How to climb the corporate ladder

Hello,   This is Laura Rose, author of the business and time management book: TimePeace: Making Peace with Time, the Book of Answers: 105 Career Critical Situations and Business Marketing for Entrepreneurs  is a certified business and efficiency coach.  And I specialize in professional development, career management, time management, and work life balance strategies.
Simply put, I give people the time to be, do and have whatever they want.
promotionI recently recieved the following questions about how to climb the corporate ladder.
1) What are three things you can do in the short term to show your boss you are management material?

   a) Continue to show leadership attributes in your weekly one-on-one meeting with your manager including: taking lead in your one-on-one management meeting agenda; initiating your performance discussion in the 1-on-1 manager meeting; initiating your career path and indivdual development goals in your one-on-one manager meetings; reporting status on your management self-study courses, etc.

   b) Continue to speak in clear, direct terms inregards to vision/goals, expected results that are aligned with the company’s bottom line, and contingency plans/risk management.   The critical responsible for any leader or manager is to clearly articulate the company vision and goals to their staff.  Then verifying that everyone on the team truly understand their roles in meeting those objectives.  You should be illustrating these same traits in every interaction.

  c) How you do anything – is how you do everything.  Be a leader (or example to others) in everything that you do.


2) What are three things you can do in the long term?
  a) Take any company approved management or leadership courses
  b) Have your manager spell out exactly what you need to accomplish to qualified and considered as a management candidate.  Then co-create (with your manager) your Independent Development Plan and Personal Business Commit plan (explained in more detail in the Professional Development Toolkit).  Get the documents approved and signed by your manager to make him a co-conspirator in your success.  Take the initiative to setup weekly or twice-a-month one-on-one manager meeting to report your progress and status.
   c) Continually review the job opportunities both in your department and out.  Most companies have a “open position” webpage.  Keep an eye out for different managerial positions in adjacent positions (positions that have similar traits to your background and experience).  Make sure your manager isn’t the only one that knows about your skills, talent and experience. Start volunteering your services to sibling departments and areas to increase your business contact sphere and your skillset.  Work with mentors that are already in the areas that you are interested in moving into.  Position yourself to be on the executives mind when an opporutnity does arrive.

3) What are three major mistakes people make when trying to climb the corporate ladder.
   a) Confusing “taking charge” with “leadership”.  Taking charge or trying to take control is counter-productive, especially if you are not the official team lead.  Rather, lead by example instead.
   b) Confusing leadership as “doing things right” and policing others.  Leadership is doing the right things (which is a different  emphasis than simply “correctly following policies and procedures”)

c) Forcing, pleading, persuading people to follow you.  Leaders’ followers (or fanbase) already are aligned with the leader’s vision, mission and goals.  Since the followers’ already agree with the direction and ultimate goal and the leader already trusts in his/her team’s talent, skill and craft, all the leader has to do is provide a clear direction to his crew.

I go into detail in the Professional Development Toolkit  and Get that Well-Deserved Raise online course.

Check out the other online courses on this topic:

Landing that position in a tough job market

Hello, this is Laura Lee Rose – author of the business and time management book TimePeace: Making peace with time – and I am a business and efficiency coach that specializes in time management, project management and work-life balance strategies.  Stephen Wynkoop and I regularly meet on professional development topics. Our interviews can be found at Laura Rose Career Management Series

This week’s topic was “Advice for improving the odds of landing a position in a tough job market”

One of the best quotes to keep in mind is the “But what have you done for me lately”.  This is true in the job market.  Companies are in the business to make money.  If you can illustrate tangible evidence in both dollars and sense (common sense), how you have made money for your companies in the past and how you will do it in the future – you will stand out.

So – how do you do this when an employer has 600 resumes to review?

The first thing is to catch their attention upfront.  Acknowledge that they will probably only spend seconds on your resume.  If you don’t capture their attention in those first few seconds, your resume is tossed aside.  Therefore, highlight your professional skills that are directly relevant to the desired position right at the top of the resume; followed by the roles and positions that are significant to this current position.

Eliminate any tasks or duties that distract the reader from your applicable skill set. Don’t feel obligated to do a chronological or historically accurate list of all your employment.  Make sure you expand on the tasks that are in direct support to this new position.  Talk in dollars saved or made for the company.  Use numbers and percentages to illustrate how your contributions directly affected increased revenue or reduced costs.

