longer and is crucial.

Gaps?

What have you been doing for the last 6 months, year, two years, five years?

What about my references and my gaps in work?

Answering the 'why did you leave your last job' question.

It's impossible! No, it's not.

The principle is simple: it has three parts - acknowledge, dismiss, move on.

acknowledge - 'Yes, I was taking care of some family business for two years.....'

dismiss - '...and now that's taken care of....'

move on - '..I'm looking for a job with an established company which will make use of my great experience which is why I applied for this interesting job....'


Agencies 'connect' with homeless
Offer of free meal, haircut, clothes draws hundreds
 
Daryl Slade
Calgary Herald

Sunday, April 27, 2008
Original here

haircut.jpg
Ben Fredricks gets a haircut from volunteer Juhli Khemaroth at Project Homeless Connect.
CREDIT: Lorraine Hjalte, Calgary Herald
Ben Fredricks gets a haircut from volunteer Juhli Khemaroth at Project Homeless Connect.

Ben Fredricks sauntered into the Telus Convention Centre Saturday, got a good meal, a badly needed haircut, a shot of self-esteem and scanned clothes racks in hopes of finding a pair of jeans.

All in all, it was a good day for the 29-year-old man who has been living at the Sunalta homeless shelter, dealing with an alcohol addiction in hopes of being able to reintegrate into the work force.


Fate, fortune and destiny: a western perspective

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Working in the Chinatown area of Downtown Vancouver I am surrounded by reminders of faith and belief in chance, luck, fate, fortune and destiny; it seems a very Chinese, and more broadly Asian, philosophy.

The western world and the English language have their own version though, so the idea of being in touch with, in pace with, in tune with, what we should be doing and feeling is not exclusively Asian.

The English word is 'hap'.