Bambi,
Excellent one. Great. Printed it and filed in my personal file.
Rao
-Original Message-
Sent: Friday, November 30, 2001 4:10 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Dennis --
I sent Kimberly my tips offline (and my resume) but thought I would forward
my tips based on nearly
I have to agree. In the end I did shorten it but its three pages now.
Not quite as experienced;-) I did move a few things around so that
my technical stuff is the first thing they see. Hopefully I won't have to
use
it and I get another contract within the organization but better
safe then sorry
Bambi - Excellent. I printed it and it is going into my "off-site
repository". I especially like your point to Make Your Resume Friendly to
The People Making Small Piles of Big Piles. If you've gotten to meet the
people that could hire you, then the resume is just a nice addition to your
stunning
Dennis --
I sent Kimberly my tips offline (and my resume) but thought I would forward
my tips based on nearly 24 years of experience to you folks in case you find
it of value. If so, great, if not, oh well, but they were lessons learned
over the years and apply to all jobs, contract and perm.
I
One page?!?!!? My one page resume would have to just say "Call me for
details"! Two would be cutting to the bone!
-Don Granaman
[OraSaurus]
- Original Message -
To: "Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, November 30, 2001 1:56 PM
> Kimberly - From my
Kimberly - From my admittedly meager experience of job-hunting for both
permanent and contract work, here is my impression:
1. If the resume is for permanent work, keep the resume brief and to the
point. The objective is to keep HR from tossing your resume. Keep it to a
single page and hit the maj