Sure, you may have
a pretty good work history, top - notch experience, and great recommendations, but that doesn't mean you automatically receive an interview, or even a job offer.
Not exact matches
TR has a
pretty good history of
working with other companies in recent
history.
«Understanding how the continent
works, being able to find the information, being able to figure out how mineral and oil deposits are formed, being able to understand risk - aspects of earthquakes... generally requires a
pretty committed staff who've got a
good history of what's going on.»
In spite of his youthful
history, the Labrala has some
pretty ancient lineage that includes the Labrador retriever who dates back to 19th century Newfoundland where he was used as a
working dog on fishing boats as
well as the Vizsla who comes from Hungary and dates back almost a thousand years where he was used for hunting in Central Europe.
A Sega arcade game's most essential finishing touch and seal of quality is a solid rolling intro - the company has produced some of the
best in
history, typically running off the in - game engine - but this sequence, despite apparently being
pretty decent to begin with in terms of the edit itself, is butchered by what can surely only be explained as some sort of tragic
work - experience / internship blunder.
There are all sorts of things, scraps from art
history — Picasso, Ruscha, Warhol... but also bits from the news, aphorisms,
pretty, idyllic landscapes, and quotes from your past
works as
well.
You have a
pretty good resume: solid
work history, relevant skills and keywords, and the
best resume format to highlight it all.
Recruiters nowadays are
pretty switched on in terms of the various methods used by job seekers to disguise gaps in their
work histories and it is
well worth bearing in mind that many will ask about them outright.