“A Few Things about a Technical Resume…”

In almost fifteen years of experience in technical recruiting, you
would not believe the technical resumes I have seen from even some
very senior members in our technology community.  Thought I’d remind
folks of a few things that a technical resume should be.
What A Technical Resume Needs To Be:
       An example of the person’s technical & business functionality
documentation abilities, reflecting the business aspect/purpose of the
position – as well as the technical environment.
       The only objective the resume needs to address is the objective of
the hiring management.  View the resume through the eyes of the
prospective hiring manager.
       Be Precise and Concise!
       It should speak for that technical person in their absence – speaks
of the quality of that person’s abilities and business/technical
abilities – being the technical person’s sales and marketing
material.  It “sells” the candidate.
       Environment: listing technical tools – provides hiring manager a
chronological history of your experience using a particular
development tool.  Include version numbers.  The latest version shows
your skills are current but older versions document your length of
experience (ex: Oracle 2.x – 9i)
The average person briefly glides over resumes – the way you peruse
your credit card statement or perhaps the contract for a rental car.
Each technical position or project had to have some type of business
justification.  Companies just don’t hire “techies” without some type
of business reason and purpose.

A technical resume must exemplify the prospective new employee’s
technical documentation abilities.  Each technical position requires
some type of documentation (both technical as well as business
functionality).  A technical resume must find a happy medium between
business analyst and technical expert.  All business and technical
aspects needs to be documented and detailed for each position listed
in the employment history section of the chronological resume –
without getting verbose.  Be precise and concise!

If you’re a hiring manager implementing a new architecture for your
software development team – don’t you think it would make sense to
hire someone who can do the JAVA programming or the infrastructure
implementation – but also find someone who can document that work in a
precise and concise way?  Isn’t that truly what your resume should be
stating?
Beware of “made-up words” or terms that may have been created on the
job and used in that specific organization and environment.  Acronyms
at one company don’t always mean anything to another – or could mean
something complete different.  The author of a technical resume needs
to consider the person who will be reading the resume, quickly
scrutinizing it and hopefully deducing that you’re the ideal match for
their needs.

Director level and higher candidate resumes should definitely have the
first few bullets of each position documenting both technical and
business aspects:
       Size of the staff – and what type of positions it included, multiple
locations, offshore, etc.
       Size of budget (regional, district, etc.), sales quotas (budgeted,
accomplished, etc.) – and make sure that you clearly state that
budgets were met, sales quotas exceeded and that projects were brought
in on-time, etc.
       Be Precise and Concise – without being verbose.  If not, there’s
probably a 99% change that the reader will presume something
incorrectly.
A technical resume IS the marketing and sales material for that
technical person.  It’s what is going to be representing that
candidate – when that candidate is not there to speak for him or
herself.  If the candidate is a well-educated, successful, productive
professional – why shouldn’t that person’s resume reflect that?  If
the candidate is a QUALITY person, present a QUALITY resume! (…and I’m
not talking about putting it on pretty letterhead or an extremely
expensive bond of paper).
This may seems all to obvious when you read it – but how many people
actually have a “workable” resume that can be quickly tailored to
represent their candidacy and qualifications for their “ideal
opportunity
View the technical resume as if you’re using the eyes of the hiring
manager.  You just might see the technical resume in a completely
different way… - the way that’s going to lead to the hiring manager
quickly deducing this person’s qualifications are “ideal” and lead to
an interview.

Whether you’re a recruiter, internal HR person or a technical
professional reading this article – a technical resume should be more
than just a resume or an e-mail note received.  By including both the
business as well as the technical aspects of past employment history –
demonstrating the technical documentation abilities – and the ability
to document the technical business perspective of past projects – you
will be demonstrating to prospective employers that this technical
professional has the vital skills necessary to achieve the business
objective or deliverable.

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Hope someone out there - finds this article of interest !! (just
sharing the info !!)
Your partner in placement,
Danny!

Daniel Parrillo
Staffing Manager – Sr. Technical Recruiter
Replay Solutions - A SDLC Tool Company (www.replaysolutions.com)
Phone #: 415-695-1600
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

LinkedIn Profile: http://www.linkedIn.com/in/thehonestrecruiter/


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