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Mastering the CV: an example

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Crafting a standout CV can be the key to unlocking career opportunities. In a competitive job market, your resume needs to effectively showcase your skills, experience, and personality.

Imagine you're a hiring manager sorting through countless resumes. Each one competes for attention, but only a select few leave a lasting impression. A successful CV goes beyond mere facts; it tells a cohesive story of your career progression and accomplishments. From formatting to content, every detail plays a crucial role in shaping the perception of your candidacy.

Without further ado, here's a blueprint of a CV.

CV - example

 

1. Contact Information

Make sure your name and contact details are clearly visible (and correct!). There is no need for unnecessary headlines such as ’Name:’ and ’Address:’. Instead use font size to clearly differentiate these.

Age & Marital Status
Think carefully before including your marital status, age, health or anything similar. Do these details sell you as an applicant? 


2. Headlines

Clearly break up the information on your CV and guide the reader with headlines, spaces and different fonts. 

Photo?
CVs in Denmark are likely to include a photo. If you have a professional looking photo, including it can be a nice way to personalize your CV.


3. Profile

This paragraph should be like an elevator pitch summarizing who you are and why the employer should hire you. It should be tailored to the role and employer, concise and not cliché. Evaluate each phrase you write, asking yourself: do I need this many words to get across the same idea? Do I sound confident in myself? Could I be using an adjective to differentiate myself and be persuasive? Could every other applicant for this role write the same thing that I am writing?


4. Education or Experience first?

As a student or young graduate it is likely that your most significant skills and experience will come from your education. This will probably be the same for your competition so your employment, extracurricular activities and voluntary experiences will play a significant role in differentiating you from the other candidates. When ordering your CV think carefully about what is most impressive or interesting for the employer and put that at the top. 


5. Focus

Don’t simply choose all your subject areas but instead describe the areas that you think are relevant for the job. 


6. Grades

If your grades are good then share them.


7. Key Learning

What is it that you bring to the employer from your past experiences?


8. Company Description

If it is not clear and you think it adds to your CV, you can include a description of the company (i.e. Financial Services Firm, +100 employees.). Alternatively, you could work these details into the responsibilities section. 


9. Responsibilities

Only include those responsibilities which add something to you CV and make you more attractive in the eyes of the employer. If you’ve had similar responsibilities in different positions, try to avoid duplicating what you write on your CV – emphasise a different aspect, show your breadth of experiences and development towards where you want to be. 


10. Font

Always think about whether the type and size of your font is easily readable for others.


11. Results

Your relevant successes and where you made a difference should be included, particularly if they are concrete examples or your work was recognized in someway. 


12. Additional

Only include what demonstrates a competency, knowledge or accomplishment that the employer might see as desirable. 


13. Sports, reading, chess foreign travel etc

’An interest in world food and skiing’ does little to demonstrate a competency and serves more as clutter that detracts from your professional message. Consider carefully, which interests present valuable data about you to the potential employer.


14. Skills

This is best a section about your hard skills (your soft skills should be apparent from your responsibilities and achievements). Consider whether very common skills (i.e. Microsoft Word and Email) add to your offering. If you’ve been to University, or you can program in C++, the employer can safely assume you have basic computer skills. 


15. References

Generally it is assumed that you will be able to provide references upon request.


16. Links to your online profiles

Make sure to include up-to-date sources, like LinkedIn, GitHub, Behance or similar. Focus on ones with immediate relevance to the job at hand.


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