Executive Resume Tips for a Corporate Job

Aug 21, 2015

With competition at its highest, you need to stand out from the crowd with a stellar executive resume that not only highlights your skills and experience, but also illustrates how you are the ideal match for the specific position for which you’re applying. To do that, you must ignore the resume tips that plague the recruiting industry — and go straight for the jugular.

Keep in mind that even at the executive level, your resume is merely an introduction. Its purpose is to land an interview; it is not designed to get you the job. So it must make an impact and leave recruiters hungry for more. A resume is a teaser, a trailer, an appetizer before the main course — you.

Bad Executive Resume Tips Top the Charts

The days of one-resume-fits-all are over. And if you’ve been advised to follow some sort of pre-determined template to create your executive resume, then you’ve been sorely misled. If you’ve done your homework and decided that this is the next right move for you, don’t hold back. Place the job (and the company) in the crosshairs of your career path. Create a resume that’s targeted and specific enough to hit the bull’s eye.

Leave behind these resume tips of old. Eschew the advisor who insists that you use some of these misguided resume tips that show up all too often on executive resumes:

  • Resumes must be one page
  • An objective statement at the top of the document is mandatory
  • You have to choose between a functional and a chronological format
  • When applying for different jobs, just change the objective and send the same resume
  • Don’t spell out quantifiable measurements; present achievements in general terms
  • Use industry lingo
  • A photo or graphic will shoot your resume to the top of the pile

Turn Up the Volume

Take all those resume tips you learned in college and toss them out. You are a unique, talented, successful leader, and your executive resume should reflect those facts. Take the time to polish your resume. Potential employers and their HR departments see hundreds, if not thousands of resumes a year, so yours must rise above the fray to shout, “I am the best choice!”

Thoughtful planning, careful editing and creative writing can turn those tired old resumes into seductively persuasive documents that open doors. Make an immediate impression that won’t be ignored. Human resource departments exist as gatekeepers. When your executive resume passes their test, CEOs, CFOs, COOs and board members will read it next.

Tell Them What They Need to Know

You may believe that the executive status of a position compels employers to spend more time reviewing potential candidates when in fact 32% spend only three to five minutes scanning resumes. Another 24% of hiring executives spend fewer than two minutes screening each resume. It may actually be closer to 6 seconds! With such little time to make an impact, you need to be sharp and to the point — quickly.

So here are 10 executive resume tips to get you noticed in a short amount of time. These tips will help you land an interview, where the true hiring decisions are made.

  1. Introduce yourself at the top of the page with a title that expresses the position you hope to hold. At the top, under your name, type the title. For example, if it’s an executive accounting job you want, write your title as “Chief Financial Officer — CPA and MBA with Analytic and Controller Expertise.”
  2. Summarize what you can offer the company. Lose the objective statement, which typically is about what you want, and replace it with a summary of what you can do for the organization. Illustrate how you’ll add value with positive statements such as increasing ROI, improving project flow, motivating sales staff or smoothing regulatory compliance.
  3. Focus your executive resume consistently throughout the document. Resume tips that call for you to list all your previous experience and skill-sets in different industries often water down the points you need to make with a specific employer. This is why you need to tailor your resume for every job — so that you can zero-in on just the relevant facts that you want this employer to know about you, your skills and your experience.
  4. Highlight numbers. Provide explicit evidence (without giving away company secrets) of what you’ve done for previous employers. Instead of saying you “improved productivity,” for example, write “increased production by 50% in the first three years,” or “saved approximately $2 million through exhaustive restructuring in the first year.”
  5. Clean up the copy so your executive resume is easy to read and scan. Resume tips that insist on perfect spelling, grammar and layout never go out of style. In addition to making no errors, use consistent fonts throughout and reduce the amount of fancy formatting. Your goal is to help your reader focus, not create visual distractions.
  6. Stay current and relevant. While you may bring 20 or more years of serious experience, too much detail about your past could weigh down your resume. Consider a section called “Early Career” that highlights your relevant experience. For example: “Held series of leadership positions in roles ranging from controller to CFO of small and medium manufacturing companies.”
  7. Use a hybrid format that allows you to focus on the highlights of your achievements and experiences, making it both functional and chronological. Indicate specific achievements at the top. Follow it with relevant positions that add context to your successes.
  8. Stick to two pages (three at the most if you need to list a slew of credentials). Remember that you’ve got less than two minutes — some say as little as 20 seconds — to make an effective first impression. You can always send your credentials as a separate document. Once you land an interview, definitely take a hard copy of your resume as well as your credentials with you to the interview.
  9. Leave out the fuzzy, overused industry lingo. This Forbes interview with Tony Beshara, author of Unbeatable Résumés, gives resume tips includes words and phrases such as “customer-oriented,” “creative” and “excellent communications skills” as prime examples of wasted space.
  10. Make it past the gatekeepers in HR and in the computerized recruiting software by using keywords that come from the job posting, the job description, and company’s mission statement. Unless you hand-deliver your resume to the decision-maker (with whom you have a relationship or a really good referral), all the resume tips in the world won’t help you if your resume is tossed out during the first round of reviews.

Aim for the Face-to-Face

The purpose of any resume, especially an executive resume, is to get you in the door for an interview. While your credentials and promises may win you a chance at getting the gig, it’s your personality and your ability to fit in with the company’s culture that will get you the job. No amount of resume tips can make up for a bad interview. So when you get that call, be prepared, put on your best face and deliver the goods.

About the Author

Charlie Kimmel

As President and CEO, Charlie has dedicated his 25+ year career to executive search at Kimmel & Associates. Charlie joined Kimmel & Associates in 1990 as a Recruiter. In 1993, he graduated with honors from the University of North Carolina at Asheville, where he received a BA in History.

Read More About Charlie Kimmel
Contact Kimmel and Get Started Today
Let Us Help