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Updating a Resume Phoenix AZ

Your resume may have been full of content about your old career, but if you’ve completed a new degree and want to change fields there are a few things to keep in mind when crafting your new document.

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Updating a Resume

Your resume may have been full of content about your old career, but if you’ve completed a new degree and want to change fields there are a few things to keep in mind when crafting your new document.

Transferable Skills are Key

First, you will not have to start from scratch. Chances are that some of your experience included the use of skills that you will need in your new job, so you just need to identify those skills. For example, if you were a receptionist and now you are entering the nursing field, you can highlight some of your administrative and customer service skills.

The next step is to bring out some of those skills in your job descriptions from the past. State what you did and the things you accomplished, but put items with those transferable skills higher up in the description.

For example, if you worked in a call center and had to report on activity and help customers, you could write:

Documented customer requests and responded to client needs individually.

This will still apply to your future job as a nurse, so it is important to highlight it. Keep this in mind as you write your resume.

Consolidate Similar Experiences

If you had a job that took place more than 15 years ago and irrelevant to what you want to do (say you delivered groceries in college) there is no need to include that. But what happens if you job-hopped and your past is a little choppy, but you still have relevant past experiences?

If you have a background full of similar jobs and a few interruptions into other fields or short-term gigs, you can use a technique to lump all of your relevant experience, like this:

Administrative Assistant

Company A (2005-2009)

Company B (2002-2003)

Company C (1999-2001)

List your duties in a few sentences. Since they are similar for each job, they can be lumped together.

  • Use bullets for accomplishments.
  • It is okay to call out the specific company in bullets to show which job you were at when you had a big achievement.

This way, even if you had another job between 2003 and 2005, you’re drawing attention to the fact that you have plenty of administrative experience.

Set the Tone with a Profile

Regardless of what your past winds up looking like, your resume should start with a strong profile that summarizes everything you have to offer. This replaces the “objective,” which most people are familiar with. But if you have a few years under your belt, an objective is not relevant and they are better used for new professionals that do not have any professional experience.

Instead, highlight your skills in a few sentences. Because you do not have experience in the new field, it is a smart idea to pull out those transferable skill areas that will help you transition into the medical field. For example, if you’re new to the nursing field and have a 15-year history of working as a secretary, your profile may look something like this:

Qualifications Profile

  • Nursing: Resourceful caregiver ...

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