Don’t be afraid to customize your resume to each application. Decades ago, we created one resume and sent 60 copies of the same resume out into the job market.  Today’s technology allows us to customize each resume to better fit and match the desired position.  Use the same terminology and descriptions in your resume as they posted in their job description. Using the same language allows your resume to pass through any automated resume scanner or filter.

 Include cover letters or hyperlinks in your online applications.  Many companies have online applications as their first-line screening.  One way to set you apart from the competition is to include a cover letter or a hyperlink to your YouTube video resume.  Many online applications will allow you to attach a resume and/or cover letter.  Take advantage of these attachments to show more of your individual and team contributor.

Set yourself apart by including YouTube, presentations, and article links. Go out of your way to illustrate your expertise.  With today’s technology, there is no limit to creating your own presentations, webinars, videos, articles, demos, prototypes or eBooks to tangibly show your skill set and expertise.

You have passed that gate and at the interview stage.  How do you continue to set yourself apart?

Much in the same way as you illustrated your value to the company in the resume; you continue to showcase any revenue generating scenarios in your interview.  Continue to highlight stories and examples of how your dedication and contributions affected the company’s bottom line.

 

Avoid highlighting the skills that you do not have. Even if you don’t have the exact requirements for this new job, you have worked in a similar environment, with a similar tool or have the appropriate transferable skills.  Highlight the skill set and experience that you do have and extrapolate how those skills and experience relate and support this new position.  Focus on the transferable skill set that will set you apart from the other candidates.

 

Conduct the interview as a conversation.  Don’t wait until the end of the interview to ask your questions.  Comment and query throughout the interview like a real conversation.  Learn as much about them as they are finding out about you.  This is a two way street.  Use your questions to illustrate that you have done your homework on their company and position.

 

Collect contact information.  One of the mistakes that people make is not to collect contact information from everyone they interviewed with.  Even if you are going through a recruiter, take it upon yourself to contact everyone that you interviewed with.  Although your recruiter is helpful in setting these meetings up – it’s to your advantage to take charge of the follow-up.  After all, your recruiter works for many job candidates.   YOU only have one job candidate to work for:  YOU.

 

Use your follow-up emails and thank you notes to close the skills gap. When you have identified a gap in your skill set during the interview, use the follow-up notes to close that gap.  For instance, if during the interview you realized that they are not only looking for someone with manual test experience, but with automated test experience (even though the original job description did not include it).  Take this opportunity to download one of the many free automated test tools and craft an automated test on their website or product.  Then include this update in your follow-up email to them.

 

Use the phone.  Many candidates will use email and thank you notes as a follow-up.  I agree with the thank you notes.  To set yourself apart, use the phone as well.

 

Add them to your Linkedin.com.  Stay on their radar.  Just because this position doesn’t pan out, make sure you are on their minds for the next opportunity.

 

What about college graduates?  How do they differentiate themselves?

 

As for college graduates, creating a portfolio of your transferable skills and illustrating how that will increase revenue or reduce costs will help.  A graduate that handled both school and the job market will outshine someone who just attended classes.  A graduate that received glowing recommendations from both the job market and professors will outshine one who doesn’t.  A graduate that has a portfolio of presentations, published articles, or a how-to video about that particular job role or industry will outshine one who doesn’t.  In today’s market, the average will not get noticed.   Decades ago, companies were willing to hire graduates with the knowledge that the candidate will not know much and there will be a long learning curve.   In today’s market, you need to show that you already have the talent and discipline for that particular job.  If more you can show that you will be able to hit the ground running (minimum learning curve and self-motivated), the better you will outshine those that don’t do that.  We are talking about tangible evidence (not just lip service).
In the IT Professional Development Toolkit, I go into the: who, what, where, when and how to accomplish all of the above. I also have a transferable skill worksheet.

 

Also following online courses:

12 Tips for Realistic Scheduling
10 Tips for Telecommuters
 10 Career Boosting Resolution Laser Lesson

10 Hidden Time Waster Laser Lesson

Get That Well-Deserved Raise Laser Lesson
Professional Development Toolkit
It’s a SNAP – Social Networking Accelerated Process for business networking

Or sign up for my weekly Time and Career Management Newsletter at: http://eepurl.com/cZ9_-/

 

