Help With Resume
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@alex.olynyk said in Help With Resume:
Should a MOOC be on a resume under Education?
What is a MOOC?
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@scottalanmiller massive open online course
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If you don't have lots of certs to put into a list, just add this to your Windows skill item:
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@alex.olynyk said in Help With Resume:
@scottalanmiller massive open online course
I don't know what that means, but unless it was an accredited university, don't list it under education (or at all.) Taking classes is not something you list on a resume.
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Just in this one tiny section, deploying ownCloud and OpenFire appear twice. Nothing should appear twice on your resume.
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Start by defining your skills. Skills are not "Tasks I've Done", they are "things I'm good at and feel that you should hire me because of". The rest of the resume is showing support for the skills list.
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@scottalanmiller How do I define my level of experience with a skill? If I list PowerShell, do they assume I am an expert or just know the fundamentals?
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@alex.olynyk said in Help With Resume:
@scottalanmiller How do I define my level of experience with a skill? If I list PowerShell, do they assume I am an expert or just know the fundamentals?
Depends on how you present it. If you only know the fundamentals, why would it be a key skill on which you are basing your career, though?
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I'd put something like Windows 7 - 10. Brevity is your friend.
Server 2012? That's both your first and your last experience? Why have you not gotten 2016 installed at home yet? Assuming you want to work with Windows, and given that you lead your resume with it, I'm assuming that you do.
MS Office... no matter how good you are at it, that's a secretarial skill, unless you are implying some mastery of deploying it or something. How do you expect me to take it seeing it listed as one of your most critical skills?
Ubuntu and CentOS on a line together is fine, but on a huge line of randomness isn't good. What is their association with MS Office, for example?
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@scottalanmiller I have 2016 installed on my personal laptop in Client Hyper-V. I dont have the funds for server hardware.
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@alex.olynyk said in Help With Resume:
@scottalanmiller I have 2016 installed on my personal laptop in Client Hyper-V. I dont have the funds for server hardware.
What does server hardware have to do with it? The OS is the OS, it's the same wherever it is installed.
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@scottalanmiller said in Help With Resume:
@alex.olynyk said in Help With Resume:
@scottalanmiller I have 2016 installed on my personal laptop in Client Hyper-V. I dont have the funds for server hardware.
What does server hardware have to do with it? The OS is the OS, it's the same wherever it is installed.
Right - it should really only ever be installed inside a VM anyhow, so server hardware or laptop, doesn't matter, experience is experience.
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I polished up mine as well.
As of March 1st, I have been pulled off our Japan support and after our migration to Azure, April 1st I leave.
I applied for a job on Wednesday night and Friday I got an e-mail back. I guess my resume is OK for now
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Google Drive is blocked here so I cannot see your full resume, but from the images @scottalanmiller posted, I see alot of fluff for entry level stuff...
The 5 month consulting job can be summed up in 2 bullet points:
- Managed Desktop and laptops for residential customers. Some of my tasks include troubleshooting, purchasing, repairs, and new deployments
- Deployed (Always sounds better than Installed) and Managed Trend Micro Security Products including Worry-Free Business Manager and Worry Free Remote Manger.
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The words "responsible for" should only appear a few times in the entire resume, if you glance at the resume quickly you can see the pattern of them being repeated.
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When I look at Lakewood Ranch, you seem like an entry level tech, but I know that isn't true. The wording is just really bad.
You can start bulllet points with the same word in a Resume, but it should happen very sparingly. A good rule is to only use the same starting word ONCE in each job description
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And definitely don't mention things like "work with vendors". That's not showing something you want people to know about.
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Why not highlight your Linux experience?
Instead of saying "deployed Openfire and Owncloud," I would say something like this.
- Researched, implemented, and deployed Enterprise level messaging platform and File Sharing Platform on Linux Servers. Tasked as system admin for these server(s) and application. Some of my duties include frequent Operating System Updates, Application Updates, Testing, GPOs, and Security.
Doesn't that sound a million and a half times better?
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@IRJ Yes, it does. Thank you.
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Nobody cares about setting up accounts so I would either completely remove that information or phrase it in a way that is more impressive.
Instead of saying Setup accounts for new hire
- Active Directory duties include user management, GPOs, group membership management, file permission management, etc.