Tuesday, April 14, 2020
Should I Put Microsoft Word or Microsoft Office on My Resume
Should I Put Microsoft Word or Microsoft Office on My Resume Ask a room full of hiring managers which resume cliche is most likely to make their eyes roll back in their heads, and theyâll probably all give you the same line: âProficient in the Microsoft Office Suite.â This string of seemingly innocuous words sunk its hooks into the job seekerâs lexicon years ago, and remains a resume staple to this dayâ"and for no good reason. Yeah, everyone wants to flex a little. But padding your resume with âskillsâ shared by everyone with an office job signals to employers that you actually donât have any skills at all. It might even throw you out of the running. âIn 2018, if youâre attempting to get a job, the presumption will be that you are computer literate,â says career consultant Carlota Zimmerman. âIf a client seriously told me she was going to write âproficient in MS Office Suiteâ on her resume, Iâd ask her, âWhy stop there? Can you also use a knife and fork?'â This is not to disparage the entire Microsoft suite of programs, nor its users: Expertise in some Microsoft tools, such as Excel, OneNote, or PowerPoint, can be attractive to recruiters. But there are better ways to brag about your skills than relying on a stale catchall term. Here are a few resume dos and dontâs to keep in mind. DONâT list Microsoft Word on your resume. Period. The only thing worse than using âProficient in Microsoft Office Suiteâ as a stand-in for, you know, actual skills is using âMicrosoft Wordâ instead. You wrote your resume using some sort of word processing software, right? It stands to reason that you have a baseline knowledge of the most popular one out there. No need to call attention to a program most middle-schoolers can handle. âListing Microsoft Word as a skill should be removed from every resume,â says Andrew Selepak, a communications expert and professor at the University of Florida. âYou wouldnât list the ability to type in a resume that you typed. If you shook hands with someone during a job interview, you wouldnât tell them one of your biggest skills is the ability to shake hands.â DO include programs where you have expert-level knowledge. A few individual Microsoft programs â" and certain capabilities within those programs â" do deserve a nod. Maybe you can work Excel pivot tables like nobodyâs business. Or maybe youâre the only one on your team who can whip up a memorable PowerPoint presentation. In those cases, feel free to pepper in a few of these expert-level skills. Just be specific. âDetailing your precise knowledge of the software is a great way to stand out,â says Zachary Vickers, a career adviser and hiring manager at Resume Companion. âExpand upon exactly how youâre proficient with the Microsoft Office Suite. Mention that you know how to build spreadsheet formulas in Excel, export PowerPoint slides into video formats, or merge productivity apps with Outlook.â DO figure out other ways to show off. Thereâs a difference between skills and experience: Itâs the divide between what you can do and what youâve already done. Recruiters want to see the latter, and industry-specific keywords that reflect that experience. So even if youâre applying for a position that would definitely require you to use programs like Word and PowerPoint, itâs better to give specific examples of how you used the programs, instead of just ticking them off. âIf Iâm hiring for an admin assistant or data entry position, I prefer to see things like how many words per minute you can type, or examples of content you wrote ⦠such as official company letterheads or ebooks,â says Amine Rahal, founder of the digital marketing firm IronMonk. DONâT claim expertise you donât have. Many job seekers claim to be âfluentâ in the entire Microsoft Office Suite, career experts say, when what they really mean is, âI use Microsoft Word and Iâve opened PowerPoint a few times.â âJob seekers may have a loose interpretation of the word proficient,â says Andrew Quagliata, a lecturer in management communication at Cornell. Quagliata used to work as a manager, and says he once learned after the fact that a new hire had lied about her capabilities. After that, he started testing candidates. âI still remember the time a candidate stood up and walked out of an interview in the middle of an Excel assessment,â Quagliata says. âHe had listed âProficient in Microsoft Officeâ on his resume.â Be honest: Do you really know every program like the back of your hand? If youâre embellishing, it can backfire. On resume: I'm proficient in in Microsoft Word, PowerPoint and Excel. In real life: pic.twitter.com/5iD1cqeRs1 â" ? (@Chidinma_xo) April 20, 2016 DO pay attention to the job ad. Thereâs one exception to pretty much all of the above: if youâre sending a resume in response to an ad that specifically seeks Office skills. Thatâs because applicant tracking systems, the software companies use to sort online applications, are programmed to scan resumes for keywords related to the job posting. If the ad youâre applying to has Microsoft Office software among its required skills, you should definitely create a version of your resume that includes it. Mirror the adâs phrasing as is â" whether thatâs listing each individual program or using the catchall âMicrosoft Office Suite.â âEmployersâ software isnât smart enough to understand that Microsoft Office includes Excel, Word and PowerPoint, so if the job posting lists the specific programs, your resume should list each program, too, so you can match those keywords,â says professional resume writer Kelly Donovan. But again, if a job ad doesnât include Office as a requirement, skip it for more relevant info. âPut yourself in the mind of the recruiter,â says Ben Guez, founder of another marketing agency, Laxir. âThink, what skill will be useful for the position? If I am looking for a digital marketer I want to see âGoogle Adwords, âFacebook Ads,â and âsocial media.â âI donât really give a damn if you were doing great PowerPoint in school ⦠It wonât bring value to the company.â
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