How to find a specific job at a specific company

Hello,   This is Laura Rose, author of the business and time management book: TimePeace: Making Peace with Time, the Book of Answers: 105 Career Critical Situations and Business Marketing for Entrepreneurs  is a certified business and efficiency coach.  And I specialize in professional development, career management, time management, and work life balance strategies.
Simply put, I give people the time to be, do and have whatever they want.
I recently recieved the following question about find a specific job at a specific company:
  • If a job seeker is determined to work at a specific company, what can he do to increase his chances for success?
  • Who should he be reaching out to?
  • What kinds of research should he be doing?
  • How should he approach applying?
  • Should he focus on a specific job posting or just reach out to HR to show general interest in working for the company?

leveraginglink3With the advent of LinkedIn.com (professional social media app), it’s easier to research positions, employees, and company work environment details.  If you are determined to work at a specific company, start business networking with those that work in that company.  Use LinkedIn.com to identify different employees, at various roles and responsibilities.   Start building a business relationship by using your current linkedin contacts to create warm introductions to your new contact targets.

I outline the steps in the online class “Leveraging Links”.

Check out the other online courses:

How to rebuild confidence after you have been out of work for some time

Hello, this is Laura Lee Rose – author of the business and time management books TimePeace: Making peace with time  and The Book of Answers: 105 Career Critical Situations– and I am a business and efficiency coach that specializes in time management, project management and work-life balance strategies.  Stephen Wynkoop and I regularly meet on professional development topics. Our interviews can be found at Laura Rose Career Management Series

This week’s topic was “How to rebuild confidence after you have been out of work for some time”

We can have a gap in our resume in a couple of ways:

1)    We are out of work (either by chose or otherwise)

2)    We have been continuously employed but not in the field of our choice.

In either case, employers may hesitate because the fear that technology has passed us by; our skills are obsolete; and we are no longer relevant.

The best way to build confidence after you has been out of work for some time is to actually accomplish tangible and tactile things while you are out of work.   Identify your goals for self-improvement in regards to health, education, presentation skills, networking, and family.  Then accomplish those goals.  Most employers like to hire self-motivated people that can solve their own problems.  By using this gap in employment for some self-assessment and self-improvement (while you are still job searching) is a good use of your time.

Since the main reason for employer’s hesitation in an employment gap is the ability to stay relevant in today’s ever-changing technology, the best advice is to stay relevant regardless of what type or how the gap occurred.  You can do this by:

  • Use the gap to learn a new skill, achieve a certification or license
  • Stay active in your profession by volunteering your services to nonprofits or service communities
  • Teach at a local community college,
  • Create online courses in your field of expertise.
  • Speak at local professional organizations or conferences
  • Write articles, blogs or eBooks in your field of expertise
  • Develop YouTube presentations, demos or prototypes as proof of your new skill set.
  • Create a portfolio or press kit of your accomplishments during the gap

Note: If you are volunteering, make sure you are working in the area that will assist you in your job search.  For instance, if you volunteer for the ASPCA and are a web designer – don’t take on the task of emptying out the litter box.  Instead, work on their website, assist with their SEO and engine optimizations, or automate their manual office duties.  Accept tasks that are in line with your next job description.

Then update your resume with your new skills and links to your articles, videos, apps, etc.

The employer’s fear of the “gap” is that you have fallen out of touch with your field.  If you can show that you have sharpened your skills (during the gap), then you have tangible evidence that you are not only still relevant in your field but an expert.

Where do I place these volunteering and other activities in the resume?


Remember that your resume isn’t a list of all your “paid” employment.  It’s a place to highlight your skills and talents.  The fact that you didn’t get paid for your services does not detract from your experience and expertise.   I would place all the relevant professional skills at the top of your resume.  I would also include them in your Work Experience.

The resume doesn’t highlight the salary for each position.  It just highlights your ability and skills.

In the IT Professional Development Toolkit, I go into the: who, what, where, when and how to accomplish all of the above. I also have a transferable skill worksheet.

Also following online courses:

12 Tips for Realistic Scheduling
10 Tips for Telecommuters
 10 Career Boosting Resolution Laser Lesson

10 Hidden Time Waster Laser Lesson

Get That Well-Deserved Raise Laser Lesson
Professional Development Toolkit
It’s a SNAP – Social Networking Accelerated Process for business networking

Or sign up for my weekly Time and Career Management Newsletter at: http://eepurl.com/cZ9_-/

Advice for people who want to do a 180° career change

CareerChange-300x300Hello, this is Laura Lee Rose – author of the business and time management books TimePeace: Making peace with time  and The Book of Answers: 105 Career Critical Situations– and I am a business and efficiency coach that specializes in time management, project management and work-life balance strategies.  Stephen Wynkoop and I regularly meet on professional development topics. Our interviews can be found at Laura Rose Career Management Series

This week’s topic was “Advice for people who want to do a 180° career change”

What steps do you take to succeed?

