|
E-mailing
Resumes: The Good, The Bad, The Unexpected
By Tracy Laswell Williams, CAREER-Magic.com
The following
article is based on an e-mail I received from a "recently
re-employed UNIX Guru" - we'll call him Louis, because,
well, that's his name. Fresh from a relatively short period
of unemployment, he still identifies with those still in job
search mode - and nice guy that he is, he wanted to share
a few pointers with you regarding e-mailing of resumes in
the hope that it would improve your success. His company gets
lots of e-mail from job seekers - and get this:
"I'd
say that about 20% of the e-mails we get from job seekers
have problems with attachments. That is:
1) there is no attachment even though they reference one;
2) the attachments can't be opened;
3) the attachments contain only an icon or the persons' vcard;
4) the attachments are corrupt or otherwise unreadable.
We never
follow-up with these candidates because if they are so cavalier
about what they send
out without verify the contents, it doesn't say much about
their attention to detail and follow-through."
Yikes!
Louis suggests that you do this instead:
"When
sending out electronic mail assume NOTHING about the recipient
in terms of their technical abilities or what software
or platform they may be using.
Double-check
to be sure you sent the attachment you thought you sent.
Use
a simple filename based on your name, e.g. "JimSmith.doc"
rather than "resume.doc."
When
sending out attachments, ALWAYS include the content of the
attachment in the e-mail message body (in ASCII/plain
text) as well. Not as pretty, but, your resume certainly shouldn't
stand on formatting alone. Remember, some people won't ever
open attachments from unknown sources.
To
further cover your bases, consider sending attachments
with multiple versions of Word. Word 95 / RTF seems to be
the best "least common denominator." Mention prominently
in your e-mail that if there are any problems reading its
attachments to please reply immediately
Make sure that your reply address is valid. We've had
people send things in and we have tried to follow-up with
them only to have their e-mail address bounce back.
ALWAYS
end your e-mails with a tag that signifies the end e.g. <<END>>.
I sometimes receive e-mails that don't appear complete either
because of poor writing style or the file was simply truncated.
Either way, unless I know for sure, it will get pitched.
TEST
your e-mail attachments by sending to friends who utilize
different OS, platforms, and word processing applications.
And
follow up, too, to be sure someone received the resume! Yes,
even if you have to call, fax, or snail mail someone! How
else do you stay at the top of the pile?
Copyright 2008 - Tracy Laswell Valdez, Recruiter | Job Search Consultant,
CAREER-Magic.com, 303-424-1700 | tracy@career-magic.com.
|