Resume Revamp - Advice on Format/Layout and Type of Content
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@wrx7m said in Resume Revamp - Advice on Format/Layout and Type of Content:
If you have gone through multiple generations of upgrades, say, Windows 2003 to 2008 R2 to 2012 R2 to 2016 for AD domain controllers, how would you state something like that?
What question are you trying to answer here?
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@flaxking Would you say 3 generations of AD migrations?
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@wrx7m said in Resume Revamp - Advice on Format/Layout and Type of Content:
If you have gone through multiple generations of upgrades, say, Windows 2003 to 2008 R2 to 2012 R2 to 2016 for AD domain controllers, how would you state something like that?
I mean, you can say that you migrated all the domain controllers to the latest version. This is a good project but I do not think it is that big.
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Not sure if I can be of help, but I once ask MangoLassi community to do a quality check on my resume and here's the result.
I always get a great feedback from the employers or recruiters every time they check this version of my resume.
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@darrel Thanks for posting yours.
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I guess I will make mine more brief.
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@wrx7m said in Resume Revamp - Advice on Format/Layout and Type of Content:
If you have gone through multiple generations of upgrades, say, Windows 2003 to 2008 R2 to 2012 R2 to 2016 for AD domain controllers, how would you state something like that?
I would keep it short and concise. It depends where you are putting it, I suppose. But something in skills like...
"Experience with multiple AD upgrades over a number of generations."
And elsewhere "Windows Experience: 2003 - 2016"
I doubt that anyone is going to be overly concerned with exactly which combinations of AD upgrades you have done, rather just that you have done it multiple times over multiple versions.
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@wrx7m said in Resume Revamp - Advice on Format/Layout and Type of Content:
I guess I will make mine more brief.
That is what most people agree on, more brief over less brief.
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@wrx7m said in Resume Revamp - Advice on Format/Layout and Type of Content:
I guess I will make mine more brief.
I'm against the ML general consensus here. At least in Canada, I believe when employers say resume, they mean more like a CV. I've been through resume writing instruction once in secondary school, and twice in post secondary school. Never was taught to make it one page. Before I got my current job, I watched a resume writing course and it said to not worry about limiting it to one page.
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It's not about brief or lengthly, but anticipate the questions that the employer is asking when looking at your resume and clearly and concisely answer them.
Don't put in stuff they're not going to care about. But make sure you put in enough for them to be able to think you might be a good fit.