Very rarely is that 180° degree career change.  Even when you think you are doing a complete change in careers, you carry with you a set of transferable skills that translate nicely into the next new chapter of your life.  The recommendation is to highlight those shared traits and illustrate how they were the foundations of your next step.  Don’t highlight the differences in your career choices.  Instead highlight the similarities.  Make them understand that this “new career” is the natural next logical step in your advancement (not something totally new).

Some examples of transferable skills can be (but not limited to):

  1. Organizational skills
  2. Multitasking
  3. Project management
  4. Customer Service and Satisfaction
  5. Customer Advocacy
  6. Writing/Editing
  7. Creating/Innovation
  8. Process Improvement – Quality Assurance
  9. Detail oriented
  10. Problem Solving
  11. Solution oriented
  12. Time management

 

Even a pastry chef and a surgeon (careers you may feel have nothing in common) will have transferable skills in common.  It is the transferable skills that make us excel in a multitude of environments.

What’s the first step in transitioning into a different career?

One recommendation is to start building your Press Kit or portfolio on your new career now, when you are still in your current career.  The assumption is that you are already following your passions in the form of a side-job or hobby.  Take that hobby to the next step.

For instance, what if your new ‘wish list’ career is that pastry chef?  Chances are that you are already baking for your family and friends.  You are already conducting catering service for your community of followers.  There are several steps you can take, while you are still in your current career.

1)    Take pictures and video of your pastry and catering events.

2)    Create your pastry website, logo and brand

3)    Create your brochures and business cards

4)    Collect testimonials from friends, family and your community

5)    Create your facebook and linkedin social media pages

6)    Take culinary classes in your desired wish list career

7)    Start blogging and send out social media posting that illustrate your expertise

8)    Publicize that you are available for catering events

9)    Collaborate with other entrepreneurs and offer to cater their catalyst events

10) Give your pastry as appreciation gifts at your office

11) Offer to cater the office parties and meetings

12) Create your pastry business plan

13) Create a resume based on your graphics experience and client testimonials

The goal is to start building and collecting the proper experience and resume, while you are still in your current career.

What if you are current a teacher’s assistant and you want to break into graphic design.

  • Highlight your training materials and your PowerPoint and graphic tools used in your previous teaching position.
  • Highlight and/or create a portfolio of your graphic designs and presentations.
  • Obtain your certification in graphic designs.
  • Offer your services to some non-profits or small business owners.  Then use their testimonials in your portfolio.
  • Update your social media pages with your graphic designs
  • Create a resume based on your graphics experience and client testimonials

The goal is to jump from engineer to management.  What steps to you take?

  • Take leadership and management course
  • Offer your services to sibling departments
  • Propose a money-saving project and lead it
  • Create a small team on your project idea and lead it
  • Accept a project management position for a non-profit or community volunteer position.
  • Update our resume with these experiences

 

Final tip is to create an Individual Development Plan.  Outline your gaps between where you are and where you want to be.  Identify the steps, tools, studies or certifications that you need to accomplish those goals.  And setup your milestones, deadlines, accountability partners, and reasonable forcing functions to assure success.

In the IT Professional Development Toolkit, I go into the: who, what, where, when and how to accomplish all of the above. I also have a transferable skill worksheet.

Also following online courses:

 12 Tips for Realistic Scheduling
10 Tips for Telecommuters
 10 Career Boosting Resolution Laser Lesson

 10 Hidden Time Waster Laser Lesson

 Get That Well-Deserved Raise Laser Lesson
Professional Development Toolkit
It’s a SNAP – Social Networking Accelerated Process for business networking

 Or sign up for my weekly Time and Career Management Newsletter at: http://eepurl.com/cZ9_-/

 

Use that Gap in Your Employment to your advantage

This is Laura Lee Rose, a business and efficiency coach that specializes in professional development, time management, project management and work-life balance strategies.  The Professional Development Toolkit package covers professional development and real-world IT topics in detail. If you are interested in inexpensive training in these areas,get signed up

I recently received the following questions:
  • How can a job seeker best explain gaps in their resume?
  • What’s the best way for a job seekers to jump back into the workforce after an absence – either planned or otherwise?
  • How does one build confidence after you have been out of work for some time.
Gaps in a resume could be in a couple of forms:

1) an employment gap (out of work)

2) working away from your chosen profession  (not your chosen industry or position)

Even if you have been continually working, but not working in your chosen field or industry, you may feel nervous about applying for that new job.

