Resume and Job Search Tips: What to Put on Your Job Search and Career Web Site

Choosing the Right Elements for Your Web Site Can Do Wonders for Your Job Search

By Andrew Jensen, published Jan 23, 2007
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As the world moves increasingly to digital technologies for everything, it's a given that resumes and job search communication would do the same. Although it's not likely that Web sites will replace the traditional one- or two-page resume, the Web offers terrific opportunities for augmenting such documents.

This is particularly true in professions that rely heavily on creative accomplishments. Most notable among these are any jobs that allow development of projects. Naturally, artists, designers, and other obviously "creative" professions offer lots to show on a career Web site. But projects don't necessarily have to be what most people think of as "creative" to be worthy of the expanded coverage a Web site can provide.

Four Great Things to Put on Your Job Search and Career Web Site

Case Studies
Why not talk about some particular challenges and how you met them during your career? Start by framing the situation and the problems, then get into specific details about how you used the resources at hand to improve things. Like everything else with job search communication and resumes, focus on measurable benefits: how much money you saved, how much time you took out of the task, the percentage you reduced complaints by and so on. And remember, your descriptions aren't limited to just a few words, like on a resume.

Your Experience
Any job search can benefit dramatically from a more detailed account of a person's experience. This is your chance to really elaborate on what you've done, and what it means to a perspective employer. And don't be bashful. Focus on tangible, measurable results. And give particular emphasis to things you've initiated on your own. They don't have to be huge, company-saving upper-management triumphs. Just take a situation that could have gone worse, and tell how your efforts ensured that it didn't.

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