Resume Length
Posted: Mon Dec 24, 2012 10:21 pm
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How is a job from 13 years ago relevant? Experience that dated is almost always unhelpful. If you must, you can do one liners for the other jobs to show that you were employed in the interim.echooo23 wrote:The general consensus seems to be that resumes should not be more than one page, but the problem then becomes reducing it down to what matters. I have 13 years of work experience - the first one dating back 13 years was law related, then after a prolonged gap, the last 6 years were also law related. If I edit out those 4 non-law jobs in between to get the resume down to one page, would the 8 year "gap" in employment reflect poorly on me?
Seconded. I had to trim a lot of meat off my resume to get it to fit on one page and it sucked, but there are very few people who credibly need 2 pages. I know of a person who is former biglaw partner, former director of multinational, former CEO, current board member of two publicly traded companies who started his own group of firms and still manages to keep it down to a pagebdubs wrote:How is a job from 13 years ago relevant? Experience that dated is almost always unhelpful. If you must, you can do one liners for the other jobs to show that you were employed in the interim.echooo23 wrote:The general consensus seems to be that resumes should not be more than one page, but the problem then becomes reducing it down to what matters. I have 13 years of work experience - the first one dating back 13 years was law related, then after a prolonged gap, the last 6 years were also law related. If I edit out those 4 non-law jobs in between to get the resume down to one page, would the 8 year "gap" in employment reflect poorly on me?
Wait.... you want to go back 13 years to put high school work experience on your resume?!?!?! You can't be serious.echooo23 wrote:Well, it's relevant to the extent that it's law-related. And it may count for something that I was a paid intern at the DA's office when I was still in high school, so I certainly don't think it would be unhelpful. I did reduce the others down to a single line, but it's still too long. The only way I can see it work is by eliminating even the one-liners, but I'm worried about the gap.
Flameechooo23 wrote:Well, it's relevant to the extent that it's law-related. And it may count for something that I was a paid intern at the DA's office when I was still in high school, so I certainly don't think it would be unhelpful. I did reduce the others down to a single line, but it's still too long. The only way I can see it work is by eliminating even the one-liners, but I'm worried about the gap.
Ok... I will say that if your going back 13 years is to put high school experience on your resume then you need to reformat a bit. My professional resume outside of law is 2 pages but my law resume I was able to cut down to 1 page with margins set to narrow, with size 11 font and I used spacing judiciously to make it not looked cluttered. I did eliminate some things more than 6 years back that were entrepreneurial in nature (summarized in 1 line or added to a cover letter if the position made it relevant), but I made even the largest experiences 5 lines or less and made a lot of awards etc into one line rather than listing them one per line.echooo23 wrote:Pretty much anything and everything in my target market. In this economy, I don't think I can afford to be too selective. Just going to cast a wide net and see what turns up. I'm putting together a few resumes - some longer, some shorter, and some more geared toward certain fields.worldtraveler wrote:Mine is two pages because for public interest that is tolerated and expected much more than in the private sector. OP, what are you planning on applying for?
And yes. Like I said above, I believe that a 1L who already has paid work experience at the DA's office could be helpful, or at the very least, not unhelpful. It could also show that I have been committed to this field for a significant period, even if there were gaps in between. Maybe I'm wrong, but I feel like work experience from long ago is only unhelpful if it was not related to the job for which the application is being made or if there is significant similar experience that is more recent. For me, I had some experience 13 years ago, had a gap, and then worked for 6 years at a law firm. If I only put the most recent law firm experience it would show an incomplete picture of me at first glance. At the very least, I just don't see how it's unhelpful. And it may put me ahead if the person who's reading is looking for someone who is older and who shows a greater commitment to law than some dipshit 22 year old barely out of diapers.bdubs wrote:Wait.... you want to go back 13 years to put high school work experience on your resume?!?!?! You can't be serious.echooo23 wrote:Well, it's relevant to the extent that it's law-related. And it may count for something that I was a paid intern at the DA's office when I was still in high school, so I certainly don't think it would be unhelpful. I did reduce the others down to a single line, but it's still too long. The only way I can see it work is by eliminating even the one-liners, but I'm worried about the gap.