Those
Difficult Dates
by
ResumeEdge
Where should you place
your dates? It all depends on how much
importance you want to give them. If
you have gaps in your employment history
that you would rather explain in an
interview, then the dates should be
less obvious (Sample
1). You can even leave them off
altogether and list totals instead (Sample
1), although your reader will automatically
assume you have something to hide. You
need to make the decision whether leaving
the dates off will harm your chances
of getting an interview more than putting
the dates on your resume.
Another reason to de-emphasize
dates is your age. If you would rather
not give your age away, then make the
reader work to figure it out. Tuck dates
against the text with parentheses (Sample
1) or bury them somewhere else in
the resume (Sample
1). You can selectively choose to
leave dates off your education and show
them only on your experience.
So, how far back should
you go when listing your experience?
The answer is simple. When your past
experience stops being relevant to your
job search, leave it off. The usual
is 10 to 15 years in the past, unless
there is something in your older experience
that is critical to your qualifications.
This will help to deflect interest from
your age.
Accuracy and honesty are
the most important considerations when
it comes to dates. Don't lie! I had
a client who chose to fudge on his dates
and I didn't know about it. He was invited
for an interview and then lost the job
when previous employers were contacted
and the dates didn't match. It wasn't
worth it. Honesty is always the best
policy.
There are many ways to
make room for the dates. One is to establish
a clear column of dates to the right
of a resume, which keeps the text lines
short and makes the dates easy to find.
You should not use this clear column
of dates on the right if you are creating
a scannable resume since this style
produces three newspaper-like columns.
Putting dates on the left
gives them a great deal of importance.
Since people read from left to right,
information on the left of the page
is read first and carries greater weight.
Make sure you really want your dates
to be that important before placing
them in the left-hand column.
You may use months with
years or years only. Some people feel
more comfortable with a full accounting
of their time and prefer the month/year
method. However, making room for all
those words becomes a problem if you
choose to spell out the month, as in
January 1989 to February 1993. Abbreviations
or numbers for months make designing
your résumé a little easier:
Jan. 1989 – Feb. 1993
or
Jan 1989 – Feb 1993
or
1/89 – 2/93
Dot leaders (. . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.) can help draw the eye to the dates
on paragraph-style resumes where it
is difficult to create a clear column
for the dates (Sample
1). However, dot leaders should
not be used in a scannable resume.
There is no single, preferred
method for the positioning of dates
on a resume. The key is to create a
sense of balance by placing the dates
in a position that is complimentary
to the rest of your information, while
keeping in mind how much importance
you wish to give them and the scannability
of your resume.
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