Want Stronger Results? Try a Networking Resume

Find a JobTrying to engage high-level decision-makers in your job search? Planning to contact recruiters or network during business meetings?

You might find these audiences quickly become overwhelmed with reading your full executive resume—or a multi-page document is simply too much to handle in a busy networking situation.

The solution? A Networking Resume — a powerful sound bite that encapsulates your career in a single page and gets more traction in your search by supplying a quick picture of your bottom-line brand value.

Also called a Marketing Brief or Networking Biography, this single-page document allows you to zero in on what you want, while hitting the high points of your career. It’s especially useful for job hunters in the midst of person-to-person contact who want to avoid the hassle of tracking multiple sheets of paper.

Best of all, a Networking Resume is fairly simple to construct, especially after you’ve invested significant branding effort into writing your full-fledged executive resume. (See this example of a Networking Resume for a CEO & CEO candidate.)

Here are 5 easy steps to take when condensing your leadership expertise down into a potent, single-page marketing tool:

1 . Skip the job descriptions.

There’s no room for lengthy explanations of teams led, budgets managed, and so forth. Instead, you’ll want to pull out some results-focused stories from your work history or a bullet-point executive accomplishment list that reflects the high points of your career.

2. Distill your career into just titles, dates, and companies.

A Work History section on your Networking Resume will present just the facts of each job in your career, and believe it or not, this can be very effective.

Often, recruiters will be skimming for progression in your background, and writing a short summary of your job titles can quickly demonstrate promotions and the increasing level of responsibility required for a leadership position.

3. Give your success stories a label and some context.

The best part about writing a Networking Resume or Biography? Giving more detail on highlights of your work, using full sentences that pack in metrics and tell a well-rounded story.

While these items should be featured on a full resume, they rarely will be allowed the same breathing room. Consider fleshing out each Challenge-Action-Result story, highlighting up to three achievements.

4. Write a branding tagline that speaks to results.

If you’ve been able to make significant impact as an executive, here’s the place to show it. Break your brand message down into a straightforward and condensed headline that describes how you get results (as shown here).

Struggling with this step? Keep condensing it, taking out words and refining the tagline until you have a powerful sentence that conveys impact. Here are some ideas:

Turning Around Challenged IT Organizations by Building Loyal, Productive Teams

Generating 650%+ Revenue Increase Through Competitive Market Strategies

5. Sum up your education and board affiliations.

Boil your educational background down into just a few lines, using common abbreviations for degrees, states, universities, etc.

You’ll also want to cut to the chase on professional associations, speaking engagements, and volunteer affiliations; use the organization’s initials to conserve space; list keynotes with the word “Speaker,” followed by the name of the organization.

Now, you’re prepared to give a snapshot of your professional background and executive abilities to recruiters and hiring authorities, without worrying about information overload or excess paper.

You’ll still need a full resume for interviews, of course, but your new Networking Resume can serve as a value-packed, concise introduction to decision-makers.

[This article was originally posted on an earlier date]

Laura Smith-Proulx, founder of An Expert Resume, is a resume expert & former recruiter who wins interviews for C-Suite leaders using powerful personal branding and resume strategies.

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About Laura Smith-Proulx

Laura Smith-Proulx, founder of An Expert Resume, is a resume expert and former recruiter who wins interviews for C-Suite leaders using powerful personal branding and resume strategies.

Comments

  1. Anonymous says:

    @ Laura @ Marissa, thank you!!! This should be fun to make :} } Also, this kind of thing would be good for a web resume as well, by the looks of it!

  2. Laura Smith-Proulx says:

    Very interesting questions, and yes, I do believe a Networking Resume would work well for an early career or job-hopper candidate.

    The main point you’d want to emphasize is relevance of your background to the goal – cutting immediately to the chase to point out how that recent degree prepares you for the “real world” (which you could show in a quick success story) or how the diversity of your experience applies to the job you are targeting.

    In this case, you might want to either eliminate or rework the career history (grouping jobs as consulting gigs that span several years if appropriate, for example). Most recent grads aren’t going to have significant work history, and hiring managers are not going to be surprised by this.

    However, you’ll always need to be prepared with a more detailed resume version for the interview.

    Laura

  3. A networking resume is absolutely appropriate for early career professionals. At this Fortune 100 company, we refer to these 1 page documents as Internal Resumes or Profiles. They often include a photo. They are very useful to send to someone you haven’t met before, but have a networking meeting scheduled. A bullet that says “Paid for 50% of my college expenses with a variety of part time jobs” is much more powerful than listing Starbucks Barista, with bullets on the drinks you made and the exchange of money.

  4. Victoree says:

    I get the distinct impression that this kind of document has little merit for early career, “patchy” career (job gypsies) or job changers. Am I reading it correctly?

  5. Roshni P Kumar says:

    Even i am keen to know if a networking resume would be suitable for a professional in their 20′s

  6. Anonymous says:

    Interesting! Would a networking resume be appropriate for an early professional in their 20s, by any chance?

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