In The Name of Allah, The Most Beneficent, The Most Merciful

Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 20

In the name of allah,the

most beneficent, the most


merciful
How to write an Effective CV

Prof. Anees Ahmad Ansari


Resume vs. Vitae

• Length: Short • Length: As long as it


• Content: All-inclusive • takes
summary of skills, Content: Area-specific
experiences and listing of education
• education • and academic
background
Purpose: to get an
interview or Purpose: promotion and
employment tenure, grants,
specialist positions,
awards, etc.
Curriculum Vitae (or CV)

• Latin origin
• Means “the course of one’s
life”
• Vitae or Vita?
What is a CV?

What is the purpose of a CV?


• To inform the employer about
your education, work
experience, skills and
interests
• To ‘sell’ these qualities and to
persuade the employer to
invite you to interview
It’s all about you

CVs are an opportunity to show an employer why you are an ideal


candidate for the job.

A good CV will:
• Stand out from the crowd.
• Draw attention to your relevant skills, experience, achievements and
potential.
Create such an impression on the employer that they will not be able
to turn you down for interview.

Everyone has potential


Everyone has more skills than they think they do
Everyone can write a good CV
Do

• Use a standard font size in.


• Include recent and relevant work experience (paid or
• voluntary). Be consistent in your layout.

List your skills and achievements and back up with


evidence. Keep it short (maximum 2 pages).
Use positive action verbs such as “organised, delivered,
• accomplished, achieved”.
Include a statement about your career aspirations and what you have to
• offer the employer.
• Be honest but positive (negatives can always be turned into
• positives). Proof-read for spelling, punctuation, grammar and
meaning.
Get someone to check it for you.
Don’t

• Do it in a rush.
• Leave gaps in employment.
• Lie.
• Include irrelevant personal
• details such as marital
status.
• Simply write a list of duties under work experience (remember you are
selling yourself!).
Use flashy
There is noor largeway
single font.
to write a CV. It is your document and can be
structured and presented as you wish within a basic framework.

The important thing to remember is that this is the first impression an


employer will have of you. It is your marketing brochure through which
you are trying to sell yourself.
5 Tips for a CV

• Clear – well organized and logical


• Concise – relevant and necessary
• Complete – includes everything you
need
• Consistent – don’t mix styles or fonts
• Current – Up-to-date
What should be on a CV?

• Start with contact information


– Full name
– Permanent mailing address
– E-mail address that won’t expire
–Phone numbers
• Education
• Honors and Awards
• Professional Experience (employment)
• Publications and presentations
• Extracurricular and volunteer
experience
Other sections for a CV

• Certifications and
• licensure Professional
• affiliations Professional
• activities Research
• Added qualifications
Proving your ability

There are four main things employers will look at in CVs:

• Education - ability to think clearly, analyse and assess information,


draw conclusions, work independently, research

• Work experience - ability to get on with people, work under


pressure, meet deadlines

• Leisure interests - ability to plan and organise, co-operate with


others, compete, lead, work hard to achieve results

• Specific skills – e.g. driving licence, computer skills, foreign


languages, artistic skills
Tips on Education section

• Most current schooling first (include your


current educational work)
• Only include diploma
• distinctions Get the school’s
• names correct!
Degrees/certifications are what is important – not
• time spent
List Thesis/Dissertation titles
Tips for Professional Section

Affiliations Activities
•Only those current •Past and present
•Most current first •Most current first
•Include all dates •Only those specific
of affiliation to
•Note any academic/research
leadership positions •Should be school or
university
sponsored
•Include your role
Tips for Research Section

• List most current first


• Make sure you indicate others you worked
• with Include grant funds if obtained
• Briefly describe here
Publications and Presentations Section

• Two options for listing


– Most recent
– Order of publication
• Always bold your name in authorship
• Include submitted and/or pending publications
or presentations
• Presentations may be large or small but pertinent
enough to talk about
• Have copies of your pubs and/or presentation for the
life of your CV
Added Qualifications Section

•Should be verifiable
•Include language fluency
•Cultural knowledge – maybe. Especially if you have
had hands-on experience
•Anything else special
Presentation of your CV

• The first visual impression of your CV is


important
• For standard CVs, use plain white A4
paper
• Do not double
side
• Keep your CV to two sides of
paper
• Check your
spelling
• Use bullet points and bold font but in
moderation
Presentation of your CV

• Formatting – make sure it’s


consistent
• Size 10-12 font (depending on font
style)
• Clear font e.g. Arial,
Calibri
• Focus on
accomplishments
• Target your CV to that
job/company
• 2:1, not Two One or
2,1
• Use short, concise
sentences
• Consider your
audience
References

• Ideally, one academic and your


manager
• Ask permission from your reference and let
them know what position(s) you’ve applied for

• Use relevant references if


possible
• You can say ‘references available on request’
rather than including contact details if you wish

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy