spy have never paid better
 Cover Letter Writing
Your Cutting-Edge cover letter for retail management Resource
take the dirty advantage with this revolutionary software
Home Contact Us    
   

cover letter for retail management
Navigation

Offer Letter Cover Letter
Receptionist Sample Cover Letters
Sample Cold Calling Intern Cover Letter
Medical Assistant Cover Letter
Sample Career Change Cover Letter
Scholarship Cover Letter Sample
Career Change Cover Free Letter
Career Change Cover Letter Sample
Cover Letters For Customer Service Jobs
Cover Letter For Retail Management
Sample Cover Letters For Registered Nurses
Apply Cover Letter Online Resume
How To Write Cover Letter To Book Magazine Reviewers
Job Cover Letter
Sample Job Application Cover Letters
Career Change Cover Example Letter

Resources

Learn How To Get Your Cv Or Resume Reviewed!
By Recruitment News
I know many people who do not include a covering letter when the send out their CV or resume in response to an advertisement.This is a very big mistake!!They simply Read more...

 

create your own Adsense empire

Special Collection of Hard To Find E-Books, Software, Scripts and More

 

What Makes Your Job Search Go ‘round
It’s no secret: your job search can be a drag. And it can be very draining on your psyche. Maybe if we go in-depth to see what really is all involved in a job search and what it entails, it’ll help Read more...

 

The First Step To Writing A Successful Story
By Craig Willis
Did you ever start telling somebody about a kick-ass story idea you had brewing in the back of your head, only to have them roll their eyes and start anxiously looking for the nearest Read more...

 
Resources

Best Tips For Writing A Marketing Manager Resume
A marketing manager is an individual who supervises all marketing, advertising, and promotional personnel and activities. They basically have to implement and direct all the marketing Read more...
Resources

Reasons Why To Get Motivation From Cover Letter Samples?
By navdeep singh
A cover letter is an important part of every application letter. It is thus amazing how most job applicants ignore the cover letter and just submit their applications with only their comprehensive Read more...
Resources

Basic Pointers Of Cover Letter Writing
By Emmitt Streat
Looking for a job is indeed a burdensome task to do especially for the newbie in the world of job hunting. However, you do not have any other choice but to do the said task in order to have an income Read more...


Welcome to Cover Letter Writing - your comprehensive cover letter for retail management resource.

Below, you'll find extensive information on leading cover letter for retail management articles and products to help you on your way to success.

13 Resume Mistakes That Can Cost You The Interview
By Judi Perkins -

Today, on I am bringing some more updated graphic related to the cover letter

Mr. Robert Roger, the Designer and Editor
Robert Roger
Editor

1. A BLAND OR GENERIC OBJECTIVE: If your objective could be applied to a marketing resume as easily as a resume for an accounting position, then your objective says nothing and will get you nowhere. An objective is NOT some required paragraph at the top of the page that is an exercise in 5 lines of job speak. It's an actual and real description of your skills as they're related to who you are and what you want. It should vary with the type of job for which you are applying.


2. BLAND JOB DETAILS: "Responsibilities included overseeing construction of 4 Hilton Hotels in Tri-City Metro Area, each 50 floors in height." Yeah? So what? That doesn't say if they went up on schedule or if you brought the projects in under budget. It doesn't say if you took all four from site work up or if the guy handling two of the four hotels was fired and you were promoted to overseeing all four. Differentiate yourself from the others coming in to interview. If you don't tell the hiring company how you will be an asset to them, how will they know?

3. WHO'S THE MYSTERY COMPANY?: Don't assume the name and purpose of your company is common knowledge. If it's a competitor, it might be, and if it's in the same industry and located nearby, it might be. To be on the safe side, provide a sentence or two about the focus of your company's products or services.

4. ANOTHER JOB, ANOTHER PARAGRAPH: Don't keep adding on to your resume job after job, year after year. By the time you're in your 40s, you need to have weeded out some of the earlier stuff. You don't need all the college activities, just your degree. You don't need ALL 5 bullets for each of your first two jobs.

5. REFERENCES: Shouldn't be listed on your resume. "References available on request" is the proper phrase. You present them separately when they're requested. This isn't about protocol. This is about protecting your references so they aren't called until you and the company are serious about each other.

6. IT'S NOT A STORY!: Don't - whatever you do, DON'T - write your resume in the third person!

7. SKIP THE PERSONAL INFO: You might think your weekend baseball coaching or your church choir participation shows you're an interesting and well-rounded person, but they're irrelevant. If the interviewer wants to know who you are as a person, aside from the job interview and your qualifications, he'll ask.

8. DEGREE DATE: No matter how old you are, don't leave the date of when you were graduated off your resume. It looks like you're hiding something (well, you are, aren't you?), and then everyone counts the years backwards and tries to figure out how old you are. Sometimes you can be ruled out - just for leaving the date off. If you're trying to hide your age by not stating the date, what else might you not be forthcoming about?

9. SPELL CHECK, SPELL CHECK, SPELL CHECK: Spell checking visually by you AND someone else, any fewer than three times, isn't enough. And don't forget to check your punctuation.

10. GETTING YOUR RESUME OUT THERE - part one: Don't use one of those resume blaster things. Half those sites aren't even valid. You don't know how it will come out on the other end. You don't even know where it's going or if the landing targets are employment related. It's bad form and just....NOT the way to find your perfect job. Finding your perfect job takes focus, attention, detail, individuality, tailoring, specifics. Resume blasting is about as far from that as you can get.

11. GETTING YOUR RESUME OUT THERE - part two: If it's an ad, you probably have instructions as to how to send it. If it says email, cut and paste it in the form, AND attach it. You never know what it can look like on the other end because of the variety of settings available to each user. Quite frankly, you're better off not emailing it at all, because it usually just goes into cyber space, and then it's all about the hiring company - but unfortunately, besides not sending it at all, sometimes that's your only choice. Emailing your resume takes any option for further participation right out of your hands, because often there's not even a name given for a follow up contact. You've no other option than to wait and wonder. (And half the time it's going to HR or an admin department to be scanned into an electronic database.)

12. GETTING YOUR RESUME OUT THERE - part three: If you know the company, call and ask if they prefer email, fax, or snail mail. I know a recruiter who never even opened his email. Because he was listed in The Kennedy Guide to Executive Recruiters, he received so many resumes emailed to him cold (so NOT pro-active) that he just did a mass delete every morning. Candidates contacted for a specific search were requested to snail mail their resume to him. How about that? I'll bet less than 10% of those who emailed their resumes even bothered to follow up to see if it was received (this isn't a numbers game).

13. RESUME VISUALS: Ivory paper. Black ink. Individual pages. No plastic, 7th grade, science report cover with the plastic slider or metal push down tabs. Your name centered at the top, not on a cover page that says "Introducing Clifton Lewis Montgomery III". No exceptions. Your resume is a professional document, not a school book report or an art project. Until every resume is done this way, yours will still stand out in the crowd.

You are the product, and your resume is the marketing piece. To find your perfect job you must differentiate yourself from the other people who will be interviewed.

Your resume must be specific, individualized, easy to skim so it invites a closer reading, and focused on the differences you've made with your previous companies, as well as the accomplishments you've achieved with - and for - them. This tells the hiring company what you can do for them - and it IS about the hiring company, not you.

Of course this assumes you meet the requirements for the job - otherwise it doesn't matter how good your resume is! The resume is what gets you in the door. If your resume is poorly written, looks sloppy, is difficult to read, is cryptic in any way, or necessitates being slogged through to learn your information (they won't bother), you won't even get in the door. And how can you decide whether you like the company, if they've already decided they don't like you?
Judi Perkins has been a contingency and retained search consultant for 25 years, with a short stint in the temporary and local permanent placement market. She has owned her own firm and been hired repeatedly by numerous clients. Learn how to ace an interview - and thousands of other job tips at www.findtheperfectjob.com

We strive to provide only quality articles, so if there is a specific topic related to cover letter that you would like us to cover, please contact us at any time.

And again, thank you to those contributing daily to our cover letter for retail management website.

How To Get Chiropractic Patient Referrals From Medical Doctors - Part 3
By Ron Savelo
New Source of ReferralsIn my previous two Articles in this series I explained a method of getting new patient referrals by sending a comprehensive narrative report to your Read more...

Moon GRAFIX© 2006 - All Rights Reserved - Designed For cover letter for retail management.