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#1
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Resume Problem
I want to create a resume with a large wide colored vertical block on the
left side of the page. The block contains the headers PROFILE, SUMMARY AND QUALIFICATIONS, PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE, EDUCATION, AND REFERENCES. To the right of this block is NAME ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Below the above are paragraphs with bulleted lists that line up with the block hraders. A horizontal line separates each paragraph. Can Word or some template do this? Thanks for all replies. Barry |
#2
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Resume Problem
Most of the résumé templates in Word use tables for layout, and that's
undoubtedly the easiest way to accomplish what you're seeking as well. Tables don't have to have borders, and they can have shading in selected cells as well as selective cell borders. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Barry" wrote in message ... I want to create a resume with a large wide colored vertical block on the left side of the page. The block contains the headers PROFILE, SUMMARY AND QUALIFICATIONS, PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE, EDUCATION, AND REFERENCES. To the right of this block is NAME ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Below the above are paragraphs with bulleted lists that line up with the block hraders. A horizontal line separates each paragraph. Can Word or some template do this? Thanks for all replies. Barry |
#3
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Resume Problem
Thanks Suzanne, but could you please show me how this would be set up?
Thanks again Barry "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Most of the résumé templates in Word use tables for layout, and that's undoubtedly the easiest way to accomplish what you're seeking as well. Tables don't have to have borders, and they can have shading in selected cells as well as selective cell borders. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Barry" wrote in message ... I want to create a resume with a large wide colored vertical block on the left side of the page. The block contains the headers PROFILE, SUMMARY AND QUALIFICATIONS, PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE, EDUCATION, AND REFERENCES. To the right of this block is NAME ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Below the above are paragraphs with bulleted lists that line up with the block hraders. A horizontal line separates each paragraph. Can Word or some template do this? Thanks for all replies. Barry |
#4
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Resume Problem
Barry -
A word of advice: Don't get too creative with your resume unless you're applying for a job as a graphics designer or the like. KISS that resume! (My best friend is an HR rep with a national company. I've learned a lot from her on what *not* to do in my resume...and what *not* to say on an interview.) -- JoAnn Paules MVP Microsoft [Publisher] ~~~~~ How to ask a question http://support.microsoft.com/KB/555375 "Barry" wrote in message ... I want to create a resume with a large wide colored vertical block on the left side of the page. The block contains the headers PROFILE, SUMMARY AND QUALIFICATIONS, PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE, EDUCATION, AND REFERENCES. To the right of this block is NAME ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Below the above are paragraphs with bulleted lists that line up with the block hraders. A horizontal line separates each paragraph. Can Word or some template do this? Thanks for all replies. Barry |
#5
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Resume Problem
Have a look at some of the résumé templates that ship with Word. These have
two columns. You apply your shading to the left column. You can apply horizontal borders to the cells in the second column. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Barry" wrote in message ... Thanks Suzanne, but could you please show me how this would be set up? Thanks again Barry "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Most of the résumé templates in Word use tables for layout, and that's undoubtedly the easiest way to accomplish what you're seeking as well. Tables don't have to have borders, and they can have shading in selected cells as well as selective cell borders. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Barry" wrote in message ... I want to create a resume with a large wide colored vertical block on the left side of the page. The block contains the headers PROFILE, SUMMARY AND QUALIFICATIONS, PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE, EDUCATION, AND REFERENCES. To the right of this block is NAME ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Below the above are paragraphs with bulleted lists that line up with the block hraders. A horizontal line separates each paragraph. Can Word or some template do this? Thanks for all replies. Barry |
#6
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Resume Problem
I agree with your friend too. On many occasions I have spent hours sifting
through Resumes for job applicants and I can tell you that the winners are simple and on a single, duplex sheet. Anything longer doesn't get read. They MUST be kept simple, so only include the MOST IMPORTANT facts in order to keep it within those boundaries. Don't do anything flashy: just like web sites (car manufacturers please note) anything with FLASH gets dumped. Use a simple, highly legible font. Elaborate, fancy or over-bold fonts just don't work. Despite what font snobs may say, Arial and TNR (10 - 12 pt) are winners on the Resume front. If anyone says otherwise, they have never had to sort hundreds of job applications. Terry Farrell "JoAnn Paules [MVP]" wrote in message ... Barry - A word of advice: Don't get too creative with your resume unless you're applying for a job as a graphics designer or the like. KISS that resume! (My best friend is an HR rep with a national company. I've learned a lot from her on what *not* to do in my resume...and what *not* to say on an interview.) -- JoAnn Paules MVP Microsoft [Publisher] ~~~~~ How to ask a question http://support.microsoft.com/KB/555375 "Barry" wrote in message ... I want to create a resume with a large wide colored vertical block on the left side of the page. The block contains the headers PROFILE, SUMMARY AND QUALIFICATIONS, PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE, EDUCATION, AND REFERENCES. To the right of this block is NAME ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Below the above are paragraphs with bulleted lists that line up with the block hraders. A horizontal line separates each paragraph. Can Word or some template do this? Thanks for all replies. Barry |
#7
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Resume Problem
H(S?)RYK.
