Job-seekers are used to hearing the same advice, on repeat: Always send a thank-you. Don't lie on your resume. Oh, and that resume -- make sure it's no longer than one page. Except … that last one ...
An awful lot of people have internalized the old rule that your resume should be only one page and go through incredible contortions to keep their resumes down to that, even when they have years of ...
Despite the long-held convention, a recent study has found that two-page resumes are actually preferred by recruiters, no matter the candidate’s experience level. The study, conducted by resume ...
New report shows how resumes have changed in five years. Keeping your resume up to date is not on everyone's to-do list. But resumes are changing fast— and career experts say you have to keep up. The ...
Keeping your resume to one page is the general rule and for many candidates, this advice is good; however, there are absolutely reasons to have a resume that continues onto a second page in spite of ...
One corporate and business counsel updates his resume with help from a certified professional resume writer. David Pearl’s one-page resume was deceptively stark. Pearl, 56, was a successful lawyer; he ...
I'm in a perpetual argument with more than one person over the appropriate length of a resume. I've always believed in the 1-page resume. Most on the other side see 3-pages as a logical limit. They ...
No. There seem to be so many “rules” about resumes that take lawyers sideways and compromise their ability to create an effective document. The one-page rule is one of them. I frequently see resumes ...
Jason Seiden recently posted a strong argument about why resumes should be limited to one page, unless you're a technical candidate or a senior exec. In a nutshell, his arguments were: It's ...
Wrong. There seem to be so many "rules" about resumés that take lawyers sideways and compromise their ability to create an effective document. The One Page Rule is one of them. I frequently see ...