Nursing Resume Do's and Don’t's Part I
Monster Resume Expert by Kim Isaacs
August 04, 2008
Although a good resume can’t get you a job, a poor resume will keep you from getting one. A resume is a professional marketing tool, a written record of your accomplishments and professional credentials. Because it usually represents the first impression a prospective employer will have of you, your resume must be top-notch in format, content, and appearance. Follow these simple guidelines to improve the impression your resume makes.
What to do
DO use a chronological format. Start by listing your current or most recent job and work back from there. This is the format most employers are looking for, and anything else makes them suspicious and impatient. Although every rule has exceptions, stick to this format to be safe.
DO focus on your accomplishments and more interesting or marketable skills and experiences. Your resume should highlight the best that you have to offer, not read like a job description. If you’re a staff nurse, the interviewer will expect you to have provided patient care and administered medications. Instead, include special activities such as conducting patient and family teaching, making presentations to outside groups, sitting on interdisciplinary committees, and budgeting and scheduling responsibility. If your experience is limited, focus on the more significant clinical skills, such as ventilator care, chemotherapy administration, and attaining I.V. certification.
DO print your resume on good quality paper and with good quality print. Most laser printers will do the job. If you don’t have a good printer, put your resume on a disk and bring it to a local printer or office services company that has a letter-quality printer. Ask to see samples of good-quality resume paper. Chose one that is white or off-white, never use colored paper or paper with designs or borders. Make sure the print on your resume is crisp, dark, sharp and clear.
What NOT to do
DON’T list personal information about your health, height and weight, marital status, and so on. This information shouldn’t be part of a job search process. In fact, asking about such matters in an interview is illegal, so don’t offer this information. You want the interviewer to focus on your job-related experience, not your personal attributes.
DON’T list hobbies and personal activities such as reading, skiing, and sewing. Discussing these in an interview is fine if you’re asked—they can even help establish rapport with a prospective employer. But this information, just like your height and weight, doesn’t belong on your resume.
DON’T list references with names and addresses. In fact, you don’t even need to say “References Available Upon Request.” If employers want references, they’ll ask for them. Keep your resume free of unnecessary information.
Read “Nursing Resume Dos and Don’t’s Part II” here.
Back to Career Tips Resources.
dfwrecruit4u
2 months ago
8 comments
As a nurse recuiter, I have seen my share of resumes. You want to make sure that you do not add information that could lead to identity theft. Please keep your personal information (social security number, date of birth, nursing license number) off your resume. This information does not belong there. This information will be required once you are in the process of being hired and you will then be able to disclose it during the application process.
ashley919
6 months ago
8 comments
these are really great tips very good to know all of this.
jmana4of6
6 months ago
2 comments
HELP! I am a graduate practical nurse and have no idea how or what to put on my resume. All my life I've been a secretary and I don't know the first thing to write or how to format my resume. Can someone please help me; sending a copy of yours will truly be appreciated (of course I expect false dates & such); I just need an idea. Thank you all.
Nursingcareermanager
6 months ago
6 comments
These are fantastic tips and important to landing the best job especially the, ' DO focus on your accomplishments and more interesting or marketable skills and experiences. Your resume should highlight the best that you have to offer, not read like a job description'.
HELGA
6 months ago
2 comments
This is really good. i have learnt alot that i don't know before about resume writing
Shan4691
7 months ago
1512 comments
This is a great resource for anyone looking for a job, not just nurses.
vickielee1970
7 months ago
560 comments
First all of this is good advice. But please, if you get the interview, take your printed sheet of Up-to-Date References. I have seen too many people come to interviews without a printed sheet of references and scramble to fill one out as they wait for their turn interviewing. Afterwards the interviewer and others try to call those references and if the numbers are old or people have left the positions, it is very hard to give some a chance at a job when you cant verify their work history or quality. Make sure your references know you are using them, so they expect the call, if there is a better time to contact a certain reference, it doesn't hurt to give that information either. I have made a lot of cold calls that went no where because of poor information. Rarely does anyone take the time to call more than once or call you back for better information. Do yourself a favor if you don't have the time or skills to set up an excellent resume, pay a professional, it will be money well spent. And of course if you have some skill, you can copy it to computer for later reference and to update.
blueorchid23
11 months ago
2 comments
Good advice! Here are some additional things that I have incorporated into my resume. Since this will be a 2nd career for me, I did a functional resume instead. I also added a skills section highlighting what I have learned in nursing school and what I have learned in my past jobs. The skills section is a good way to sell myself, especially since I will be a newbie in this profession.
maryrn62200
11 months ago
14 comments
Thanks for the advice; I'll have to update my resume and remove my references.
maryrn62200
11 months ago
14 comments
Thanks for the advice; I'll have to update my resume and remove my references.
medicdr5
11 months ago
14 comments
Common sense! But good info to follow.
charlita
12 months ago
2990 comments
I found this article to be very informative.
gitachakraborty
about 1 year ago
2 comments
I have been working 12 yearsin nursing and 10 years primary health care development project and now i am practicing Psycho counselor and Pstchotherapy consultant ,May I study in MSC Nursing . Should I get the chance and I want to scholarships also for study ,
Thanks
Sincerely Yours ,
Gita Chakraborty
sommersby4ever
about 1 year ago
12 comments
Excellent advice giving in this article. It works if you follow the tips above.
SuZeQu
about 1 year ago
6 comments
Thanks so much for the wonderful tips. This was not something that we were taught 32 yrs ago. I've been fortunate to have a daughter who graduated with a business degree and a degree in HIM to help me along. Thanks again! S Hanks RN