The biggest mistake people make their resume is to make it too "pretty." "Pretty" is annoying and distracting. The myth of needing to do something to stand out from the crowd implies that the hiring manager doesn't read the resume. Not true. Resumes do in fact get read -- scrutinized, actually. Remember, the hiring manager's job depends on the quality of their hires, not the applicant's ability to choose a font. (I would add Tahoma 10 or 12 as an acceptable choice, YMMV) Basic Word-template resumes are the easiest to read. Terry's advice single sheet is applicable the *vast* majority of the time, but there are occasions when you may need two pages (**NEVER** three.) If your experience or other qualifications absolutely need two pages, and the position for which you are applying is such that those experiences/qualifications require explaining, then the odds are better than good it will be read. Keep it simple, straightforward, and honest. Hiring types have a very sensitive bullsh!t-o-meter. Dan (Former hiring manager -- 10K resumes read, at least.) wrote in message ... I agree with your friend too. On many occasions I have spent hours sifting through Resumes for job applicants and I can tell you that the winners are simple and on a single, duplex sheet. Anything longer doesn't get read. They MUST be kept simple, so only include the MOST IMPORTANT facts in order to keep it within those boundaries. Don't do anything flashy: just like web sites (car manufacturers please note) anything with FLASH gets dumped. Use a simple, highly legible font. Elaborate, fancy or over-bold fonts just don't work. Despite what font snobs may say, Arial and TNR (10 - 12 pt) are winners on the Resume front. If anyone says otherwise, they have never had to sort hundreds of job applications. Terry Farrell "JoAnn Paules [MVP]" wrote in message ... Barry - A word of advice: Don't get too creative with your resume unless you're applying for a job as a graphics designer or the like. KISS that resume! (My best friend is an HR rep with a national company. I've learned a lot from her on what *not* to do in my resume...and what *not* to say on an interview.) -- JoAnn Paules MVP Microsoft [Publisher] ~~~~~ How to ask a question http://support.microsoft.com/KB/555375 "Barry" wrote in message ... I want to create a resume with a large wide colored vertical block on the left side of the page. The block contains the headers PROFILE, SUMMARY AND QUALIFICATIONS, PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE, EDUCATION, AND REFERENCES. To the right of this block is NAME ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Below the above are paragraphs with bulleted lists that line up with the block hraders. A horizontal line separates each paragraph. Can Word or some template do this? Thanks for all replies. Barry |
#8
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Resume Problem
single sheet is applicable the *vast* majority of the time, but there are
occasions when you may need two pages (**NEVER** three.) Terry did say "a single, duplex sheet," which I took to mean two pages, printed front and back on a single sheet. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Daniel-San" (Rot13) wrote in message ... H(S?)RYK. The biggest mistake people make their resume is to make it too "pretty." "Pretty" is annoying and distracting. The myth of needing to do something to stand out from the crowd implies that the hiring manager doesn't read the resume. Not true. Resumes do in fact get read -- scrutinized, actually. Remember, the hiring manager's job depends on the quality of their hires, not the applicant's ability to choose a font. (I would add Tahoma 10 or 12 as an acceptable choice, YMMV) Basic Word-template resumes are the easiest to read. Terry's advice single sheet is applicable the *vast* majority of the time, but there are occasions when you may need two pages (**NEVER** three.) If your experience or other qualifications absolutely need two pages, and the position for which you are applying is such that those experiences/qualifications require explaining, then the odds are better than good it will be read. Keep it simple, straightforward, and honest. Hiring types have a very sensitive bullsh!t-o-meter. Dan (Former hiring manager -- 10K resumes read, at least.) wrote in message ... I agree with your friend too. On many occasions I have spent hours sifting through Resumes for job applicants and I can tell you that the winners are simple and on a single, duplex sheet. Anything longer doesn't get read. They MUST be kept simple, so only include the MOST IMPORTANT facts in order to keep it within those boundaries. Don't do anything flashy: just like web sites (car manufacturers please note) anything with FLASH gets dumped. Use a simple, highly legible font. Elaborate, fancy or over-bold fonts just don't work. Despite what font snobs may say, Arial and TNR (10 - 12 pt) are winners on the Resume front. If anyone says otherwise, they have never had to sort hundreds of job applications. Terry Farrell "JoAnn Paules [MVP]" wrote in message ... Barry - A word of advice: Don't get too creative with your resume unless you're applying for a job as a graphics designer or the like. KISS that resume! (My best friend is an HR rep with a national company. I've learned a lot from her on what *not* to do in my resume...and what *not* to say on an interview.) -- JoAnn Paules MVP Microsoft [Publisher] ~~~~~ How to ask a question http://support.microsoft.com/KB/555375 "Barry" wrote in message ... I want to create a resume with a large wide colored vertical block on the left side of the page. The block contains the headers PROFILE, SUMMARY AND QUALIFICATIONS, PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE, EDUCATION, AND REFERENCES. To the right of this block is NAME ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Below the above are paragraphs with bulleted lists that line up with the block hraders. A horizontal line separates each paragraph. Can Word or some template do this? Thanks for all replies. Barry |
#9
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Resume Problem
I learned from the best - her bullsh!t-o-meter is calibrated daily.
