View of Career Services Building from southeast Career Services @ Virginia Tech
Career Services Building (0128)
Corner of Washington Street & West Campus Drive
Blacksburg, VA  24061
phone 540-231-6241     fax 540-231-3293       www.career.vt.edu
location | office hours | walk-in advising & appointments | contact us | our staff | events | career fairs | A-Z index
Career Services is for all students: freshman, sophomore, junior, senior,
and graduate level, at
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.
Our Mission and Core Values 
FOR:   Students  |  Graduate Students  |  Employers  |  Alumni  |  Faculty & Staff  |  Parents
Explore Careers & Majors  |  Externships  |  Internships  |  Co–op  |  Job Search  |  Plan for Grad School
 
You are here: Career Services > For Students > Job search > Resumes and vitae > Most frequent resume mistakes
 
JOB SEARCH TOOLS & SKILLS:
Resumes and vitae
Cover letters & other letters
E-mail
Telephone
References
Researching employers
 
FINDING JOBS & EMPLOYERS:
How VT grads did it
Who hired VT grads
How to start your job search
Pros & cons of ways to job-hunt
Advertised jobs
Unadvertised jobs
Networking
VT CareerLink
CareerSearch
Hokies4Hire & the On-Campus Interviewing Program
Job listing web sites
On-line job search advice & privacy protection
 
MEETING EMPLOYERS:
Handshakes
Career fairs / job fairs
Employer info sessions
Interviewing
Interview attire
Business casual attire
Dining etiquette
 
DECIDING ON A JOB OFFER:
Salary, benefits, negotiating
Responding to job offers
Acknowledging a job offer
Deadline extensions
Declining
Accepting
Contracts
Relocating
 
SPECIAL INTERESTS:
Diverse students
International students
Students with disabilities
LGBT students
Graduate students

 
 
 
Most frequent resume mistakes
Please, be original.  Don't make these common mistakes.
 
Mistake: Inventing a new name for the university
Correct: Use the full name, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, or use the official shortened name, Virginia Tech.
Or use the full name with the shortened name in parentheses for future reference.
  DO include the location as "Blacksburg, Virginia" (or you may abbreviate state names).
  DON'T include street addresses and zip codes of school and work locations.
   
Mistake: Listing a personal web site that contains inappropriate content.
Correct: See listing your personal web site URL on your resume.
   
Mistake: Using really small fonts
Correct: Employers are typically reading many resumes, and are taking less than half a minute to read one.
  Really small fonts are hard to read and don't photocopy as well. (That applies to your address block as well.)
  What's too small? Generally don't go smaller than a 10 point, but notice that all font styles aren't sized equally. For example, a 10 point Arial font is smaller than a 10 point Antique Olive.
   
Mistake: Really wide margins with content squeezed in the middle.
Correct: Your margins should be at least one half inch. You really don't need more than one inch.
  Lots of students ask if their resumes have "enough white space." An employer isn't reading white space.
  Employers are reading your content, and you want it to be easy to see.
   
Mistake: Long wordy descriptions in your objective and elsewhere.
Correct: You don't need complete sentences in your resume.
  Concise, understandable phrases are sufficient.
  Look at the examples in resume formats and samples.
  Ask for a Career Services advisor's assistance in editing your resume through walk-in advising.
   
Mistake: Typos.
Correct: You have one chance to make a first impression. In many cases, your resume, or your resume plus a cover letter, are the only things an employer has to base an impression of you.
  The resume is a critical document for presenting yourself. The view is that if you would make a mistake on your resume, you'll probably make a lot more mistakes on the job.
  It's easy to miss your own typos. Use spellcheck, but remember it won't catch every error. Frightening example: If you leave the first "l" out of "public relations," spellcheck is not going to let you know. Get the idea? Ask friends to proofread.
   
Mistake: Using too complicated a format; getting too creative.
Correct: The employer typically spends about 15 to 30 seconds reading your resume.
  Keep the layout simple and clean (like the examples in resume formats and samples).
  Avoid too many layers of indentation.
  Use one font size for the document; only make your name larger.
  Don't mix font types.
   
Mistake: Using a unique, creative layout or style to stand out from the crowd.
Correct: The best way to stand out from the crowd is with high quality content and a clearly written, neat, error-free document.
  Employers are looking for content, not fancy or dangerously creative layout.
  Don't stand out for the wrong reason.
           
© 1996-2006 Career Services