From the course: Writing a Resume

How to showcase the skills an employer wants

From the course: Writing a Resume

How to showcase the skills an employer wants

- Your summary of skills or summary of qualifications is at or near the top of your resume. And it's another area that will be scanned quickly. If you want this section to make the reader keep reading, you need to include all of the right keywords. Let's take another look at the job description labeled manager human resources which can be found in your exercise files. Now would be a good place to pause this video and read it. The job prescription is from a manufacturing company in California. It was made extremely clear exactly what they were looking for in a candidate. So let's go over these with a slightly different lens. Must be able to align with the shared services and functions of ODI training, talent acquisition, benefits, compensation, and payroll. The manager will be most successful by aligning themselves as a strategic business partner to the operations leadership at the manufacturing facility. Strong knowledge of government regulations related to employment such as FLSA, EECO, ADA, FMLA, et cetera. Minimum of seven years, human resources, generalist experience. Experience with Six Sigma or Lean manufacturing, Bachelor's degree in Human Resources or related field. Must be bilingual in English and Spanish. These key phrases are important because they start with words like must, strong or minimum. These are important indicators that scream pay attention to me. Deciding what to include should be easy at this point. Your summary of skills or qualifications should include at a minimum that you are bilingual in Spanish, and that you have more than seven years of HR experience. It should include experience with any of the subject matter areas mentioned like organizational development or ODI, talent acquisition, benefits, compensation, and payroll. And with ODI, they got even more specific and said training. So if you have expertise there now would be the time to mention it. And I know the questions percolating. You want to know what to do if you don't have seven years of experience, what if you aren't bilingual in Spanish? And what if you don't have any experience with Six Sigma or Lean manufacturing? Let's work through this for a moment. If a company states that they require someone who speaks Spanish and you don't know how to say anything other than gracias or hola why bother applying? Search for other jobs that you really want and that warrants spending time and energy attempting to get. Why waste your valuable time on a job you clearly will not get? It can be tough to give up on a job that sounds great, but you have to be realistic here. Let's keep the focus on the jobs you have the ability to get, and then let's help you get them.

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