Friday, April 10, 2020
6 Most Horrifying Resume Blunders Employers Have Ever Seen - Work It Daily
6 Most Horrifying Resume Blunders Employers Have Ever Seen - Work It Daily For the most part, your resume is the very first impression you give to employers â" you donât want to give them the impression that youâre careless, lazy, or obsessed. A single resume faux pas can instantly turn off a hiring manager or recruiter, and, in some cases, creep them out a little bit. Horrifying Resume Blunders We asked a bunch of employers what was the absolute worst resume mistake theyâve come across. These are our six favorite. Laugh... and learn: 6. Dear... Sir? Elle Kaplan is the CEO of Lexion Capital Management, one of the only 100 percent women-owned and operated investment firms in the nation. So, it goes without saying that Kaplan is, in fact, a female. And yet, on more than one occasion, applicants have âbeen assuming that I am a male! Huge mistake,â she says. 5. LOL @ Text Language Susan Hawkins, a SEO content writer from AMSVans.com once saw a resume in which the applicant had used an ampersand () in place of the word âandâ in every instance. Job seekers, this is a terrible, terrible way to show them youâre tech savvy! âTwitter and texting has led to the ubiquitous idea that the ampersand can be substituted for the word âandâ in all forms of writing,â she says, âItâs really sad.â 4. Template Bloopers Josh Hiebel from Saratoga Wine Exchange just got a resume this week from someone who didnât finish filling out the template. âAt the bottom it said, your name here and your address here,â Hiebel says. Meanwhile, elsewhere in the country, Elaine Simon from DeBebians.com encountered a similar, careless job applicant who used a template and forgot to replace all the information with their own details. âSeeing the telltale âABC School- Sometown, NYâ on a resume definitely sends that candidate directly into the trash,â Simon says. Itâs hard to believe that youâll get stuff done if you canât even finish a resume, people. 3. Unbelievable Embellishments We all know what happened when Yahooâs former CEO Scott Thompson fibbed about his computer science degree (he got canned). Job seekers, bending the truth is just not worth it. âWhen I told one applicant that no one at his former company had heard of the âExecutive Merit Award,â heâd cited, he simply replied that was probably because, after heâd won it three years in a row, the company retired the reward in his honor,â said Barry Maher, speaker, trainer, consultant at Barry Maher Associates. Okay buddy, we werenât born yesterday! Greg Szymanski, HR director for a Seattle real estate development firm, is fed up with all the lies. He especially encounters âeducation credentials from degree mills or other shady institutions or misrepresenting degrees earned.â 2. The Stalker Manifesto Researching online before a major event in our lives is pretty much second-nature to us now. Before you apply for a job, researching the company is a given â" but spouting off too much information is a sign of desperation and, frankly, creepiness! One candidate sent Steve Jones, VP of programming for Newcap Radio, a resume and cover letter that could have easily been used in a horror movie. âHe knew my wifeâs maiden name and the names of my kids. He referenced not only things that I had accomplished in my career, but family events that he should have no knowledge of,â Jones says. âUsing social media, he had gone deep and done his research,â he says. Beyond creepy! 1. Whoops! Wrong Upload When you upload your resume, all it takes is one click of a button â" make sure itâs the right file! Because once itâs out there, thereâs no turning back. Rachel Dotson from ZipRecruiter opened up a job applicantâs email only to find a screenshot of a desktop background. âWhile itâs an honest mistake, the fact that he didnât check to make sure the document uploaded correctly reflects poorly,â Dotson says. But it could have been a lot worse. In fact, a similar hilarious resume blunder went viral recently. Vanessa Hojda, a York psychology student in Canada, uploaded a picture of crazy-eyed Nicolas Cage instead of her resume. Moral of the story: Donât save your favorite celebrity photos in a folder among resumes and cover letters⦠oh, and always double check your upload before you send! Image Credit: Shutterstock Have you joined our career growth club?Join Us Today!
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