More important than the resume is the intro letter - this tells a smart employer more about you than your credentials.
The letter should be highly personalised, lateral thinking and explain your true aspirations as well as summarise how you be an asset to them.
No one likes reading a long list of data - as long as your qualifications match the position of the job - this is all the reassurance that most employers need. The rest is down to your intro letter!
After all - they want to enjoy working with someone who'd they like to see as a 'friend' - not a cardboard cut-out! x
2007-02-12 03:11:49
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answer #1
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answered by ? 5
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Do you need to borrow someone elses CV?
And above: a resume and a CV are two totally different animals.
2007-02-12 03:12:04
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answer #2
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answered by professorc 7
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Can't you type up your own and print it off. Why the need to find a site that will not have your details anyway.
2007-02-12 03:12:22
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answer #3
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answered by SYJ 5
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No!!!
However, my site has details of how to create your own CV, as well as a bunch of other stuff!!
http://www.gjobadvice.co.uk
2007-02-12 12:13:58
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Why? Do you want to steal someone else's CV?
If not, all you need is a word processor to create your own CV.
2007-02-12 03:08:13
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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ms works has a cv template.
2007-02-12 04:22:12
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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There is a resume template in MS Word.
2007-02-12 03:07:13
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answer #7
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answered by Del Piero 10 7
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