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Thursday, July 9, 2020
Using Testimonials in Your Resume
Using Testimonials in Your Resume TweetWhen writing your resume, its one thing to claim youre terrific at teamwork, building great client relationships, or coaching others. But wheres the evidence? It can be especially hard to make a compelling case for soft skills like those above; they can be hard to quantify or certify. Rather than just asking the employer to take your word for it, why not have someone else vouch for you? In an increasingly review-driven world, a new trend in resumes and cover letters is to include a short quote from your manager, a customer or client, or some other credible source. Its most effective when the quote can be verified, perhaps because its online as a recommendation in your LinkedIn profile. Thats a great reason among many to get LinkedIn recommendations. You can also quote from a letter of recommendation, adding in parentheses that the full letter is available upon request. A customer kudo might be another good source, probably omitting the customers name to maintain confidentiality. A glowing excerpt from a performance review can be very effective, including the managers title but perhaps omitting their name if you feel it might be distracting or inappropriate. Include the date, if recent. Examples Heres an example, this one involving a LinkedIn recommendation. Lets say Judith Jones wants her resume to communicate above all that shes a team player, but she knows that just saying so wont be very convincing. Fortunately, Judiths LinkedIn profile contains the following recommendation from a key internal customer: I had the pleasure of working with Judith in two different companies over the course of eight years. Judith is a consummate Human Resources professional and would be an asset to any company that hired her. She is always open to new processes and she partnered well with Payroll. She often came to me and asked How can I make this process work better for you? Shes an incredibly collaborative colleague. I highly recommend Judith. Steven Sanchez, Director of Payroll, The Green Company For her resume, she should shorten this to something brief and punchy, such as: Judith is a consummate Human Resources professional She often came to me and asked How can I make this process work better for you? Shes an incredibly collaborative colleague. I highly recommend Judith. (Steven Sanchez, Director of Payroll, Multinational Marketing, Inc., excerpted from: www.linkedin.com/in/Judithqjones) (Notice we are including Stevens name. His comment has already been made public, so he obviously has no objection to being quoted by name.) Where to Use Testimonials in Your Resume Where would you put this in your resume? Some good spots might be: At the end of the Summary. This is a very powerful location, so reserve it for strong, extremely relevant praise from your direct manager, senior management or other high-profile source. At the end of the resume. In the Experience section, under the job in which you received the praise. For another way of formatting the testimonials, check out my post on the Blurbs Block. So my advice is: Get LinkedIn recommendations, and also hang onto your customer kudos. They can say a lot for you! Using Testimonials in Your Resume TweetWhen writing your resume, its one thing to claim youre terrific at teamwork, building great client relationships, or coaching others. But wheres the evidence? It can be especially hard to make a compelling case for soft skills like those above; they can be hard to quantify or certify. Rather than just asking the employer to take your word for it, why not have someone else vouch for you? In an increasingly review-driven world, a new trend in resumes and cover letters is to include a short quote from your manager, a customer or client, or some other credible source. Its most effective when the quote can be verified, perhaps because its online as a recommendation in your LinkedIn profile. Thats a great reason among many to get LinkedIn recommendations. You can also quote from a letter of recommendation, adding in parentheses that the full letter is available upon request. A customer kudo might be another good source, probably omitting the customers name to maintain confidentiality. A glowing excerpt from a performance review can be very effective, including the managers title but perhaps omitting their name if you feel it might be distracting or inappropriate. Include the date, if recent. Examples Heres an example, this one involving a LinkedIn recommendation. Lets say Judith Jones wants her resume to communicate above all that shes a team player, but she knows that just saying so wont be very convincing. Fortunately, Judiths LinkedIn profile contains the following recommendation from a key internal customer: I had the pleasure of working with Judith in two different companies over the course of eight years. Judith is a consummate Human Resources professional and would be an asset to any company that hired her. She is always open to new processes and she partnered well with Payroll. She often came to me and asked How can I make this process work better for you? Shes an incredibly collaborative colleague. I highly recommend Judith. Steven Sanchez, Director of Payroll, The Green Company For her resume, she should shorten this to something brief and punchy, such as: Judith is a consummate Human Resources professional She often came to me and asked How can I make this process work better for you? Shes an incredibly collaborative colleague. I highly recommend Judith. (Steven Sanchez, Director of Payroll, Multinational Marketing, Inc., excerpted from: www.linkedin.com/in/Judithqjones) (Notice we are including Stevens name. His comment has already been made public, so he obviously has no objection to being quoted by name.) Where to Use Testimonials in Your Resume Where would you put this in your resume? Some good spots might be: At the end of the Summary. This is a very powerful location, so reserve it for strong, extremely relevant praise from your direct manager, senior management or other high-profile source. At the end of the resume. In the Experience section, under the job in which you received the praise. For another way of formatting the testimonials, check out my post on the Blurbs Block. So my advice is: Get LinkedIn recommendations, and also hang onto your customer kudos. They can say a lot for you! Using Testimonials in Your Resume TweetWhen writing your resume, its one thing to claim youre terrific at teamwork, building great client relationships, or coaching others. But wheres the evidence? It can be especially hard to make a compelling case for soft skills like those above; they can be hard to quantify or certify. Rather than just asking the employer to take your word for it, why not have someone else vouch for you? In an increasingly review-driven world, a new trend in resumes and cover letters is to include a short quote from your manager, a customer or client, or some other credible source. Its most effective when the quote can be verified, perhaps because its online as a recommendation in your LinkedIn profile. Thats a great reason among many to get LinkedIn recommendations. You can also quote from a letter of recommendation, adding in parentheses that the full letter is available upon request. A customer kudo might be another good source, probably omitting the customers name to maintain confidentiality. A glowing excerpt from a performance review can be very effective, including the managers title but perhaps omitting their name if you feel it might be distracting or inappropriate. Include the date, if recent. Examples Heres an example, this one involving a LinkedIn recommendation. Lets say Judith Jones wants her resume to communicate above all that shes a team player, but she knows that just saying so wont be very convincing. Fortunately, Judiths LinkedIn profile contains the following recommendation from a key internal customer: I had the pleasure of working with Judith in two different companies over the course of eight years. Judith is a consummate Human Resources professional and would be an asset to any company that hired her. She is always open to new processes and she partnered well with Payroll. She often came to me and asked How can I make this process work better for you? Shes an incredibly collaborative colleague. I highly recommend Judith. Steven Sanchez, Director of Payroll, The Green Company For her resume, she should shorten this to something brief and punchy, such as: Judith is a consummate Human Resources professional She often came to me and asked How can I make this process work better for you? Shes an incredibly collaborative colleague. I highly recommend Judith. (Steven Sanchez, Director of Payroll, Multinational Marketing, Inc., excerpted from: www.linkedin.com/in/Judithqjones) (Notice we are including Stevens name. His comment has already been made public, so he obviously has no objection to being quoted by name.) Where to Use Testimonials in Your Resume Where would you put this in your resume? Some good spots might be: At the end of the Summary. This is a very powerful location, so reserve it for strong, extremely relevant praise from your direct manager, senior management or other high-profile source. At the end of the resume. In the Experience section, under the job in which you received the praise. For another way of formatting the testimonials, check out my post on the Blurbs Block. So my advice is: Get LinkedIn recommendations, and also hang onto your customer kudos. They can say a lot for you!
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