Applyingย for a job in South Africa is not easy, the is lots of graduates who applies for jobs everyday. Example, for a single job or internships advertised, you find out they receive more than 1000 applications, so it is very important to have a best CV out of the best.
10 best steps to write a successful CV. When it comes to applying for a new job, your CVย is yourย ticket toย that initial foot in the door and secure an interview –ย but how do youย make sureย your CV is added to the interview pile and not the bin?
Follow these tips to help you get started in creating a successful CV and securing your next job:
1. Fundamentals
There is no right or wrong way to write a CV but there are some common sections you should cover. These include:
- personal and contact information
- education and qualifications
- work history and/or experience
- relevant skills to the job in question
- own interests
- achievements or hobbies
- some references.
2. Job Description
The clues are givenย in the job application, so read the details from start to finish. Take notes and create bullet points, highlighting everything you can satisfy and all the bits you canโt. With the areas where youโre lacking, fill in the blanks by adapting the skills you do have. For example, if the job in question requires someone with sales experience, thereโs nothing stopping you from using any retail work youโve undertaken โ even if it was something to help pay the bills through university. It will demonstrate the skills you do have and show how theyโre transferable.
3. Role
When youโve established what the job entails and how you can match each requirement, create a CV specifically for that role. Remember, there is no such thing as a generic CV. Every CV you send to a potential employee should be tailored to that role so donโt be lazy and hope that a general CV will work because it wonโt.
Create a unique CV for every job you apply for. You donโt have to re-write the whole thing, just adapt the details so theyโre relevant.
4. Skills
Under the skills section of your CV donโt forget to mention key skills that can help you to stand out from the crowd. These could include: communication skills; computer skills; team working; problem solving or even speaking a foreign language. Skills can come out of the most unlikely places, so really think about what youโve done to grow your own skills, even if you take examples from being in a local sports team or joining a voluntary group โ itโs all relevant.
5. Interests
Under interests, highlight the things that show off skills youโve gained and employers look for. Describe any examples of positions of responsibility, working in a team or anything that shows you can use your own initiative. For example, if you ran your universityโs newspaper or if you started a weekend league football team that became a success.
Include anything that shows how diverse, interested and skilled you are. Donโt include passive interests like watching TV, solitary hobbies that can be perceived as you lacking in people skills. Make yourself sound really interesting.
6. Experience
Use assertive and positive language under the work history and experience sections, such as โdevelopedโ, โorganisedโ or โachievedโ. Try to relate the skills you have learned to the job role youโre applying for. For example: โThe work experience involved working in a team,โ or โThis position involved planning, organisation and leadership as I was responsible for a team of peopleโ.
Really get to grips with the valuable skills and experience you have gained from past work positions, even if it was just working in a restaurant โ every little helps.
7. References
References should be from someone who has employed you in the past and can vouch for your skills and experience. If youโve never worked before youโre OK to use a teacher or tutor as a referee. Try to include two if you can.
8. Presentation
A successful CV is always carefully and clearly presented, and printed on clean, crisp white paper. The layout should always be clean and well structured and CVs should never be crumpled or folded, so use an A4 envelope to post your applications.
Always remember the CV hotspot โ the upper middle area of the first page is where the recruiterโs eye will naturally fall, so make sure you include your most important information there.
9. No more than two pages of A4
A good CV is clear, concise and makes every point necessary without waffling. You donโt need pages and pages of paper โ you just keep things short and sweet. A CV is a reassurance to a potential employer, itโs a chance to tick the right boxes. And if everything is satisfied, thereโs a better chance of a job interview. Also, employers receive dozens of CVs all the time so itโs unlikely theyโll read each one cover to cover. Most will make a judgment about a CV within sections, so stick to a maximum of two pages of A4 paper.
10. Keep your CV updated
Itโs crucial to review your CV on a regular basis and add any new skills or experience thatโs missing. For example, if youโve just done some volunteering or worked on a new project, make sure theyโre on there โ potential employers are always impressed with candidates who go the extra mile to boost their own skills and experience.