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The fastest way to respond to
Internet job listings is to e-mail your cover letter and resume to the
person or organization indicated. However, if you mess up the process,
the best resume in the world still won't get you where you want to be.
As with everything else, there are some simple rules to follow before
you hit the "send" key.
1. Have a properly formatted e-mail resume. If you copy
and paste the text of your designed resume into the body of an e-mail
message and just send it without preparation, when it reaches the
recipient the formatting will be such a mess it will probably be
unreadable, and will then be deleted.
2. Always send your resume in the body of the e-mail
message, not as an attachment, unless otherwise specified. You have
about 20 seconds to catch the eye of the recipient and to get him or her
to read your resume. If you force the recipient to find and open an
attachment, zip! Your 20 seconds are over before they even start. Put
the resume right in the message so the reader will see it as soon as he
or she opens the message. This technique also helps you get through
e-mail systems set to refuse attachments in this day of rampant computer
viruses.
3. Include a cover letter whether or not you are
responding to an advertised opening, and address it to the person or
organization you are contacting. Employers get a lot of unsolicited
resumes sent to them with nothing more than a "here's my resume, please
tell me if you have any jobs I might fill." Not only does this tell them
you know nothing about what they do and who they are, but you have also
given them absolutely no desire to open your resume. Sell it in the
email!
4. If responding to an advertisement, always use the
advertised job title or job code as the "Subject" of your e-mail
message. This makes it easy for your e-mail to be sorted and routed to
the appropriate persons. If you are "cold calling," put a few words
stating your objective in the "Subject" line.
5. Read the application instructions included in any
job advertisement and follow them. Maybe you need to send it to a
particular e-mail address. Maybe you need to apply through their web
site using a specific code. Or just maybe the employer actually wants
you to submit your resume via e-mail as a Word attachment. Whatever they
want you must do. You don't want your application delayed because it
went in the wrong direction, and you don't want to be regarded as
someone who doesn't follow directions.
Just remember, it only takes a couple of seconds for someone to delete
an e-mail message, and it will happen if your info ends up on the wrong
desktop or if you make someone's job harder. Think before you respond!
http://www.awriteresume.com
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