Use a confident tone and positive language
- Concentrate on your achievements not your responsibilities. This means listing things you have done - such as products launched, sales increase, awards won - not rewriting your job description. Quote figures whenever possible
- Make your most relevant experience and skills prominent to encourage the employer to read on
- Keep it to the point and concentrate on the quality of your achievements, not the quantity
- List other skills that could raise you above the competition such as languages and IT skills
- Your CV can be far longer than the normal 2 pages of a non academic CV but your first page should include all the best bits
- Check thoroughly for correct spelling and grammar - spotting errors is a quick and easy way of weeding out weaker candidates when faced with a mountain of CVs to read
- Appeal to your online audience, ensure you have relevant keywords in your CV
- Capture immediate attention, Prioritise the content and detail the most relevant information first.
- Make sure that you include all Education and prizes awarded, research interest, funding awarded for research projects, other research experience and your publications.
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