The sections that most interest me in the report are «Career Marketing Communications» and «Social Media Profiles...» which include resumes, cover letters, and LinkedIn profiles, as well
as other career marketing communications.
As they pull together information for their resume, they should keep in mind that they'll need to spread this information out across
their other career marketing communications — executive biography, case studies, other documents, LinkedIn profile and other online career materials.
Without knowing what their target employers want and need, we can't possibly define my clients» personal brand and ROI, and create resumes, bios, online profiles and
other career marketing communications that will attract and resonate with their target audience, and clearly distinguish my clients as good fit candidates.
And if you are not up to date on current trends in resume writing, LinkedIn profile presentation, and
other career marketing communications, you will appear to be outdated.
Naturally then, you can't begin to build your career brand (and write your resume,
other career marketing communications, online profiles, blog / website, and other web pages) without first identifying who your target audience is, what their needs are, and which good - fit strengths and qualities of yours will help them solve their problems.
Although there are recruiters and hiring decision makers who will skip right over your cover letters, others read them religiously and judge candidates by them as strongly as they do their resumes and
other career marketing communications.
With unemployment at around 10 % and job search frequently stretching out beyond 10 to 12 months, more and more executive job seekers are stuck figuring out how to deal with prolonged employment gaps on their resumes and
other career marketing communications.
As they pull together information for their resume, they should keep in mind that they'll need to spread this information out across
their other career marketing communications — biography, case studies, other documents, LinkedIn profile and other online branding.
Once you define what best describes you, consult a thesaurus to nail the exact words to use in your resume, biography, online profiles, and
other career marketing communications.
But how can you know what messaging (through your resume, LinkedIn profile and
other career marketing communications) you'll need to create to resonate with employers if you don't know exactly which employers you're targeting?
Take a look at your executive resume, LinkedIn profile, VisualCV, and
other career marketing communications.
Update your executive resume and
other career marketing communications.
With today's shaky economy, it's more important than ever to get out there with a resume and
other career marketing communications that will truly differentiate you from the competition, while deeply aligning what you have to offer with what the job and the employer need.
If you're struggling with your resume and
other career marketing communications, these stumbling blocks are probably the culprits:
Executives in a quandary about what to do next have some work to do before tackling their resumes and
other career marketing communications.
After working on executive branding, and creating your resume, biography and
other career marketing communications, you've started landing job interviews.
Are you still relying on anemic, overused phrases like «results - oriented» and «team player» to sell yourself in your executive resume and
other career marketing communications?
I advise my top - level executive clients to keep track of their accomplishments so that updating their resumes and
other career marketing communications is less painful.
They see someone else's brand messaging, perhaps on a LinkedIn profile, that kind of sounds like them and is written well, so they «borrow & # it for their own LinkedIn profile or resume or
other career marketing communications.