Effective Resume - The Resume Summary
Resume Summary - Why Your Resume Needs a Summary Section (and how to
write one)
© David Alan Carter
All Rights Reserved
A summary statement on a resume is pretty much what the name implies; a thumbnail sketch of the particular
skills, strengths and accomplishments that make you the perfect fit for the job in question. The resume summary is
your advertising pitch to the reader. Short on details, it is a teasing list of assertions of what you can do and
what you can offer the company. The actual data backing up those assertions is implied to be found throughout the
balance of the resume. The job of the summary is to coax the reader into exploring that balance, with a
predisposition that the qualifications for the job have already been met.
The importance of such a summary statement can't be overstated. If your resume summary doesn't grab the reader,
address his needs and pique his interest in reading further, all hope is lost.
Location of the Resume Summary
If your resume has an objective statement, locate the summary directly beneath the objective. If you elect to
forgo the objective, the summary will be the first section on the resume, just beneath your name and contact
information.
Should a Resume Summary Take The Place of the Objective?
Opinions are divided. Some career experts will tell you that the objective is old school and a liability on a
contemporary resume. Others will tell you that nothing focuses a resume like a clear objective statement. I think
it remains advisable to use an objective, if 1) you know the position you're applying for, and you insert that
position title into your objective, 2) you have an overly diverse work background that doesn't lend itself to a
natural focus, or 3) you're changing careers, or entering the job market for the first time.
If you don't use an objective, your summary will need to be crafted to include the element of focus that would
have otherwise fallen to the objective.
Example of a Resume Summary used WITH an Objective Statement
Objective: Position as OCCUPATIONAL THERAPIST.
Summary: Dedicated professional with a B.S. in Occupational Therapy and over nine years of
O.T. experience in diverse clinical settings including hospital, home health, mental health, and skilled
nursing/long-term care facilities.
-
Particular strengths in identifying individual needs, formulating practical solutions to those
needs, and coordinating therapeutic activities with other health care disciplines to maximize patient
benefits.
- Implemented "Claudia Allen" therapeutic approach in a nursing home setting.
- Perceptive listener with excellent interpersonal and communication skills.
Example of a Resume Summary used WITHOUT an Objective Statement
Summary: Occupational Therapist delivering excellent patient relations skills and
demonstrated technical/therapeutic proficiency from over nine years of diverse O.T. clinical experience in
hospital, home health, mental health, and skilled nursing/long-term care facilities.
-
Particular strengths in identifying individual needs, formulating practical solutions to those
needs, and coordinating therapeutic activities with other health care disciplines to maximize patient
benefits.
- Implemented "Claudia Allen" therapeutic approach in a nursing home setting.
- B.S. in Occupational Therapy.
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Having trouble
identifying... your most marketable skills? That can be especially
tough - not to mention expressing those skills in a promotional, yet unbiased,
manner. Now might be a good time to consider a professional resume service.
But beware, not all resume services are created equal. Former
recruiter and pro writer David Alan Carter put the Web's most popular resume
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Reviews of
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The resume summary typically focuses on three to five skills or competencies that have been culled from
resume and represent the best arguments as to why you are a perfect match for the job in question. And by the way,
the summary section can go by a number of names: Profile, Summary, Summary of Qualifications, Career Summary,
Accomplishments Profile, Etc.
Call it what you will. But whatever you chose to call it, make it a part of your resume... or plan to spend a
lot of time with your shoes shined and nowhere to go, wondering if your phone still works.
Where we go from here: If you need more help with those first few
words, let's get deep into the Job Resume Objective. Or we could move on to
the tricky task of writing Resume Accomplishments. And if you're wondering
which format makes the most effective resume -- chronological or functional -- we can get into the nuts
& bolts of the Effective Resume Format.
David Alan Carter is a
former recruiter and the founder of Resume One of Cincinnati. For more than ten years, he
personally crafted thousands of resumes for satisfied clients from all occupational walks of
life. |
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