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Entry-Level Resume Dilemma: Not Enough Experience
Kim Isaacs, Monster Resume Expert
October 12, 2009
It’s an entry-level resume catch-22: You want a job to gain experience, but you can’t find a job because previous experience is required.
Don’t be discouraged. You can still put your best foot forward and have a shot at the entry-level job or scoring your first internship. Follow these steps to create a winning entry-level resume:
Select the Right Format
The two most effective resume formats for entry-level workers are functional and combination. Steer clear of strictly chronological resumes, which place emphasis on your work history.
Functional resumes emphasize your related skills while downplaying your work chronology. Rather than citing dates of employment, this format uses categories to highlight your aptitudes. For example, if you’re seeking a secretarial position but don’t have any related experience, you may create the following categories: “Computer Skills,” “Interpersonal Communications” and “Office Management Abilities.” The latter may refer to managing your own home office, for example.
A combination resume is a chronological resume that leads with a Qualifications Summary, in which you emphasize the credentials that most qualify you for the job you’re trying to land. Strategically order the sections in your resume to best suit your qualifications, placing more relevant categories, such as Education, Key Skills, Volunteer Work, etc., before your work history.
Assess What You Offer
What you lack in real-world experience you may make up for in your motivation to excel. Put yourself in the hiring manager’s shoes and ask, “Why should I hire this person when there are 100 other applicants with more experience?”
Before you revamp your resume, research your target job on Monster and review the job descriptions. What skills, abilities and credentials are listed as desirable? Do you offer competencies, personal attributes or unpaid experience that compensate for your lack of work history? How would the employer benefit if you were hired?
Think of the top five reasons you should be selected for an interview. These will help you differentiate yourself from your peers.
Weave Your Unique Credentials into Your Entry-Level Resume
Whether you’ve chosen a functional or combination resume, you need compelling content to convince hiring managers to give you a chance. Consider these areas when developing your resume:
- Experience: Part-time positions, temporary employment, volunteer work and related hobbies are all valid forms of experience. Focus on your achievements and contributions to show you are a results-oriented worker.
- Key Skills and Abilities: Incorporate the skills that would be valuable to employers, such as foreign languages, technical capabilities, organizational ability, interpersonal and written communication aptitude, creative problem solving, research ability, customer relations, the ability to rapidly master new concepts, the ability to work independently or as part of a team and leadership potential.
- Students and New Graduates: Describe courses, school projects, internships and extracurricular activities that are relevant to your career goal.
- Other Benefits: On your entry-level resume or entry-level cover letter, indicate whether you are willing to work the graveyard shift, accept a low salary or take classes at your own expense to get up to speed. Any of these benefits could tip the scales in your favor.
Frank_Ball
almost 3 years ago
19756 comments
Please keep your comments on topic to the article -- Any comments posted with embedded links leading to questionable infected sites outside MonsterCollege will be removed and the poster's account will be banned from MonsterCollege. Thank you.
jjenkins_21
almost 3 years ago
2 comments
This is the exact problem that I run into when beginning to fill out an application, especially online. I remember one time I saw a job that interested me, but they asked for at least 5 years experience and it was an entry-level job.
ashefocused
about 3 years ago
2 comments
Great Article
mstivali
over 3 years ago
2 comments
This seems to be great advice. Let me now just re-write my resume for the 100th time...
jasonlarry9
over 3 years ago
2 comments
I like this article, a lot of things I thought would be negative on a resume can be turned around for a positive result.
DavidChou
over 3 years ago
362 comments
activities in school are important to demonstrate your softskills besides your gpa score.
Jonny_Utah
over 3 years ago
232 comments
hah
Cecil_H
over 3 years ago
2 comments
Great info indeed Entry level jobs are the back bone of well the world. Its hard enough that they fly off the seen like freash backed goods at a bussy backery.
collegegirlpinkston
over 3 years ago
8 comments
This is exactly what every student should read before doing a resume!!!
mkgessner
over 3 years ago
220 comments
Great information.
FantasyKing
over 3 years ago
44 comments
Jake- look, until you can be rescued from your parents by magic monsters that will take you to a promised land of happiness you have to put up with their rules.
Jake_Patterson
over 3 years ago
16 comments
This is exactly what im telling my parents- like how am i both experienced enough to get the job and yet entry level at the same time?!