AddStaff, Inc. |
There's a new technology that could be very helpful to you. It could help you find your next job. It's called electronic applicant tracking, and it's being used by leading businesses and organizations. By using the latest in document imaging technology, your resume can be scanned into a computer system and kept "active" for years. The computer can search for just about anything in your resume. You could be qualified and considered for jobs you never thought of. The compter can make it easier for you to be considered for more jobs, and it keeps your one resume on file so it's quicker to update your information. Here's how it works. Your resume is scanned into the computer as an image. Then OCR (optical character recognition) software looks at the image to distinguish every letter and number (character) and creates a text file (ASCII). Then artificial intelligence "reads" the text and extracts important information about you such as your name, address, phone number, work history, years of experience, education, and skills. Why is it important for you to know this? When you prepare a resume for the computer to read, you want it to be "scannable." A scannable resume is clean so the scanner can get a clean image. A scannable resume has standard fonts and crisp, dark type such as a laser printer or typewriter with a new ribbon would produce-so the OCR can recognize every letter. And a scannable resume has plenty of facts for the artificial intelligence to extract-the more skills and facts you provide, the more opportunities you'll have for your skills to match available positions. A SCANNABLE RESUME
Preparing a scannable resume is easy, like the traditional style resume, you focus on format and content. FORMAT To maximize the computer's ability to read your resume, provide the cleanest original and use a standard style resume. The computer can extract skills from many styles of resumes such as chronological (list and describe upt to 6 jobs in order by date), achievement (describe achievments rather than job titles), functional (organize by skills rather than job titles), and combinations of resume types. The most difficult resume for the computer to read is a poor quality copy that has an unusual format such as a newsletter layout, adjusted spacing, large font sizes, graphics or lines, type that is too light, or paper that is too dark. TIPS FOR MAXIMIZING SCANNABILITY
CONTENT The computer extracts information from your resume. You can use your current resume, however, once you understand what the computer searches for, you may decide to add a few key words to increase your opportunities for matching requirements or getting "hits." Recruiters and managers access the resume database in many ways, searching for your resume specifically or searching for applicants with specific experience. When searching for specific experience, they'll search for key words, usually nouns such as writer, BA, marketing collateral, Society of Technical Communication, Spanish (Language fluency), San Diego, etc. So make sure you describe your experience with concrete words rather than vague descriptions. The computer system will extract the words and information from your sentences, you can write your resume as usual. TIPS FOR MAXIMIZING "HITS"
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