Interview techniques, industry news, and other resources for our talented employees

As we all know times are changing and the recruitment and candidate market place is changing with it. Candidates no longer submit hand-written, hard copy resumes; they don’t always interview face-to-face. No-one expects a job for life these days; candidates have a wealth of job search information resources available to them on the Internet and they can apply for jobs at the click of a button.

These changes to the recruiting and job seeking landscape are beginning to filter through to the resume short-listing process, which must adapt to suit the modern marketplace. For example, where once a candidate who changed jobs twice in a decade might have seemed unstable, in the modern age this might be the norm and could even constitute a long tenure. So, I thought it would be a good time to take stock five of the key resume red flags and update them to ensure they are in line with the modern age.

Takeaways

  •     Leonardo da Vinci wrote the first professional resume in 1482.
  •     Between 1930 and 1960, resumes went from being on scraps of paper to being expected – an institution.
  •     In the 1980s, VHS resumes were used!
  •     In 1983, Microsoft Word was launched – creating a new template for resumes.
  •     Video resumes hit YouTube in 2007.