Wednesday, May 20, 2020
6 Ways to Recognise a Great CV in Two Minutes
6 Ways to Recognise a Great CV in Two Minutes In a sea of mediocre-to-good applications, itâs important to be able to recognise the great CVs quickly. A great CV is one that compels you to call them immediately, or at the very least, leave you in no doubt that you should be putting them in the âyesâ pile. Since the average recruiter can spend as little as ten seconds screening CVs, itâs important to be able to make decisions quickly. Below are six practical tips to enable you to separate the great CVs from the dross in as little time as possible. 1. Check formatting A good candidate will be aware that their CV is the first part of them to be introduced to the company, and so will have put effort into making it as clear and readable as possible. Before even looking at the content, the first thing about a great CV that should grab you is how clear and well-formatted it is. The name and contact details should be top (no need for searching through for the phone number to call them for interview), there shouldnât be dense blocks of text that obfuscate key details, and their employment history should be in reverse chronological order. The font should be professional and easy on the eye, and without even scrolling down, check the number of pages anything over three is likely to contain a lot of filler, while a good candidate will know how to articulate themselves more concisely. If youâre happy that the CV is well put together and professional to the initial eye, begin reading. 2. Location, location, location In recruitment, one of the main reasons for a candidate turning down a role, or accepting a counteroffer is location and commute time. Itâs imperative to ensure that the move will make sense for the candidate in the long term, and wonât leave as soon as something with a shorter drive to work presents itself, so start your selection process by checking the candidateâs address if theyâve included it. Unfortunately, many job hunters go on an application spree and submit CVs to any a role that seems broadly in their space, so save yourself time (and the candidate heartbreak) by limiting your initial selections to candidates within a commutable radius of your company. A good candidate will understand though, and so a great CV will show their geographic suitability clearly. 3. Check their last two role titles If their second-most and most recent roles arenât relevant to the role youâre recruiting for, thereâs really no point in reading further as any suitable experience beyond that time will be too long ago for it to matter. The most recent roles on a great CV should be the richest in content too, going into the most detail about responsibilities (and more importantly, achievements), so a quick scan through these will usually be enough to decide whether theyâre going into the âinterviewâ or ârejectâ pile. 4. Continuity and tenure A good rule of thumb in recruitment is that gaps of over six months in employment are often a warning sign. A great CV wonât have any appreciable career gaps (and ones that do will note the reason; for instance traveling or maternity leave). Similarly, having more than two or three jobs in a 12-month period can often be a red flag that youâre not looking at a long-term prospect, so a great CV will show a good average length of tenure. 5. Education Many roles now require a minimum level of education, and on a strong well-appointed CV, the candidatesâ educational background should be clearly laid out to enable you to check this. A great CV will clearly show their educational background including college or university, qualification and year. If the education section is missing, you can usually infer that either there isnât much to list, or the candidate didnât have the awareness to include it neither of which bodes well for a strong contender. 6. Attention to detail You donât need to read the entire document to recognise a good CV. A quick scan to the trained eye will turn up multiple spelling mistakes and poor sentence construction in only a paragraph or two. If these are immediately obvious, chances are that the rest of the CV wonât be impressive either so save yourself some time and stop there and then. A great CV will have been checked and re-checked for errors and will suggest that thereâs a person with excellent attention to detail behind it. While itâs impossible to really tell what a candidate is like from a short, formal document there are multiple clues that point to a great CV, and thus a great candidate. Learning what to look for within the few minutes you available have to screen means you can quickly identify a âgreatâ CV. About the author: Lee Tonge established The CV Store in 2001 and become recognised as one of the UKâs leading CV writing âexpertsâ and is often called upon by some of the worldâs most well-known recruiters for CV advice.
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