How to Handle X-Rated Employment History on Your Resume

A reader wrote with the question:

I was out of work and out of luck two years ago and out of desperation took a job that paid good money. Unfortunately, it was one I couldn't tell my friends or family about because I was ashamed of it. I took a job as an exotic dancer and have even posed for some adult-themed websites. This has been my only source of income for the past two years but now I want to get out of it and get a job I can be proud of. How do I handle this job on my resume and in interviews?

ANSWER: This is a tough situation, to be sure. While you earned good money, you can't exactly brag about the job to potential mainstream employers.

There are a few ways, however, that you can use this X-Rated job to help you acquire a job you can even tell your mom about. And you can do it without omitting the job, thus creating a two year gap between jobs. Here are a few ideas:

Transferable skills. First, focus on the skills you gained during your tenure. Even the worst jobs provide a new skill or two. As an exotic dancer, for instance, you provided customer service, entertainment, and learned how to deal with the public. You also most likely learned how to remain composed in front of large groups. These are valuable marketable assets.

Functional resume. Now that you've discovered your transferable skills, you should seriously consider using a functional resume. On functional resumes, you highlight what you've done, while diminishing your job title and place of employment. Here, you focus on your accomplishments.

Reshape the job title. Instead of using the title "exotic dancer" or "topless dancer," you might simply use the title "customer care representative" or "entertainer" or even "independent contractor." It comes down to connotation: "independent contractor" sounds much more businesslike than "exotic dancer."

Parent company. Many adult-themed establishments are owned by larger, nondescript sounding parent companies. Listing the parent company "XYZ Inc." will sound better to potential employers than "Bob's Busty Babes."