If the overall resume design is bad — like, a bunch of colors on it, your contact information going vertically down the side of the resume instead of the top, the margins are stretched out to maximize the entire page, and too
much bold texting.
Not exact matches
The search engines also rank this
text and will give it an importance if it is a title, a sub-title or
bold or Italic font that stands out, pretty
much what a human would do.
The fact is we find
bold pictures to be
much more engaging than we do a wall of
text - we're just designed to process imagery.
Much of her
text calls attention to ideas such as feminism, consumerism, and individual autonomy and desire, frequently appropriating images from mainstream magazines and using her
bold phrases to frame them in a new context.
With the new rich
text editor you can
bold, italicise, underline, strike, link and • list out your
text content as
much as you like, keeping your
text clean, tidy and readable.
• Maintaining a simple 12 pt font that is easy to read • Don't overuse
text formatting, not every skill, qualification, or job requires being
bolded or italicized • Don't add decorations to your pages, the resume format is functional not for decoration • Maintain clear wide margins on all sides of the page so that it looks clean • Keep clear space between sections rather than trying to cram as
much on the paper as you can, clear space draws the eye and shows where information can be found
So
much so, that the application instructions specifically read (in
bold text):