Monday, April 20, 2020

Tips to Make a Resume Stand Out

Tips to Make a Resume Stand OutA resume is one of the best tools to build a successful career. A good resume not only helps you land your dream job, but it also helps you land other opportunities as well. You may have made mistakes on your resume or overlooked other job opportunities that would have benefited you in the future.Instead of allowing these mistakes to haunt you, make sure that you put your personal strengths in your resume. Whether you are an engineer, architect, insurance agent, medical sales representative, accountant, project manager, stockbroker, or doctor, this is where you should focus your attention. Here are a few tips to help you master resume writing.Sell yourself! Don't leave yourself out of the promotion. Your resume should talk about yourself, your skills, and your experiences. Your potential employer may be just looking for someone with a different skill set, but it's better to have two jobs than none at all. If you do not add a personable, personal side to your resume, it will look like a lifeless document.Personalize it! One of the best ways to make a resume stand out is to personalize it. Make sure that each bullet point, header, and list item include your name.Make sure you use relevant keywords. A popular option for the search engines is to use phrases that are relevant to the job opening. For example, when writing a medical sales contact, search 'medical sales'medical sales contact'. Your resume will not get to find unless you utilize the right keyword phrases. Otherwise, it will be much harder to find you on the resume when you finally submit it.Include the skills you possess. Include information about your experiences, certifications, and other skills. This will show the potential employer that you are interested in learning more and are willing to earn their business. They will be able to see that you are a motivated worker and that you know what you are doing.Date yourself! Even if you have yet to meet, create a calendar and place dates on it for each year you have been out of college or your last job.

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

26 Ways to Fail at Business and Investing

26 Ways to Fail at Business and Investing Most people focus too much on how to get ahead by making the right decisions. In a world where most businesses go under and most investors trail an index fund, an obsession with how to not fail can be a more effective mind-set. Doing so requires knowing the behaviors that are likely to cause failure. Here’s a checklist of bad decisions I’ve witness over the years. Always remember: Success is due to your intelligence and effort. Failure is due to the political party you didn’t vote for. View “changing your mind” as a character flaw and something to be avoided. Associate complexity with added value. Surround yourself with people who agree with you or are too afraid to tell you you’re wrong. Treat information that goes against what you believe as an attack on your intelligence. Seek the council of people working on commission. Accept past correlations as a clean prediction of the future. Compete on cost rather than service. Prioritize in this order: Quarterly results, annual results, long-term results, and â€" if there’s anything left over â€" reputation. Develop strong opinions for things you have no personal experience in. Study the habits of successful people. Ignore habits which require serious, time-consuming and mentally exhausting effort. Double down on those which mimic your current hobbies. Use current popular sentiment to gau ge future outcomes, especially when it’s highly emotional. Dream big. About your future paycheck. Don’t let the intervening effort or social sacrifices required to get there become part of the story. Expect to achieve overnight what successful people took decades to accomplish. Leverage up to the point of needing your forecasts to be accurate in order to survive. Focus heavily on analytical ability, discounting common sense as too simple-minded. Treat employees as workers rather than people. Always ask, “How can I achieve the same investment returns they did, but faster?” Consider your last day of college the last day you need to study and learn. When you win, adjust your expectations upward by the same amount, ensuring that your ability to feel the joy of progress takes the form of a treadmill. Risk what you and your family rely on for a chance at something superficial and unnecessary. Since failure is not an option, discount contingency plans. Be genuinely surprised at the occurrence of recessions and bear markets. Consider a degree from a prestigious school as an entitlement to success. Look for patterns in complex adaptive systems, like the economy and stock market. Get tired of being patient. Check those boxes and you’ll be disappointing in no time.