The best way to build confidence after you have been out of work for some time, is to actually accomplish tangible and tactile things while you are out of work.   Identify your goals for self-improvement in regards to health, education, presentation skills, networking, and family.  Then accomplish those goals.  Most employers like to hire self-motivated people that can solve their own problems.  By using this gap in employment for some self-assessment and self-improvement (while you are still job searching) is a good use of your time.

Since the main reason for employer’s hesitation in an employment gap is the ability to stay relevant in today’s ever-changing technology, the best advice is to stay relevant regardless of what type or how the gap occurred.  You can do this by:

  • Use the gap to learn a new skill, achieve a certification or license
  • Stay active in your profession by volunteering your services to nonprofits or service communities
  • Teach at a local community college,
  • Create online courses in your field of expertise.
  • Speak at local professional organizations or conferences
  • Write articles, blogs or ebooks in your field of expertise
  • Develop YouTube presentations, demos or prototypes as proof of your new skill set.
  • Create a portfolio or press kit of your accomplishments during the gap
Then update your resume with your new skills and links to your articles, videos, apps, etc.
The employer’s fear of the “gap” is that you have fallen out of touch with your field.  If you can show that you have sharpened your skills (during the gap), then you have tangible evidence that you are not only still relevant in your field but an expert.

In the Professional Toolkit, I provide worksheet, templates and guidance on how to accomplish these things.    In my Book of Answers: 105 Career Critical Situations, I have 105 work-life scenarios like the above.  The scenarios show how to accomplish your goals in similar situation.
For more information on how to get this toolkit or the “Book of Answers“, please contact LauraRose@RoseCoaching.info

Employers that interview but never hires.

This is Laura Lee Rose, a business and efficiency coach that specializes in professional development, time management, project management and work-life balance strategies.  In my Professional Development Toolkit package , I go into professional development and real-world IT topics in detail. If you are interested in more training in these areas, get signed up

 I know the usual reasons for not hiring a particular individual, such as under-qualification or just-not-a-fit; but what are the reasons employers interview and then decide not to hire anyone?

There are often different reasons why employers interview and then don’t hire.  Because reasons are normally asynchronous to the hiring process, they are less evident.

Since the interview process takes time and money (from advertizing for the position, filtering and sorting incoming resumes, initial candidate screening and the interview meeting),no company goes into this process with the idea that “they do not intend to really hire anyone”.  They enter this process with the full intention of finding good candidates and eventually a good employee.

But because this process takes time, things can change during the interview process itself.  The longer it takes to find someone, the higher the risk of something changing.
Some things that they may realize during the interview process are:

1) The longer it takes to find the right person, the higher the risk that they realize that this position isn’t as critical as first thought.  They may feel that they are doing fine without the extra hand.  After viewing several candidates, they realize that they rather train and promote from within. Or they find that they have actually completed the project that they were trying to hire.
2) The position disappears because of an re-organization or business strategy change. It could be combined with some other role or eliminated altogether.
3) A new project management strategy is instituted such that either the schedule is extended to allow the current resources to handle the added tasks; or the project scope is diminished such that the current resources are satisfactory.
4) A hiring freeze was just initiated.
5) A different way of subsidizing the resources is implemented instead. This could be a short-term contractor, an affiliated partner is providing the service (outsourcing), the company decides to eliminate that service altogether (and refer clients to their referral partners)

It’s important for job seekers to not take it personally, and work hard to stay on these potential employer’s radar.  Things change – which means things will change again.  If you stay on their radar (through continued business networking techniques), when things change back again, you are on the top of their Rolodex.

In the Professional Toolkit, I provide worksheet, templates and guidance on how to accomplish these things.    The Book of Answers: 105 Career Critical Situations  contains 105 work-life scenarios like the above.  The scenarios show how to accomplish your goals in similar situation.

For more information on how to get this toolkit or the “Book of Answers” email LauraRose@RoseCoaching.info

3 resolutions job seekers should make for 2014

3 resolutions job seekers should make for 2014

1)  In addition to cleaning up your digital footprint on your various social networks, increase your professional exposure on those same networks.  For instance, upgrade your LinkedIn.com account to the pro account for better access to people you don’t currently know but want to know; create video presentations on YouTube to illustrate your expertise, professionalism and ease of conveying difficult concepts to others.