I have Print Shop and you should see the hideous resume templates they have. Oh my gawd! I wanted to barf when I noticed them. The scary thing is that there are people out there who will try to use them when job hunting. -- JoAnn Paules MVP Microsoft [Publisher] ~~~~~ How to ask a question http://support.microsoft.com/KB/555375 "Daniel-San" (Rot13) wrote in message ... H(S?)RYK. The biggest mistake people make their resume is to make it too "pretty." "Pretty" is annoying and distracting. The myth of needing to do something to stand out from the crowd implies that the hiring manager doesn't read the resume. Not true. Resumes do in fact get read -- scrutinized, actually. Remember, the hiring manager's job depends on the quality of their hires, not the applicant's ability to choose a font. (I would add Tahoma 10 or 12 as an acceptable choice, YMMV) Basic Word-template resumes are the easiest to read. Terry's advice single sheet is applicable the *vast* majority of the time, but there are occasions when you may need two pages (**NEVER** three.) If your experience or other qualifications absolutely need two pages, and the position for which you are applying is such that those experiences/qualifications require explaining, then the odds are better than good it will be read. Keep it simple, straightforward, and honest. Hiring types have a very sensitive bullsh!t-o-meter. Dan (Former hiring manager -- 10K resumes read, at least.) wrote in message ... I agree with your friend too. On many occasions I have spent hours sifting through Resumes for job applicants and I can tell you that the winners are simple and on a single, duplex sheet. Anything longer doesn't get read. They MUST be kept simple, so only include the MOST IMPORTANT facts in order to keep it within those boundaries. Don't do anything flashy: just like web sites (car manufacturers please note) anything with FLASH gets dumped. Use a simple, highly legible font. Elaborate, fancy or over-bold fonts just don't work. Despite what font snobs may say, Arial and TNR (10 - 12 pt) are winners on the Resume front. If anyone says otherwise, they have never had to sort hundreds of job applications. Terry Farrell "JoAnn Paules [MVP]" wrote in message ... Barry - A word of advice: Don't get too creative with your resume unless you're applying for a job as a graphics designer or the like. KISS that resume! (My best friend is an HR rep with a national company. I've learned a lot from her on what *not* to do in my resume...and what *not* to say on an interview.) -- JoAnn Paules MVP Microsoft [Publisher] ~~~~~ How to ask a question http://support.microsoft.com/KB/555375 "Barry" wrote in message ... I want to create a resume with a large wide colored vertical block on the left side of the page. The block contains the headers PROFILE, SUMMARY AND QUALIFICATIONS, PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE, EDUCATION, AND REFERENCES. To the right of this block is NAME ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Below the above are paragraphs with bulleted lists that line up with the block hraders. A horizontal line separates each paragraph. Can Word or some template do this? Thanks for all replies. Barry |
#10
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Resume Problem
I'm trying to set-up a resume'.Where do i look to do it in
entry,professional,intermediate?My computer has window vista and I'm using office home and student2007 version "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: Most of the résumé templates in Word use tables for layout, and that's undoubtedly the easiest way to accomplish what you're seeking as well. Tables don't have to have borders, and they can have shading in selected cells as well as selective cell borders. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Barry" wrote in message ... I want to create a resume with a large wide colored vertical block on the left side of the page. The block contains the headers PROFILE, SUMMARY AND QUALIFICATIONS, PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE, EDUCATION, AND REFERENCES. To the right of this block is NAME ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Below the above are paragraphs with bulleted lists that line up with the block hraders. A horizontal line separates each paragraph. Can Word or some template do this? Thanks for all replies. Barry |
#11
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Resume Problem
I don't have Word 2007, but are Entry, Professional, and Intermediate three
install choices for Word or three résumé formats or what? -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "joanna" wrote in message ... I'm trying to set-up a resume'.Where do i look to do it in entry,professional,intermediate?My computer has window vista and I'm using office home and student2007 version "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: Most of the résumé templates in Word use tables for layout, and that's undoubtedly the easiest way to accomplish what you're seeking as well. Tables don't have to have borders, and they can have shading in selected cells as well as selective cell borders. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Barry" wrote in message ... I want to create a resume with a large wide colored vertical block on the left side of the page. The block contains the headers PROFILE, SUMMARY AND QUALIFICATIONS, PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE, EDUCATION, AND REFERENCES. To the right of this block is NAME ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Below the above are paragraphs with bulleted lists that line up with the block hraders. A horizontal line separates each paragraph. Can Word or some template do this? Thanks for all replies. Barry |
#12
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Resume Problem
I've no idea what you mean by Entry, Intermediate or Professional. In Word
2007 you click on the Office Logo (top left corner of screen) and select New, scroll down and select Resume for the list of templates available. -- Terry Farrell - MS Word MVP "joanna" wrote in message ... I'm trying to set-up a resume'.Where do i look to do it in entry,professional,intermediate?My computer has window vista and I'm using office home and student2007 version |
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