The pros and cons of a functional resume

By Toni Bowers, Special to ZDNet Asia
Friday, October 05, 2007 09:38 AM

Functional resumes focus on a person's skills and experience, rather than on his chronological work history.

Here is an example of a functional resume. You would use a functional resume for a couple of reasons:

  • Your background is varied and doesn't add up to a focused career path
  • You want to move into a field that is totally different from the one where most of your experience lies
  • You have large gaps in your work history-months or years where you were not employed
  • You've held a lot of jobs in a few years and you don't want to give the appearance that you're a job hopper
  • You're fresh out of college and want to spotlight your knowledge and not your work experience

Keep in mind, however, that there are a few drawbacks to a functional resume:

  • Some job boards, like monster.com, don't accept them
  • Headhunters tend not to accept them
  • Suspicious hiring managers sometimes think job candidates who use functional resumes are trying to hide something
  • It's important to put some skills in context with a specific job. If you have database management experience, for example, it carries more weight if you can associate it with a specific job you held for a few years, rather than just listing it as a skill. To a hirer manager, just listing it as a skill could mean you merely read a book about it.

If you can avoid using a functional resume, you should.


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Save to my library  Save to My Library  
Blog

Talkback 0 comments

There are currently no comments for this post.

Career Resources

Tags

  1. bank
  2. benefits
  3. business
  4. compensation
  5. consultant
  6. financial
  7. hiring
  8. hong kong
  9. human resources
  10. india
  11. information technology
  12. job
  13. network
  14. personal development
  15. recruiting
  16. singapore
  17. software
  18. talent
  19. trends
  20. u.s.

Tech Jobs Now!