2) Start clearly articulating your career goals to at least one person every day.  Don’t just use your 30 second or elevator speech at official networking events.  Use it everywhere and at everyone you meet from standing in line at the grocery store to attending sporting events.

3) Ask other people about their career goals at least once a day.  Collecting data on what other people are interested in and working on provides you an easy way to introduce your  transferable talents into the conversation.  Promoting your transferable skills (skills that are useful in various roles and positions) expands your job opportunities past just one career position.

The best way to follow-through on these things is to create a Marketing and Client Attraction Plan (included in the Professional Development Toolkit).   This plan outlines the type of people you want to network with, how often you want to network with them, and actually mark the dates/times on your calendar in which you will be doing these activities.  Setting up an accountability partner (like a spouse, friend, business coach) such that you have an external commitment to follow-through is another way to stay on track.

If you are interested in this type of information, check out some of the online courses (many are free) at Udemy.

One mistake most career changers make.

The one mistakes most career changers make.

Writing their resume without the “new career” mindset.

Most career changers list their work experience and job tasks in the mindset of the past role or job title INSTEAD of the new career role or title in mind.

For example:  You are a teacher’s assistance and you want to make a career change into Graphic Designer in Instructional Videos and Presentations.  Instead of focusing your resume on everyday teacher assistance duties like watching the children, taking roll-call, distributing supplies and teaching materials, enforcing rules and regulations, etc. — you focus on the various instructional videos and presentation that you created for the classes, parent orientation, and teacher’s brown bag lunch sessions (that you did while you were in that role).  You focus and highlight the graphics and software expertise.  You provide actual video, presentation and audio examples of your work.

I am Laura Lee Rose, author of the books “TimePeace: Making peace with time”  and The Book of Answers: 105 Career Critical Situations.  I am a business and career management coach that focuses on professional development, time management, project management and work life balance strategies.  If you need assistance in taking that leap into a new career, please contact me at LauraRose@RoseCoaching.info

5 Resume Myths Debunked

There are some resume myths that confuse some job seekers.  Here are some information to debunk some major resume myths. For instance: Does the resume absolutely have to be 1 page? Is a cover letter always necessary?
Below are 5 Resume Myths

1) Resume needs to be 1 page.

Resume can be 2 pages — but if the first page doesn’t keep the reader’s attention, the second page will not be read.

Your resume needs to capture the attention and interest (and keep it) throughout.

 2) Need to list all your employment history and tasks

Only highlight the employment history and tasks that are relevant to the current position that you are applying for.

Since your resume needs to capture and keep the attention right away, discussing how you flipped hamburgers in a resume that you are applying as web site designer position is distracting.

3) Need to reuse the same resume for all potential job applications

20 years ago, you often created one resume, created 60 copies and mailed the same resume out to everyone.

With the ease of electronics, you should customize each resume to the verbage, responsibilities and role that was documented in the position description.  Customerize your resume to perfectly match the positions descriptions (if you have the proper background for the job).

4) Stick to the job position and title that you’ve held in the past.
       One mistake is to think that you need to first get hired into a similar position and then expand into a different role after you are hired.
       By highlighting your transferable skills (instead of the job title), you can position your resume to fit alternative or adjacent roles.  For instance, if your work experience is in testing, you can highlight your trouble-shooting, test lead, customer orientation, usability focus group and customer advocacy background into a Technical Support Manager position or even Business Analyst position.
5) There’s no longer a need for a cover letter.
       A cover letter allows you to better illustrate your fitness for this particular job.  It is encouraged to expand upon the skills and tangible results that illustrates your value and contributions to past and future employers.  It’s also a good idea to highlight what additional benefits you bring to this particular company and position as well.
The bottom line is that there really isn’t just one answer or one type of resume.  Work with a business coach or recruiter to decide the best format and strategy for your individual goal.  It may be creating one format for one type of job; and a different format or strategy for another type of job or career change.
I am a business and career management coach that focuses on time management, project management, professional development and work life balance strategies.  I have authored several books, including “TimePeace: Making peace with time”  and “The Book of Answers: 105 Career Critical Situations.”  I also have an online Professional Development Toolkit program that goes into the who, what, where, when, why and how of all of the above.  If you are interested in the online program, please follow https://www.udemy.com/it-professional-development-toolkit/