| Atricle Dump |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Resumes Cover Letters > Great Resume Writing Starts with Identifying Your Unique Executive Value Proposition |
|
Atricle Dump - Great Resume Writing Starts with Identifying Your Unique Executive Value Proposition
How Much Will it Cost to Start a Restaurant? surable impact. When a resume lacks either of these two inseparable components, it doesn’t answer questions about your unique executive value proposition – it creates them. A resume should not create questions; it should answer questions.This is one of the most frequently asked questions in starting a restaurant, and one that people often get wrong by seriously underestimating the actual answer.That may not be a problem, if there is plenty of cash in reserve and sales pick up quickly, or it may be a devastating problem if there was very little reserve, the estimate was way off, or sales are much slower than expected in taking off.Because many restaurant entrepreneurs have no real experience in these matte By addressing these issues upfront when writing your resume, you will not only be exposed to more and better opportunities, you will be exposed to opportunities over someone that has better career experience than you, but has done a great job of keeping his/her value proposition hidden in his/her resume. In addition, you will be practiced at concisely articulating responses to the interview question: “So tell me how you did that?” As a result, you will leave an infinitely better interview impression. Marketing: Your Brand Is About More Than Just Good Looks No one that is any good at making great hiring decisions hires someone because of what a candidate has done or what their Internet presence is. WHAT? That’s right. Candidates are hired because of what the hiring authority believes you can do! They develop a belief about what you can do by understanding how you accomplished what you have done. This needs to be addressed upfront in your resume.First let’s clear up a common misconception of what a “Brand” really is. A brand is more than just your company’s name or logo. It’s more than just a particular type of product you offer such as Q-tips brand of cotton swabs. It’s more than just the look of the packaging of your product. In a nutshell your ”Brand” is the culmination of everything your prospect’s 5 senses can pick up on about you.It’s the image you present at all times. From the company’s logo and color schem Let’s start first with the need to hire someone in the first place. Any job that is created exists to produce against a set of business objectives in a way that will have concrete impact on business metrics. Nobody is hired to produce effort. Everyone is hired to produce results. Back calculating from the set of business objectives a position is chartered to achieve will imply a specific set of executive capabilities, skills and acumen that a candidate must possess to have a chance at successfully executing against the business objectives the position is chartered to achieve. All what you have done is to an employer is a sanity “check in the box” that confirms you have held the requisite scope & scale of responsibility that confirms the role they are trying to fill isn’t to big a step up in scope & scale of responsibility such that you’d be in over your head. For example, given an employment opportunity with $150M P&L responsibility role. Has your previous P&L responsibility maxed out at $15M, $50M, $100M, $250M, etc.? If you’re close to the level of responsibility, that’s just a check in the box that lets you play in the interview game. What an employer needs to get to is how you have accomplished what you’ve done. Example: “We need to fill a $150M P&L role that is chartered to grow this to $300M over the next 5 years. I see that you have grown a P&L from $75M to $250M. That’s great. Can you tell me exactly how you drove that outcome?” Most executives fall flat on their face when attempting to answer a straight forward question like this by starting their response with, “Um, well, I uh…” not well thought out response follows. It doesn’t mean you don’t know – how – you drove an outcome. It simply means you’re not practiced at concisely articulating – how – you drove an outcome. Unfortunately, this does not leave the best impression with the person interviewing you. This all too common unfortunate situation should have been addressed all the way back when you were actually writing your resume. 100% of the resumes recruiters see fail at concisely articulating an executive’s value proposition. That value proposition is a combination of two inseparable components: The specific quantified impact you have had on business metrics by achieving measurable objectives COMBINED WITH the specific set of executive capabilities, skills and acumen you leveraged to drive that measurable impact. When a resume lacks either of these two inseparable components, it doesn’t answer questions about your unique executive value proposition – it creates them. A resume should not create questions; it should answer questions. By addressing these issues upfront when writing your resume, you will not only be exposed to more and better opportunities, you will be exposed to opportunities over someone that has better career experience than you, but has done a great job of keeping his/her value proposition hidden in his/her resume. In addition, you will be practiced at concisely articulating responses to the interview question: “So tell me how you did that?” As a result, you will leave an infinitely better interview impression.< Making Career Decisions; Part 1 results.Spring is traditionally a time for new beginnings and as we start to springclean our homes, some of us may be considering springcleaning our careers.Why are so many of us unhappy at work? There are probably as many reasons as there are unhappy people, but there are a few underlying factors which influence many of us. Think back to your school days and the careers advice you were given by teachers, advisors and your parents. Just how useful was it?My own memories are of a Back calculating from the set of business objectives a position is chartered to achieve will imply a specific set of executive capabilities, skills and acumen that a candidate must possess to have a chance at successfully executing against the business objectives the position is chartered to achieve. All what you have done is to an employer is a sanity “check in the box” that confirms you have held the requisite scope & scale of responsibility that confirms the role they are trying to fill isn’t to big a step up in scope & scale of responsibility such that you’d be in over your head. For example, given an employment opportunity with $150M P&L responsibility role. Has your previous P&L responsibility maxed out at $15M, $50M, $100M, $250M, etc.? If you’re close to the level of responsibility, that’s just a check in the box that lets you play in the interview game. What an employer needs to get to is how you have accomplished what you’ve done. Example: “We need to fill a $150M P&L role that is chartered to grow this to $300M over the next 5 years. I see that you have grown a P&L from $75M to $250M. That’s great. Can you tell me exactly how you drove that outcome?” Most executives fall flat on their face when attempting to answer a straight forward question like this by starting their response with, “Um, well, I uh…” not well thought out response follows. It doesn’t mean you don’t know – how – you drove an outcome. It simply means you’re not practiced at concisely articulating – how – you drove an outcome. Unfortunately, this does not leave the best impression with the person interviewing you. This all too common unfortunate situation should have been addressed all the way back when you were actually writing your resume. 