But parts of the debate actually focus on what's
commonly seen in resumes, not what the majority of career coaches recommended.
This week, FreeResumeBuilder.org asked hiring managers across a range of industries to describe the most embarrassing mistakes
they commonly see in resumes and cover letters.
Not exact matches
A Bachelor's Degree
in Math is
commonly seen on Math Tutor
resumes.
Strategic Account Managers come from various educational backgrounds, and a Bachelor's Degree
in a relevant field is
commonly seen in sample
resumes.
A degree
in an educational field is
commonly seen in After School Teacher
resume samples.
A Master's Degree
in an education - related study area is
commonly seen on Education Director example
resumes.
Tips
commonly include printing your
resume as if you were
in person, sitting at a table to ensure your voice sound clear and projects, and smile even though no one can
see you.
A Bachelor's Degree
in elementary education is
commonly seen on example
resumes.
A Master's Degree
in educational development or a similar field is
commonly seen in Youth Program Director example
resumes.
A Bachelor's Degree
in a foreign language is
commonly seen on Language Arts Teacher
resume samples.
A degree
in industrial management or business administration is
commonly seen on Production Specialist
resumes.
A Bachelor's Degree
in business management or any other related field is
commonly seen in Administrative Associate
resume samples.
This is normally the method you write the
resume in, most
commonly Microsoft Word and this format is normally the one you
see in printed form.
Coursework teaching both technical and design skills are
commonly seen in successful Assistant Fashion Designer
resumes.
Duties such as assigning tasks to QA Engineers, documenting bugs, developing test plans, running automated tests, writing reports, and supporting developers are
commonly seen in QA Test Leads
resume samples.
The tips and tricks shared
in today's article come from one employers
commonly see omitted
in many executive assistant
resumes.
This is the traditional
resume you
see in printed form, crafted using a word processing program (most
commonly Microsoft Word).