| Michigan
Industrial Hygiene Society
Use Your Resume To Help Negotiate a Higher Salary
Most job seekers believe that salary negotiation starts once they
have an offer in hand, but nothing could be farther from the truth.
In fact, your resume can make the difference between negotiating
at the top end of the salary range—or the bottom end—in
your next job offer. If that sounds strange to you, consider the
following points:
A prospective employer’s first impression of you is created
entirely by your resume.
The employer’s first impression of you will assign a value
and build a level of urgency for the employer to contact you—before
someone else does.
First impressions are nearly impossible to change.
If your resume sells your skills short, then you can’t expect
to receive offers at the upper end of your salary scale. Your current
resume could be losing you thousands of dollars in income power.
By making a few key changes in your resume now, you can position
yourself for higher salaries in the future.
There are three resume strategies for promoting high salary
negotiation success:
Show that you are a high return on investment with quantifiable
results.
Many job seekers throw around the phrase “results oriented”,
but they fail to back it up with concrete evidence—leaving
the reader to conclude otherwise. You may feel that you have no
quantifiable evidence of your value in previous jobs, but every
job has quantifiable results that can better reflect your worth
on your resume. Revenue, sales dollars and material costs are not
the only results that use numbers.
Consider using the number of man-hours saved in process improvements,
the percentage of repeat customers, or the number of peers helped
by a particular efficiency to help reflect your abilities. Every
employee is hired to solve problems, and most problems have some
quantifiable element at their core.
Illustrate the breadth of your experience.
Notice the use of the word “breadth” rather than “length”
of experience. Just because a candidate has been doing a job for
a long time does not necessarily mean he is worth more. Breadth
of experience focuses on quality, not quantity.
There are two key ways to express breadth of experience:
Industry knowledge
Since industry expertise is usually in high demand, you can show
your value through insider understanding of industry issues.
Transferable skills
If your
career spans many industries within the same occupation, highlight
the transferable skills that have enabled you to bridge the gaps
from industry to industry.
Entice the reader to want to know more about you.
Job seekers often make the mistake of assuming that the job of their
resume is to inform the reader. Not so! The ONLY job of your resume
is to entice the reader to want to know more about you.
What that translates to is an understanding of what to include and
what to leave off your resume. Too much detail can distract the
reader and lose his interest, but not enough information, and the
reader will wonder what you have been doing with your life. A proper
balance between detail and result will win the reader’s interest
and leave them saying, “I’ve got to call this guy for
an interview today!”
A professional resume writer can create a resume that sells you
as a high return on investment. By portraying you as someone with
great breadth of experience and a wide range of critical skills,
potential employers will see you immediately as someone of high
value, building their vision—and your self-confidence—of
you in the upper end of the salary scale.
Deborah Walker, CCMC
Career Coach ~ Resume Writer
Find more job-search tips and resume samples at:
www.AlphaAdvantage.com
Email: Deb@AlphaAdvantage.com
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