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The Business Card Resume

Martin Yate
Martin Yate
NY Times bestseller
Copyright © 2012
All rights reserved

"Have you heard about a 'mini-resume' that fits on a personal business card?" One of my readers asked. "I was wondering your opinion on these resume cards, part of me says it's a good thing another part not so much?"

The first time you hear about a business card resume, it can sound like a gimmick, and you should know better than to waste valuable job search time pursuing gimmicks. That said, business cards are an accepted sales tool the world over, and for a job hunter they’re so much less intrusive than carrying around a wad or resumes under your arm.

If you want to try a business card resume, you must consider the severely limited space available to you and use that space wisely:

Front of the card

  1. Critical Information: Your name, target job title, telephone number and email address.
  2. Use legible, business-like (Times Roman, Arial) fonts.
  3. Make it readable. Limit the word count so that you can maximize font size to increase readability; better to have one legible email address than add a social network address and have them both illegible.
  4. No one in a position to hire you can read an 8pt font…and reminding someone that they are old and have failing eyesight…not a good sales pitch.

Back of the card

Space is minimal, so less is more and readability is everything, the words you choose must communicate both your understanding of the job and your ability to deliver when you are doing that job.

  1. Repeat your target job title.
  2. This is followed by a two word headline on the next line:
    Performance Profile
  3. Then follow this with a single short sentence that addresses the #1 deliverable of your target job. The #1 deliverable in your job (and all jobs) is the identification, prevention and solution of problems within that specific area of professional expertise. It is ultimately what we all get hired to do.
  4. Finish with a social network address that delivers a comprehensive professional profile to any interested reader, such as your LinkedIn profile; or your web-based resume or any other URL that delivers the full story on your professional capabilities.

As an example we can all relate to, an accounting professional who worked in Accounts Receivable might have the rear side of a business card resume that looks something like this:

Martin Yate                                516.674.3728

Snr Accounts Receivable

Performance Profile
Focused on the ID, prevention and solution of all
recurrent A/R problems.
www. http://www.linkedin.com/martiny

Notice that by starting this mini-resume with a verb, you not only show understanding of what is at the heart of this job, you also deliver a powerful personal brand statement by telling the reader what to expect.

In job transition? Martin does a one hour job search webcast every Monday www.ilostmyjob.com/k . First Monday of the month the topic is Resumes, the following Monday is Networking, followed by The Network-Integrated Job Search and on the 4th Monday, How To Turn Interviews into Offers.

Let me help change the trajectory of your life for the better,

Martin Yate, CPC

34 Years in career management,
NY Times bestseller, 14 books, 62 foreign language editions

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