Resume Writer
Registered User
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2004
- Posts
- 1,121
Hi Everyone,
I went to an Hiring Manager meeting the other day here in PHX. Here is more information about what they have to say. I am also including my observations over the years.
1. Do not include personal information on the resume. This includes age, marital status, health, hobbies, etc.
2. Please do not apply to jobs for which you are not qualified. An employer recently posted an ad that was VERY specific about what he wanted in a candidate. He could not believe the responses that he got, with only 1 in 30 having the exact qualifications he was looking for. This is just as valid in the airline industry. Most of the employers now (including aviation) are putting in lines that say, "those who do not meet the criteria or qualifications will be disgarded."
3. "It's not about you." One employer told me that she got resumes from people stating that they wanted to get the best training they could to move on in their career! That may be your intention, as it is when you are starting out in the aviation business, but it does not mean that you have to boldly state it in your objective. The best sentence that you could use in a cover letter is that you want to make a valuable contribution to THEIR organization.
4. Match the background you have to the job description. You may have to alter your resume slightly. Think about the things you have in your background that match the position. Then sell yourself on those areas. A resume should be a good marketing document, with you being the product you are selling.
5. Even if you are in aviation, put a solid job description. Do not leave the employers guessing about what you did in your previous jobs.
6. Write a good SOLID cover letter. This is your chance to sell yourself and yes, they do get read. They should not be more than four paragraphs. Once again, state your qualifications as they MATCH the position.
As a professional resume writer and former Hiring Manager, I suggest that you do some things in your career that make you stand out. Have you been on any committees? Have you helped to develop an operations manual? Have you had a high number of students that have passed FAA checkrides?
I know how tiring aviation can be, with the long hours and little appreciation. However, if you can get some other extra items on your resume, it will make you stand out from other candidates. Perhaps you have worked with Make-A-Wish to grant wishes for terminally ill children. Maybe you have gone and spoken to elementary or high school children on career day to talk about your profession. These are all things that can be included in your resume. It simply shows that you have gone above and beyond the call of duty.
Let me tell you something that you are all probably aware of already. As a Hiring Manager, I would go through hundreds of resumes and select the people I wanted to interview. When it was time to sit them down for that interview, I got to a point where I was looking for "something" that set each person apart from the others.
Hiring Managers want to see something that they can relate with in their own lives. Let me put a caveat on this: do not include items relating to politics, religion or abortion. You never know whose desk your resume will cross. When you participate in the areas that I have described, i.e., community service, the Hiring Manager starts to buy into you.
I can remember a client years ago who came to me for a resume. She had just returned home from the Peace Corps. I looked at her and told her that the Peace Corps job would be the thing that the interviewers asked about because a lot of people would like to do that, but do not have the courage to take that as a position. (I am not suggesting the Peace Corps, just an example) I also told her that the Peace Corps job would get her every subsequent job in her career.
I talked to a client today who was a District Manager for Eckerd Drug Stores. For those who do not know, Eckerd was bought out by CVS. This man was a dynamo. In every job he had with Eckerd for 17 years, he had done multiple things that improved his departments. He has to reapply with CVS for his job. I told him that with all he had done he should be a shoe-in. However, if he is not rehired by them, he will be scooped up in a heartbeat. This man not only produced numbers, but he took care of his people. As he stated, THEY were the key to his success. (Geez, can we get THIS man into the airline industry??)
Anyway, I thought that I would share this information with all of you.
Kathy
I went to an Hiring Manager meeting the other day here in PHX. Here is more information about what they have to say. I am also including my observations over the years.
1. Do not include personal information on the resume. This includes age, marital status, health, hobbies, etc.
2. Please do not apply to jobs for which you are not qualified. An employer recently posted an ad that was VERY specific about what he wanted in a candidate. He could not believe the responses that he got, with only 1 in 30 having the exact qualifications he was looking for. This is just as valid in the airline industry. Most of the employers now (including aviation) are putting in lines that say, "those who do not meet the criteria or qualifications will be disgarded."
3. "It's not about you." One employer told me that she got resumes from people stating that they wanted to get the best training they could to move on in their career! That may be your intention, as it is when you are starting out in the aviation business, but it does not mean that you have to boldly state it in your objective. The best sentence that you could use in a cover letter is that you want to make a valuable contribution to THEIR organization.
4. Match the background you have to the job description. You may have to alter your resume slightly. Think about the things you have in your background that match the position. Then sell yourself on those areas. A resume should be a good marketing document, with you being the product you are selling.
5. Even if you are in aviation, put a solid job description. Do not leave the employers guessing about what you did in your previous jobs.
6. Write a good SOLID cover letter. This is your chance to sell yourself and yes, they do get read. They should not be more than four paragraphs. Once again, state your qualifications as they MATCH the position.
As a professional resume writer and former Hiring Manager, I suggest that you do some things in your career that make you stand out. Have you been on any committees? Have you helped to develop an operations manual? Have you had a high number of students that have passed FAA checkrides?
I know how tiring aviation can be, with the long hours and little appreciation. However, if you can get some other extra items on your resume, it will make you stand out from other candidates. Perhaps you have worked with Make-A-Wish to grant wishes for terminally ill children. Maybe you have gone and spoken to elementary or high school children on career day to talk about your profession. These are all things that can be included in your resume. It simply shows that you have gone above and beyond the call of duty.
Let me tell you something that you are all probably aware of already. As a Hiring Manager, I would go through hundreds of resumes and select the people I wanted to interview. When it was time to sit them down for that interview, I got to a point where I was looking for "something" that set each person apart from the others.
Hiring Managers want to see something that they can relate with in their own lives. Let me put a caveat on this: do not include items relating to politics, religion or abortion. You never know whose desk your resume will cross. When you participate in the areas that I have described, i.e., community service, the Hiring Manager starts to buy into you.
I can remember a client years ago who came to me for a resume. She had just returned home from the Peace Corps. I looked at her and told her that the Peace Corps job would be the thing that the interviewers asked about because a lot of people would like to do that, but do not have the courage to take that as a position. (I am not suggesting the Peace Corps, just an example) I also told her that the Peace Corps job would get her every subsequent job in her career.
I talked to a client today who was a District Manager for Eckerd Drug Stores. For those who do not know, Eckerd was bought out by CVS. This man was a dynamo. In every job he had with Eckerd for 17 years, he had done multiple things that improved his departments. He has to reapply with CVS for his job. I told him that with all he had done he should be a shoe-in. However, if he is not rehired by them, he will be scooped up in a heartbeat. This man not only produced numbers, but he took care of his people. As he stated, THEY were the key to his success. (Geez, can we get THIS man into the airline industry??)
Anyway, I thought that I would share this information with all of you.

Kathy
Last edited: