|     A Curriculum   Vitae (CV) is quite simply an advertisement to sell yourself to an   employer. The main purpose of your CV is to make you attractive, interesting,   worth considering to the company and so receive a job interview. An employer   may have several hundred enquiries about a single job. Therefore, your CV   must be as good as you can make it.         The terms 'Curriculum Vitae' and 'Resume' are generally   interchangeable. But, they do differ in many ways. While both are lists of   the most relevant information of a person seeking a job, there are a few   basic differences. While the CV represents in-depth and structured   information about the professional experience and qualification of a person,   the resume usually is the same thing in a short form.         CV is the most accepted form for job applications all over the world. The   resume, on the other hand, is the most accepted form for job applications in   USA. The CV is used in USA exclusively for jobs in academics.        A CV should be well laid-out and printed on a good quality printer. You   should use bold and/or underline print for headlines. Do not use lots of   different fonts and sizes.         Before submitting your CV do not forget to spell-check/proof-read. This is   important.         Also, make sure you include all the information about yourself that will help   the recruiter to consider you as a potential candidate. Remember the   principle: "If they did not hear it, you did not say it".        Picture yourself to be a busy manager in the employer's office who has to   read through hundred of CVs in half an hour and select the best from them.   Thus, your CV must be precise, easy to read and attractive.        After you have written your CV get someone else to look at it. What you have   written may seem simple and obvious to you, but not to other person (and   ultimately an employer). Go through it again and again and refine it to make   it short, easy to read, attractive and error-free.         Preparing to write your CV    Sit down with a piece of paper. Look at the job that you are applying for.   Consider how your skills, education and experience compare with the skills   that the job requires. How much information do you have about the job   description?         Sometimes employers do not give enough information. Ask for more detail if   needed. Spend time researching detail about the job that interests you and   information about the employer—their structure, products, successes, and   approach from their own publicity, reports and publications, as well as   newspapers and internet.        Information to include in your CV    Personal details: Name, home address, college address, phone number,   email address. Do you have your own web homepage? Include it if it's good!).     Education: Give places of education where you have studied. Most recent   education should be listed first. Include subject options taken in each year   of your course. Include any special project, thesis, or work.         Pre-college courses should then be included, with grades. Subjects taken and   passed just before college or during college will be of most interest.   Earlier courses, taken at say age 15-16, may not need much detail.         Work experience: List your most recent experience first. Give the name   of your employer, job title, and very important, what you actually did and   achieved in that job. Part-time work should also be included in your CV.         Interests: Employers will be particularly interested in activities   where you have undertook leadership role or a responsibility, or which   involved you in relating to others in a team. A hobby such as coin-collecting   may be of less interest to them, unless it connects with the work you wish to   do.         Give only enough detail to explain. (If you were captain of a sports team,   they do not want to know the exact date you started, how many games you   played, and how many wins you had! They will ask this in the interview, if   they are interested.) If you have published any articles, jointly or by   yourself, give details.         If you have been involved in any type of volunteer work, do include the   details.         Skills: Ability in other languages, computing experience, or   possession of a driving licence should be included in your CV.         References: Usually give two names—one from your place of study, and   one from any work place. Or, if this does not apply, then an older family   friend who has known you for some time should be given as a reference. Make   sure that referees are willing to give you a reference. Give their day and   evening phone numbers if possible.         Length: Maybe all you need to say will fit onto one sheet of A4. But   do not crowd it and layout your CV with reasonable line-spacing and white   spaces around. No harm if your CV takes two A4 sheets. Do not normally go   longer than this. Put page numbers at the bottom of the pages—a little detail   that may impress.         Style: There are two main styles of CV, with variations within them.         Chronological: Information is included under general headings—   education, work experience, etc., with the most recent events first.         Skills based: You think through the necessary skills needed for the   job you are applying for. Then you list all your personal details under these   skill headings. This is called 'targeting your CV', and is becoming more   common. Do take advice on how to do it best.         Covering letter: When sending in a CV or job application form, you   must include a covering letter. The purpose of the letter is:         To make sure that the CV arrives on the desk of the correct person. Take the   trouble to telephone, and find the name of the person who will be dealing   with applications or CVs, and address your letter, and envelope, to that   person by name. (In a small company, it may be the managing director. In a   medium size company, it may be the head of section/department. Only in a   large company will there be a Personnel or Human Resource Department.)        Clearly say what job you are interested in. If you are sending in a   'speculative' CV hoping that they may have work for you, explain what sort of   work you are interested in. Do not say, 'I would be interested in working   for ABC Ltd', but say 'I believe my skills equip me to work in the   product development department/accounts office/etc'.         Start your letter with an underline heading giving the job title you are   interested in. (If you saw the job advertised, say where you saw it.)         Application forms    To apply for some jobs, the employer will send you an application form. You   should still use a covering letter, and send your CV also unless told not to.   Application forms need as much care to write as CVs.         Other points    Keep copies of all letters, applications forms, and CVs sent, and records of   telephone calls and names of those you spoke to.        The main features of the CV, in brief, are:       The   Resume            A resume usually can be written in three very different styles - (i)   Chronological resume—whereby your skills and main achievements are   listed by date starting with the most recent ones first, (ii)   Functional resume—whereby your skills and experience are more   highlighted than anything else and (iii) a combination of both—whereby   both skill and achievements are presented hand-in-hand.        IMPORTANT NOTE:     Do not ever falsify information, or give any misleading information to an   employer under any circumstances whatever. It's illegal, it's self   destructive, and it's just plain stupid. Do not put yourself in a position   where your statements can't be trusted. Only give verifiable information, and   do not exaggerate. Quality of information is what really matters on any CV.   Keep it real, at all times     |   
 
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