bill bennett

journalism + new media

Fill CV (or resume) blanks

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Many employers are suspicious of unexplained time on a curriculum vitae (CV) or resume. This is a hangover from days past when people didn’t flit from one job to another.

They expect to see a list of previous employers along with starting and finishing dates. Nobody gets excited about a missing week or two, but one or more unexplained periods of longer than about four weeks will ring alarm bells.

We’ll look at how to deal with blanks in a moment. First let’s look at why they make employers nervous.

I once interviewed someone with a six-month blank on his CV. His career looked solid until that point, but the job after the blank was a clear step down from the earlier positions.

There might have been a perfectly reasonable explanation – six months travelling overseas or perhaps a full-time education course not related to career matters. In fact, I discovered the interviewee had been in prison.

CV blanks may be sackings or illness

This is an extreme case. Hopefully it doesn’t apply to you. The other serious negative possibility is a forced break after dismissal.

Sacked people have difficulty finding another job, particularly in a tight-knit industry.

Less negative, but still of concern to potential employer is blank CV spaces due to illness. Companies are unwilling to hire people with medical problems – despite skills shortages.

CV blanks are common

CV blanks are hardly rare for modern knowledge workers. No-one has a job for life and being made redundant is a rite of passage in the tech industry. It can take weeks or months to find a new job after sudden redundancy. What’s more, people  burnt out by struggling companies need a rest between gigs.

Even without redundancy, knowledge workers are prone to CV blanks by the nature of their work. Many move from job to job rarely staying with one company more than two years.

Moving from one company to another is not always smooth; it’s possible to fall between the gaps. I’ve twice started new jobs only to discover within days that I’m in the wrong place. No doubt most readers will have found themselves in a similar position.

Don't forget the children

Women have extra reasons for career gaps: children. And then there are short-term contracts – jobs that only last for a specified period. It isn’t always easy to finesse a smooth transition from one job to the next.

So, we all have blanks, most are reasonable but employers don’t like them. What’s the best strategy?

The first rule is to turn those blanks into meaningful yet honest CV entries.

Leaving unexplained blanks is bad but not being truthful only makes matters worse. Be upfront about any time when you were not in paid work.

If it was only a matter of weeks then be ready to say that you ‘took a holiday’ or ‘needed a rest’ or ‘painted the house’ between jobs. That’s enough explanation. It’s also perfectly OK to tell an employer that you waited for the right opportunity to come along.

If the absence was linked to illness (or childbirth) tell the employer the truth explaining, assuming it’s true, that you are now fully recovered and keen to work to your full potential.

If you spent the time in prison… well that’s a whole different story.

Written by Bill Bennett

February 21st, 2009 at 2:51 pm

4 Responses to 'Fill CV (or resume) blanks'

  1. [...] From Knowledge Workers-”Fill in those CV (or resume) blanks”…02.21.09 21 02 2009 Here is some good advice excerpted from the Knowledge Workers blog from a post entitled Fill in those CV (or resume) blanks : [...]

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  3. [...] five sure fire ways of sinking a job interview. Even if you’re not caught out initially, a resume lie may come back to haunt you later. In some cases with disastrous consequences – there are [...]

  4. [...] if you're not caught out initially, a resume lie may come back to haunt you later. In some cases with disastrous consequences – there are [...]

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