100% of the resumes recruiters see fail at concisely articulating an executive’s value proposition. That value proposition is a combination of two inseparable components: The specific quantified impact you have had on business metrics by achieving measurable objectives COMBINED WITH the specific set of executive capabilities, skills and acumen you leveraged to drive that measurable impact. When a resume lacks either of these two inseparable components, it doesn’t answer questions about your unique executive value proposition – it creates them. A resume should not create questions; it should answer questions. By addressing these issues upfront when writing your resume, you will not only be exposed to more and better opportunities, you will be exposed to opportunities over someone that has better career experience than you, but has done a great job of keeping his/her value proposition hidden in his/her resume. In addition, you will be practiced at concisely articulating responses to the interview question: “So tell me how you did that?” As a result, you will leave an infinitely better interview impression. A Quick Lesson on the History of Power Tools lity maxed out at $15M, $50M, $100M, $250M, etc.? If you’re close to the level of responsibility, that’s just a check in the box that lets you play in the interview game.For the vast majority of us, power tools have been around as long as we can remember in one form or another. When we look back to see such items of our childhood, it’s funny how they seem so primitive, yet at the time they were the most up-to-date invention making the lives of our families so much easier than those of past generations.Centuries before the wheel was invented, the Egyptians built the pyramids with nothing more than copper tools to quarry and cut the colossal bloc What an employer needs to get to is how you have accomplished what you’ve done. Example: “We need to fill a $150M P&L role that is chartered to grow this to $300M over the next 5 years. I see that you have grown a P&L from $75M to $250M. That’s great. Can you tell me exactly how you drove that outcome?” Most executives fall flat on their face when attempting to answer a straight forward question like this by starting their response with, “Um, well, I uh…” not well thought out response follows. It doesn’t mean you don’t know – how – you drove an outcome. It simply means you’re not practiced at concisely articulating – how – you drove an outcome. Unfortunately, this does not leave the best impression with the person interviewing you. This all too common unfortunate situation should have been addressed all the way back when you were actually writing your resume. 100% of the resumes recruiters see fail at concisely articulating an executive’s value proposition. That value proposition is a combination of two inseparable components: The specific quantified impact you have had on business metrics by achieving measurable objectives COMBINED WITH the specific set of executive capabilities, skills and acumen you leveraged to drive that measurable impact. When a resume lacks either of these two inseparable components, it doesn’t answer questions about your unique executive value proposition – it creates them. A resume should not create questions; it should answer questions. By addressing these issues upfront when writing your resume, you will not only be exposed to more and better opportunities, you will be exposed to opportunities over someone that has better career experience than you, but has done a great job of keeping his/her value proposition hidden in his/her resume. In addition, you will be practiced at concisely articulating responses to the interview question: “So tell me how you did that?” As a result, you will leave an infinitely better interview impression. The Fast Fifteen an you don’t know – how – you drove an outcome. It simply means you’re not practiced at concisely articulating – how – you drove an outcome. Unfortunately, this does not leave the best impression with the person interviewing you.Do you wish you had more time in your day? Doesn't it always seem that if we just had a few more minutes, we could finish a task or project? Welcome to the fast fifteen!Usually we think of fifteen minutes as negligible in view of the larger projects and tasks that surround us. Let's examine different ways that 15 minutes could be more productive.Are you a victim of other people's agendas? If we are in `reactive' mode, then our fifteen minutes may be something like this: o This all too common unfortunate situation should have been addressed all the way back when you were actually writing your resume. 100% of the resumes recruiters see fail at concisely articulating an executive’s value proposition. That value proposition is a combination of two inseparable components: The specific quantified impact you have had on business metrics by achieving measurable objectives COMBINED WITH the specific set of executive capabilities, skills and acumen you leveraged to drive that measurable impact. When a resume lacks either of these two inseparable components, it doesn’t answer questions about your unique executive value proposition – it creates them. A resume should not create questions; it should answer questions. By addressing these issues upfront when writing your resume, you will not only be exposed to more and better opportunities, you will be exposed to opportunities over someone that has better career experience than you, but has done a great job of keeping his/her value proposition hidden in his/her resume. In addition, you will be practiced at concisely articulating responses to the interview question: “So tell me how you did that?” As a result, you will leave an infinitely better interview impression. What's The Value of Your Reputation? surable impact. When a resume lacks either of these two inseparable components, it doesn’t answer questions about your unique executive value proposition – it creates them. A resume should not create questions; it should answer questions.If you have high quality support services and polices, and your employee satisfaction surveys show that your employees are happy, does that mean your customers actually experience results that match or exceed your brand promise? Is the culture of your employee base consistent with the values of your company? Are different employee groups delivering quite different experiences to your customers, like sales and service appearing to speak a different language? These inconsistencies cre By addressing these issues upfront when writing your resume, you will not only be exposed to more and better opportunities, you will be exposed to opportunities over someone that has better career experience than you, but has done a great job of keeping his/her value proposition hidden in his/her resume. In addition, you will be practiced at concisely articulating responses to the interview question: “So tell me how you did that?” As a result, you will leave an infinitely better interview impression. It all starts with your resume.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Using Ad Agencies and Designers Private Nurses are in High Demand!
|