Do You Have A Resume Or A Marketing Document?
Does your resume list all of your experiences, all your skills, and even some accomplishments?
Does it outline all of the things you have done in the past that you think are important and can fit on two pages?
Does it clearly indicate all your past duties, tasks and responsibilities for your positions?
All good stuff, but for the most part, missing a lot of the important stuff.
Most resumes are based on, what in selling is referred to as, ‘features’ or ‘facts.’ Every junior sales rep and marketing person knows that people don’t buy on features, they buy on benefits.
Most resumes are simply a list of features the candidate thinks (key word – thinks) are important. In marketing terms it is a, ‘fact sheet’ not a marketing document. If you want to get noticed you have to have a marketing document not a resume. One that markets benefits.
Marketing 101 teaches marketing is all about getting to the customer’s motivation. It is all about what’s in it for them. Few resumes are a true marketing document. Most are some combination of features and benefits, with heavy weighting on features. Few hiring managers will get excited reading a list of features. These are nice to know, but unfortunately, don’t create any emotional reaction. Benefits, on the other hand, do create an emotional reaction. It is this reaction that creates the desire to buy.
For example, you could have the following feature on your resume, ‘Substantially reduced turnover in first year.’ A good fact but no emotional reaction. Instead you could market the benefit to the hiring manager, ‘Reduced turnover from over 55% to less than 10% in my first year. This resulted in an estimated savings of $150,000 in just hiring costs. It also dramatically increased the quality of work, completely eliminated errors and reduced overtime by 90% resulting in a cost savings from the previous year of $200,000.’
If I am an owner, CEO, or hiring manager struggling with the high cost of turnover, this is motivating and a benefit.
Selling benefits converts your resume into a marketing document. After all, that is what a resume should be.
Join our Linkedin Job Search Networking Group for a lot more on resumes, interviewing, networking and even how to answer the ‘Tell Me About Yourself?’ question.
For much more on converting your resume into a marketing document, our job search workbook has extensive examples, 5 different sample resumes, multiple sections discussing resume do’s and dont’s, plus a template to make a marketing resume, and examples of great resumes. This is yours to review for just the cost of shipping $5. Take a look inside. CLICK HERE. 4.5 stars of 5 from reader reviews.
We encourage your comments and feedback.
Brad Remillard
Related posts:
- Traditional Resumes Are Worthless
- Resumes Are Worthless – Audio Program
- I’m Perfect For The Position, So Why Did I Get Screened Out?
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(Via Career Blog.)
You only look for a job a few times in your life. Compared with the amount of time you spend actually doing it, investing time and energy in an effective job search repays the effort many times over. Studies show that people who understand and do well at the job search process enjoy substantially more job satisfaction and higher earnings over the course of their careers.
Those who put extra effort into the job search can bring not just a more satisfying life but extra salary.
We are here to help. ItsNotYouItsYourResume.com has compiled an impressive list of contributors including writers from 10BiggestInterviewMistakes, 10BiggestResumeMistakes, MyOnlineCareerCoach and MyOnlineCareerSpace, who have written the following:
Job and Career Books:
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Ultimate Online Job Search EBook
Top 10 Interview Mistakes
10 Biggest Resume Mistakes





November 24th, 2009 at 6:37 pm
Very nice blog, I agree with most of what you are saying here.