Secrets of the Job Hunt

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Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Video Resumes

Video resumes in the past have not been taken seriously. That is until Aleksey Vayner, a Yale Student, submitted his video resume to an investment bank, UBS. The financial world thought it was a joke, but soon it became one of the best video resumes on YouTube.

This woke up recruiters, and now they are scrambling to make this more mainstream.
Video resumes.
On Youtube alone there are currently over 1,590 video resumes. So it seems that people are taking this seriously. Not all the video resumes on YouTube are professional, people sing, rap, or do silly things.

Some employers are going onto YouTube and checking out these online videos. This allows an employer to pre-screen candidates before even meeting them. If you do make a video, keep it to the point, present your resume, the facts, show a little personality but don’t go to far. Remember this is for a job, not a popularity contest.

Is this the future of resumes? It’s hard to say. A lot of employers are worried about being sued for discrimination if they do accept video resumes. Photos on resumes aren’t usually accepted for this reason. Employers even black out names on resumes to protect against hiring more “English sounding ones.”

But on the chance that an employer does accept a video resume, you will stand out from the pack. I think that alone is worth the risk of putting together your own video resume. Employers get thousands of resumes, what better way to make yourself stand out than a video resume?

1 comment:

Brent said...

Thanks to high speed Internet and technological innovation, job seekers can say farewell to old-fashioned resumes and begin using cutting-edge online video methods to present themselves to potential employers.

This video resume enhances the paper resume rather than replacing it and allows candidates to stand out in a highly competitive job market. Employers view a candidate’s video resume through a web link that is printed on the paper resume or electronic resume. The employer also has the option of downloading and printing a hard copy of the paper resume from the video resume.

With an estimated 73% of all job seekers regularly using the World Wide Web to seek employment, a GnarleyDog.Com video resume provides the next logical step in revolutionizing the human resources industry.

What makes video resumes developed on GnarleyDog.Com so different from traditional resumes? Scriptwriters, professional voiceover artists, flash animators that allow the user to act as the director and developer of their own video presentation. Now, the video resume becomes a professional commercial allowing an individual to stand out in crowded job market.

To view a sample video resume, go to www.GnarleyDog.Com.